1987 >> June >> Ask Woody  

Ask Woody

Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", June 1987, page 20

I am most grateful to Mr. N.R. Woodward, Houston, Texas for his willingness to answer readers' questions. Mr. Woodward is the author of The Glass Insulator in America and developed the Consolidated Design Numbers identification system for glass insulators.


I am enclosing a picture of an insulator that I recently purchased. Notice the extra wide saddle groove in the middle insulator. Both the Hemingray and the other Columbias have a 1-1/2" saddle groove. The middle Columbia has a 2-3/8" groove and, like the CD 263 beside it, has threads that extend clear to the bottom of the skirt. Is this a different CD or a variation of CD 263? The green color of the glass looks like a Brookfield color to me. Are there many around like this one? (Bob Harding, Pickering, Ohio)

The two Columbia insulators which you have are both listed as CD 263. On saddle groove insulators, we have not usually attempted to assign different CD numbers on the basis of width of saddle as long as the rest of the body of the insulator has identical dimensions.

These two insulators are Brookfield products. The one with the saddle to accommodate a one-inch diameter cable is listed as their No. 8, and one with the wide saddle is listed as No. 7. The No. 8 is far more common, the size cables they carried were quite standard for street railway applications, the primary locations for the Columbias. Much heavier cables were used with elevated railways and subways in the larger cities; thus, the demand for insulators with a very wide saddle.



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