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Johnson bar (vehicle)

A Johnson bar is a hand lever with several distinct positions and a positive latch to hold the lever in the selected position. The latch is typically activated with a spring-loaded squeeze handle on the lever so that only one hand is needed to release the latch, move the lever, then re-engage the latch in a different position. This is an American English term; in British English, the lever is named for its function.

Many steam locomotives have valve gear controls which are set using a Johnson bar as referenced in Fred Eaglesmith's Back There: Hey Porter, tell that engineer, tell him this train's too slow. Tell him to let go that Johnson bar. I got places I got to go.

Many trucks and buses use a hand brake which is controlled with a Johnson bar. These are sometimes called "Johnson bar brakes".

Truck drivers call the lever control for air-operated trailer brakes "Johnson bars".

On Caterpillar tractors, the forward/reverse lever is also called a Johnson bar.

Some light general aviation aircraft (including Piper Cherokees, Beech Musketeers, and some early model Cessnas) use Johnson bars to actuate flaps and wheel brakes. The Cessna 162 Skycatcher uses a Johnson bar for flap operation. A small number of older aircraft (including the Mooney M-18 and some older M20s) also have landing gear actuated by Johnson bars.

On the Boeing 707/720 aircraft, the Johnson bar was used to manually extend the nose landing gear. This was only used if the normal gear extension failed.

Johnson bar

A Johnson bar (also Johnson corrugated bar) is a type of corrugated high-carbon steel rebar used to reinforce concrete.

The Johnson bar was invented by A.L. Johnson of the St. Louis Expanded Metal Company. Its specific efficacy comes from having "alternate elevations and depressions to grip the concrete," with the shoulders of the corrugations having "an inclination with the axis of the bar" to prevent slipping between the bar and the concrete. The pattern of elevations and depressions aids in the stability of the structure; even if a Johnson bar no longer adheres to the concrete (due to vibrations, for instance, or to accidentally being smeared with oil, reducing the adhesion significantly, as may happen during careless construction), it will have a hold on the concrete as strong as or stronger than a "plain" bar (that is, a simple prismatic bar).

Johnson bar (disambiguation)

Johnson bar may refer to:

  • Johnson bar, a type of corrugated metal bar used to reinforce concrete
  • Johnson bar (vehicle), a hand lever on various vehicles
  • Johnson Bar (locomotive), a hand lever on steam locomotives
  • Johnson bar, a lever-dolly (similar to a crowbar) for moving heavy apparatus
Johnson Bar (locomotive)

A Johnson Bar is a control lever on a steam locomotive, used to control the timing of the admission of steam into the locomotive's pistons. By controlling this timing, the amount of power delivered to the wheels is regulated, as is the direction that the wheels rotate, giving the lever the alternate name of the reversing lever.

Usage examples of "johnson bar".

Then he pulled the Johnson bar to send the locomotive into reverse.