Electric railways with
third rails or
fourth rails carry collector or contact shoes, projecting laterally (sideways), or vertically, from their
bogies. The contact shoe may slide on top of the third rail (top running), on the bottom (bottom running) or on the side (side running). The side running contact shoe is used against the
guide bars on
rubber-tired metros. A vertical contact shoe is used on
fourth rail systems. A pair of contact shoes was used on
underground current collection systems. Contact shoes may also be used on
overhead conductor rails, on
guide bars or on
trolley wires in the case of
trams or
trolleybuses. Most railways use
three rails, while the
London Underground uses
four rails. Trams or trolleybuses use a
grooved trolley shoe at the end of a
trolley pole. A contact shoe is used as a
ground on the running
rail of a rubber-tired metro.
Contact ski A long and narrow contact shoe shaped like a
ski, or "skid" or "ski collector" or "contact ski", was historically used on
stud contact systems so it maintains contact with small studs in the road placed at large intervals. A single ski was as long as in some systems. Stud contact systems were short-lived due to safety issues with the studs. They were supposed to be electrified only when compatible vehicles passed over them, but the studs often malfunctioned and remained electrified continuously, posing an electrocution hazard. File:Third rail shoe on M8 railcar, September 2018.JPG|Contact shoe on
Metro-North M8 railcar, designed for both over- and under-running third rail File:Third Rail contact shoe.jpg|A contact shoe for top-contact third rail on
SEPTA's
Norristown High Speed Line (third rail not visible) File:CTA third rail contact shoe.jpg|The contact shoe on a
Chicago 'L' car File:NYC Subway Third Rail Induction Motor.jpg|The contact shoe of a
NYC Subway car making contact with the
third rail Image:Amt Turboliner-3rd-rail-shoe.jpg|Third-rail contact shoe installed on the front
bogie of an
RTL-II car for operation into
New York Penn Station File:Bogie_avant_MR-63_metro_de_Montreal.jpg|A
rubber-tyred metro bogie. Between the two large tires, a contact shoe touches the guidebar and
electrically grounds the car. == See also ==