Home Home  Article Index Article Index  
GuruPedia  

Rail transport operations

Operations
Stations
Trains
Rolling stock
History
Terminology
By country
Modelling

A rail transport system is often complicated. It should not be viewed as just "trains and rails", but includes several components each of which is as necessary as the next. These components can be classified into two main group, extrinsic factors and intrinsic factors. Extrinsic factors involve the geography and history of the geography of a system, whereas intrinsic factors tend to be of a more technical nature.

This article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it .

Table of contents

Background

Each transport system is a business, and as such has to make economic sense otherwise it will close. From this, each will have a particular role or roles to perform. These may change with time but they will affect the specifications of each particular system.

Extrinsic factors

Rail transport systems are built into the geography, including both the physical geography (hills, valleys, etc) and the human geography (location of settlements). The rail transport system may in turn feedback into the human geography.

Landscape geography

The permanent way of a system must pass through the geology of its region. This may be flat or mountainous, may include obstacles such as water. These will determine in part the intrinsic nature of the system.

Human geography

Rail transport systems affect the human geography. Large cities (such as Nairobi) may be founded by a system.

Historical factors

Rail transport systems are often used for purposes for which they were not designed, but have evolved into due to changes in the human geography.

Intrinsic factors

Permanent way

main article permanent way.

The permanent way is pushed through the physical geography.

Types of system

The most common type of rail system is heavy rail which has reasonably high speeds and high axle loadings.

Light rail systems are designed for lower speeds and loadings and often have simplified specifications.

High-speed rail is a system with high speed.

Monorails are sometimes used instead of light rail systems for commuter transport, etc.

Maglev is a recent development with as yet only one real implementation.

Signalling

main article: railway signalling

Types of vehicle

main article rail vehicle

rolling stock, multiple unit, locomotive.

Passenger operations

  An electric multiple unit pulling into Tile Hill station; Coventry, England

train station















Freight operations

  Freight wagons filled with limestone await unloading, at sidings in Rugby, England

marshalling yard, hump yard

Popular Topics

This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.  For the live article, click here.

Privacy