Wipers will be Beryllium copper, as the addition of a small amount of Be metal does a magic change to pure copper. It becomes hard, non ductile and behaves like spring steel, just with the low resistance of copper. Amazing in that you oly need a tiny ( less than 0.1%) addition to do this, and the most common use is as a flexible aneroid vessel, used in gauges as the bending element.
Also used as a poison in railway brass centre rail, as the tiny amount is added as a disc in a press fit slug in the main wear area, so that if it is stolen as scrap this small amount of Be will render the whole batch of metal in the furnace to be unusable without further electrolytic refining, and also requiring the replacement of the entire refractory lining in the smelter from the contamination. In use the wear mark limit means the tiny disc will be rubbed away by the pantograph unit just before the limit is reached, removing this from the brass rod and spreading it in a thin coat on the ballast, where dilution renders it safe.