In
rail transport, a 'train' is a series of rail vehicles that move along guides to transport freight or passengers from one place to another. The guideway (
permanent way) usually consists of conventional
rail tracks, but might also be
monorail or
maglev. Propulsion for the train is provided by a separate
locomotive, or from individual motors in self-propelled
multiple units. Most trains are powered by
diesel engines or by
electricity supplied by
trackside systems. Historically the
steam engine was the dominant form of locomotive power through the mid-20th century, but other sources of power (such as
horses,
rope, wire,
gravity,
pneumatics, or
gas turbines) are possible.
In American
railway terminology, the term 'consist' is used to describe the group of rail vehicles which make up a train. When referring to
motive power, 'consist' refers to the group of
locomotives powering the train. Similarly, the term 'trainset' refers to a group of
rolling stock that is permanently or semi-permanently coupled together to form a unified set of equipment (the term is most often applied to
passenger train configurations). In the United Kingdom, the interchangeable terms 'set' and 'unit' are used to refer to a group of permanently or semi-permanently couple vehicles such as those of a
multiple unit. While when referring to a train made up of a variety of vehicles, or of several sets/units, the term 'formation' is used. (Although the UK public and media often forgo 'formation', for simply 'train'.)
In the United Kingdom Section 83(1) of the Railways Act 1993 defines "train" as follows:
::a) two or more items of rolling stock coupled together, at least one of which is a locomotive; or
::b) a locomotive not coupled to any other rolling stock.
Similarly, the
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway's 1948 operating rules define a train as: "An engine or more than one engine coupled, with or without cars, displaying markers."
[1]
Types of trains

Modern German Class 423 EMU trainsets meet each other
There are various types of trains designed for particular purposes.
A train can consist of a combination of one or more
locomotives and attached
railroad cars, or a self-propelled
multiple unit (or occasionally a single powered coach, called a
railcar). Trains can also be hauled by horses, pulled by a cable, or run downhill by gravity.
Special kinds of trains running on corresponding special 'railways' are
atmospheric railways,
monorails,
high-speed railways,
Dinky Trains,
maglev,
rubber-tired underground,
funicular and
cog railways.
A passenger train may consist of one or several locomotives, and one or more coaches. Alternatively, a train may consist entirely of passenger carrying coaches, some or all of which are powered as a "
multiple unit". In many parts of the world, particularly
Japan and
Europe,
high-speed rail is utilized extensively for passenger travel.
Freight trains comprise wagons or trucks rather than carriages, though some parcel and mail trains (especially
Travelling Post Offices) are outwardly more like passenger trains.
In the
United Kingdom, a train hauled by two locomotives is said to be "double-headed", and in
Canada and the
United States it is quite common for a long freight train to be headed by three, four, or even five locomotives. A train with a locomotive attached at each end is described as 'top and tailed', this practice typically being used when there are no reversing facilities available. Where the second locomotive is attached temporarily to assist a train up steep banks or grades (or down them by providing braking power) it is referred to as 'banking' in the UK, 'helper service' in North America.
Trains can also be mixed, hauling both passengers and freight, see e.g.
Transportation in Mauritania. Such mixed trains became rare in many countries, but were commonplace on the first 19th century railroads.
Special trains are also used for
Track Maintenance; in some places, this is called
maintenance of way.
Motive power

A heritage steam train in
Poland

An early horse-pulled train
The first trains were rope-hauled, gravity powered or pulled by horses, but from the early 19th century almost all were powered by
steam locomotives. From the 1920s onwards they began to be replaced by less labour intensive and cleaner (but more complex and expensive)
diesel locomotives and
electric locomotives, while at about the same time self-propelled
multiple unit vehicles of either power system became much more common in passenger service. Most countries had replaced steam locomotives for day-to-day use by the 1970s, usually with diesel locomotives. A few countries, most notably the
People's Republic of China, where
coal and labour are cheap, still use steam locomotives, but this is being gradually phased out. Historic steam trains still run in many other countries, for the leisure and enthusiast market.
Electric traction offers a lower cost per mile of train operation but at a very high initial cost, which can only be justified on high traffic lines. Since the cost per mile of construction is much higher, electric traction is less favored on long-distance lines with the exception of long-distance high speed lines. Electric trains receive their current via
overhead lines or through a
third rail electric system.
Passenger trains

Interior of a passenger car in a long-distance train in Finland

Interior of a passenger car in a local train in Austria
Passenger trains have '
passenger cars'.
Passenger trains travel between
stations. The distance between stations may vary from under 1 km to over 1000 km, and their journey time may vary between minutes and days.
Long-distance trains
Long-distance trains travel between many cities and/or regions of a country, and sometimes cross several countries. They often have a
dining car or restaurant car to allow passengers to have a meal during the course of their journey. Trains traveling overnight may also have
sleeping cars. Very long distance trains such as those on the
Trans-Siberian railway are usually not high-speed.
High-speed trains
High speed trains normally travel during the day, and arrive at their destination before the night falls and are in competition with
airliners in speed. In
Japan, most of the public transportation travel between the
Tokyo metropolitan area and the
Osaka metropolitan area (with around 500 km in distance between them) is dominated by the
Shinkansen, however in travel further than around 500 km (such as
Tokyo-
Hiroshima) more people prefer to travel by air.
[2]
Very fast trains sometimes
tilt, like the
APT or
Pendolino or
Talgo. Tilting is a system where the passenger cars automatically lean into
curves, reducing the
centrifugal forces acting on passengers and permitting higher speeds on curves in the
track with greater passenger comfort.
The fastest train on rails is the
French TGV (Train à Grande Vitesse) (French for High Speed Train) which achieved a 574.8 km/h (356 mph) speed in testing in 2007. However, TGVs run at a maximum commercial speed of 300-320 km/h.
Inter-city trains
For trains connecting cities, we can distinguish
inter-city trains, which do not halt at small stations, and trains that serve all stations, usually known as
local trains or "stoppers" (and sometimes an intermediate kind, see also
limited-stop).

A Virgin train speeding up the main line towards London, England
Commuter trains
For shorter distances many cities have networks of
commuter trains, serving the city and its suburbs. Some carriages may be laid out to have more standing room than seats, or to facilitate the carrying of
prams,
cycles or
wheelchairs. Some countries have
double-decked passenger trains for use in conurbations. Double deck high speed and sleeper trains are becoming more common in Europe.
Passenger trains usually have
emergency brake handles (or a "communication cord") that the public can operate. Abuse is punished by a heavy
fine.
Large cities often have a
metro system, also called underground, subway or tube. The trains are electrically powered, usually by
third rail, and their railroads are separate from other traffic, without
level crossings. Usually they run in tunnels in the city center and sometimes on elevated structures in the outer parts of the city. They can accelerate and decelerate faster than heavier, long-distance trains.
A light one- or two-car rail vehicle running through the streets is by convention not considered a train but rather a
tram, trolley, light-rail vehicle or streetcar, but the distinction is not always strict. In some countries such as the United Kingdom the distinction between a tramway and a
railway is precise and defined in law.
The term
light rail is sometimes used for a modern tram, but it may also mean an intermediate form between a tram and a train, similar to metro except that it may have level crossings. These are often protected with crossing gates. They may also be called a
trolley.
Maglev trains and
monorails represent minor technologies in the train field.
The term '
rapid transit' is used for public transport such as commuter trains, metro and light rail. However, in New York City, lines on the
New York City Subway have been referred to as "trains".
Some commuter trains in
Tokyo,
Japan have special cars which the bench seats fold up to provide standing room only during the morning rush hour (until 10 a.m.). The
E231 series train has two of these cars in each set (usually as part of a 10- or 11-car set), officially nicknamed "roku-tobira-sha" (literally, "6 door car") - all the other cars have four sets of doors on each side.
An estimated 3.5 million passengers ride every day on Tokyo's
Yamanote Line, with its 29 stations. For comparison, the New York City Subway carries 4.8 million passengers per day on 26 lines serving 468 stations.
Train names
Trains in the uk are named as classes, such as class 323 (Central Trains). Pendolinos are class 390s, Voyagers are class 220/221s, and Silverlink Metro trains (North London Line) are class 313s. Tube trains are named as stock. On a deep level line their names are based on the year they are made, such as 1996 stock (Jubilee Line), 1995 stock (Northern Line), 1967 stock (Victoria Line), and 1972 stock (Bakerloo Line). Sub-Surface stock are named as a letter, such as D stock (District Line), C stock (Circle, District, and Hammersmith & City lines), and A stock (Metropolitan/East London Line).
Freight trains

An electric container freight train
Freight trains have '
freight cars'.
Much of the world's freight is transported by train. In the
USA the rail system is used mostly for transporting
cargo (or freight).
Under the right circumstances, transporting freight by train is highly economic, and also more energy efficient than transporting freight by road. Rail freight is most economic when freight is being carried in bulk and over long distances, but is less suited to short distances and small loads. Bulk aggregate movements of a mere twenty miles can be cost effective even allowing for trans-shipment costs. These trans-shipment costs dominate in many cases and many modern practices such as
container freight are aimed at minimizing these.
The main disadvantage of rail freight is its lack of flexibility. For this reason, rail has lost much of the freight business to
road competition. Many governments are now trying to encourage more freight onto trains, because of the benefits that it would bring.
There are many different types of freight trains, which are used to carry many different kinds of freight, with many different types of
wagons. One of the most common types on modern railways are container trains, where containers can be lifted on and off the train by
cranes and loaded off or onto
trucks or
ships.
This type of freight train has largely superseded the traditional
boxcar type of freight train, with which the cargo has to be loaded or unloaded manually.
In some countries "
piggy-back" trains are used:
trucks can drive straight onto the train and drive off again when the end destination is reached. A system like this is used on the
Channel Tunnel between
England and
France and between France and
Italy (
Modalohr road trailer carriers). Piggy back trains are the fastest growing type of freight trains in the United States, where they are also known as '
trailer on
flatcar' or TOFC trains. There are also some "inter-modal" vehicles, which have two sets of wheels, for use in a train, or as the
semi-trailer of a road vehicle. This is '''
obsolete''', the current semi-trailers have road wheels only and are carried on specially adapted
trucks when moving on rails, for specific details see
Roadrailer.
There are also many other types of
wagons, such as "low loader" wagons for transporting road vehicles. There are
refrigerator cars for transporting
foods such as ice cream. There are simple types of
open-topped wagons for transporting
minerals and bulk material such as
coal, and
tankers for transporting liquids and gases. Today however most coal and aggregates are moved in
hopper wagons that can be filled and discharged rapidly, to enable efficient handling of the materials.
Freight trains are sometimes illegally boarded by passengers who do not wish to pay money, or do not have the money, to travel by ordinary means. This is referred to as "
hopping" and is considered by some communities to be a viable form of transport. Most hoppers sneak into train yards and stow away in boxcars. More bold hoppers will catch a train "on the fly", that is, as it is moving, leading to occasional fatalities.
See also
★
Famous trains
★
Rail transport in fiction
★
List of rail accidents
★
List of railway companies
★
Monorail
★
Rail transport modelling
★
Toy train
★
Unit train
★
Armoured train
References
1. Rules: Operating Department, Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, , , , 1948,
2. Central Japan Railway Data Book 2006, Central Japan Railway, , , , 2006,
Further reading
★ , 256 pp.