Details, Explanation and Meaning About Rail terminology

Rail terminology Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

Rail terminology is a form of technical terminology. The difference between the mainly American term "railroad" and the mainly British term "railway" is the most obvious trans-Atlantic difference in rail terminology. (see usage of the terms railroad and railway for more information). There are also several others, caused by the parallel development of rail transport systems on both sides of the Atlantic. Various terms here are presented alphabetically, where a term has multiple names this is indicated. The note "US" indicates a term originating on the American continent, while "UK" refers to terms originating in the British Isles/Europe.

0-9

Note: for 4-4-0, 2-6-4T, 0-4-4-0, etc. see wheel arrangement

A

B

C

  • caboose (US): brake van (UK)
  • cant: angle. Can be used in the context of the cant of the rail track (the relative level one rail with another); and the cant of a rail, being the angle of that single rail relative to the perpendicular.
  • railroad car, or rolling stock in British English, is a vehicle that is not a locomotive.
  • cess (UK): a narrow strip of land (usually with cables and often with a walkway) between the edge of the outermost track and the start of non-railway land. Shortened from access.
  • chimney (UK): smokestack or stack (US). Or funnel.
  • compound engine: An articulated steam locomotive passing the output steam through two engines. One engine used high-pressure steam and passed the "low-pressure" steam on to the second. Attributed to Anatole Mallet.
  • COFC: an acronym for "Container On Flat Car".
  • conductor (US): guard (UK).
  • continuous welded rail (CWR)
  • coupler (US): coupling (UK). Railroad cars in a train are connected by couplers located at both ends of each car.
  • cylinder.

D

  • diesel multiple unit or DMU: a set of diesel-powered self-propelling passenger rail vehicles usually able to operate in multiple with other such sets. Such units, especially those consisting of a single vehicle, are sometimes termed railcars.
  • down (UK, etc.): A direction (usually away from London or the capital city) or side (left side when facing in down direction). The opposite of up.
  • driver (UK): Engineer (US)
  • driving van trailer or DVT: a special end carriage from which the train can be driven in reverse for push-pull operation.

E

  • electric multiple unit or EMU: a set of electrically powered self-propelling passenger rail vehicles usually able to operate in multiple with other such sets
  • engineer (US): driver, engine driver, train driver (UK)

F

  • Fairlie: type of articulated locomotive
  • feedwater heater: A device to preheat the water for a steam locomotive; improves efficiency.
  • fettle, fettling: making repairs to rail track, especially concerned with maintaining the drainage of the ballast, and the proper cant of the rail track and rails.
  • firebox
  • four foot the part of the line between a pair of running rails. An abbreviation of four foot, eight-and-a-half-inches. See also six foot and ten foot.
  • FRED: (US) Flashing Rear End Device
  • frog: (US) casting with "X" shaped grooves used in switches and crossovers.
  • Free-mo: type of modular layout in model railroading
  • funnel (this is a Thomas the Tank Engine misnomer, for a chimney (UK), smokestack (US).

G

H

  • head-end power or HEP: A scheme whereby the locomotive engine (rather than a separate generator) provides power to carriages.
  • hotel power (slang, US): That power used to provide for the comfort of passengers aboard a train en-route. See "HEP" above.

I

J

  • '''Jointed track

K

L

  • loop (rail) (UK), siding (US): used on single-track railway lines, a loop is a second parallel set of tracks (running for a short distance), allowing two trains to pass by one another.

M

  • Mallet: type of articulated locomotive designed by Anatole Mallet ("Mallee"). See "Compound Engine" above.
  • Mogul: locomotive with a 2-6-0 wheel arrangement
  • Multiple unit (UK): A self-propelled rail vehicle which can be joined with multiple compatible others and controlled from a single driving station. The sub-classes of this type of vehicle; Diesel Multiple Unit (DMU), Diesel-Electric Multiple Unit (DEMU) and Electric Multiple Unit (EMU) are more common terms. These may also be termed railcars.
  • Multiple unit (US), Multiple working (UK): Generally seen as the abbreviation MU, this normally refers to the ability of most North American diesel and electric locomotives to be joined together and controlled from one driving station. Such a set of joined locomotives are called a consist or (colloquially) "lash-up" and are said to be "MUed together".
  • Multiple working (UK): see Multiple unit (above).

N

O

P

  • Pacific: locomotive with a 4-6-2 wheel arrangement''
  • per diem: fee paid by a railroad to the owner of a car for the time it spends on the railroad's property. Pronounced by US railroaders per die-um, not per dee-um.
  • points (UK): switch (US). Also "turnout".
  • pony truck:
  • Prairie: locomotive with a 2-6-2 or 2-6-2T wheel arrangement
  • push-pull: a mode of operation whereby a train may be driven in either direction without necessitating the locomotive to be at the forward end of the train.

Q

R

S

  • saddle: A plate which is bolted to sleepers, holding the rails in place.
  • saddle tank: type of tank locomotive water tank.
  • safeworking (Australia): The system of rules and equipment designed to ensure the safe operation of trains.
  • semaphore: usually a type of signal that has a mechanical moving arm, but the term strictly applies to any signalling using semaphores.
  • Safety Appliance Act (US): law mandating air brakes, grab bars, and automatic couplers
  • shunter (UK): switcher (US) or shifter (PRR only): A small locomotive used for assembling trains and moving railroad cars around. Also, a person involved in such work.
  • side tank: type of water tank.
  • siding: a section of track off the main line used for storing rolling stock or freight. In the US the term is also used to cover the British term: loop.
  • signal: A device that indicates to the driver of a train information about the line ahead.
  • six foot: the narrow corridor between a pair of closely-spaced tracks, measing six feet, and the most dangerous place to stand. The boundary between a six foot, where one may be hit by a train, and the wider designation/width of ten foot, where one is usually safe, is hard to judge. See also four foot and ten foot.
  • sleeper (UK), tie (US): Bars placed at 90 degrees to the rail tracks to support the rails. Generally of wood, concrete or steel, with various contraptions to affix the rails to the sleeper. Usually spikes, nails or bolts are used.
  • spike: A bolt, pin or nail used to hold rails, or plates connected to the rails (known as saddles), to sleepers.
  • smokestack (US): chimney (UK)
  • Staff and ticket: A method of safeworking involving a token.
  • subway (US): A railroad that runs underground, generally in a large city.
  • superelevation (UK): Synonymous with cant: the banking of railroad track on curves.
  • superheater: A device for further heating the steam on a steam locomotive to increase power.
  • switch (US): points (UK). Also "turnout".
  • switcher (US), shunter (UK): A small locomotive used for assembling trains and moving railroad cars around.

T

U

  • union station or union terminal: a train station in which tracks and facilities are shared by two or more railway companies.
  • up (UK, etc.): A direction (usually towards London or the capital city) or side (left side when facing in up direction). The opposite of down.

V

W

  • well tank: type of tank locomotive water tank
  • Whyte System: system of describing steam locomotive wheel arrangements, ie. "4-6-4", 2-10-2, etc. The first number indicates the "pilot" wheels that help lead the engine into turns. The second in the number of powered wheels ("drivers"). Third are the trailing idler wheels, usually to provide support to larger fireboxes.
  • Wheel tapper: historical railway occupation; people employed to tap train wheels with hammers, with a view to listening to the sound made so as to determine the integrity of the wheel; cracked wheels, like cracked bells, do not sound the same as their intact counterparts. The job was associated with the steam age, and is an early form of acoustic investigation. Contemporary planned maintenance procedures have obviated need for the wheel-tapper.
  • Wye: (UK: triangle): Three railroad tracks in a triangular form with switches at all three corners. With sufficient lengths of track leading away in all three directions, a wye can turn a train of any length.

X

Y

Z

A way of climbing hills, where the train reverses direction for a while, and then reverses again to resume the forward motion.

Some Zig Zags:

  • Lapstone or Little Zig Zag, New South Wales, Australia (c1860-1890)
  • Lithgow or Great Zig Zag, New South Wales, Australia (c1870-1910) (now a Museum railway).


This is an Article on Rail terminology. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Rail terminology


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