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Rail transport

Rail transport (also known as train transport) is a means of transport using wheeled vehicles running in tracks, which usually consist of two parallel steel rails.[1] Rail transport is one of the two primary means of land transport, next to road transport. It is used for about 8% of passenger and freight transport globally,[2] thanks to its energy efficiency[2] and potentially high speed.

A train in Alaska transporting crude oil in March 2006

Rolling stock on rails generally encounters lower frictional resistance than rubber-tyred road vehicles, allowing rail cars to be coupled into longer trains. Power is usually provided by diesel or electrical locomotives. While railway transport is capital-intensive and less flexible than road transport, it can carry heavy loads of passengers and cargo with greater energy efficiency and safety.[a]

Precursors of railways driven by human or animal power have existed since antiquity, but modern rail transport began with the invention of the steam locomotive in Great Britain around 1800. The first passenger railway, the Stockton and Darlington Railway, opened in 1825. The quick spread of railways throughout Europe and North America, following the 1830 opening of the first intercity connection in England, was a key component of the Industrial Revolution. The adoption of rail transport lowered shipping costs compared to water transport, leading to "national markets" in which prices varied less from city to city.

In the 1880s, railway electrification began with tramways and rapid transit systems. Starting in the 1940s, steam locomotives were replaced by diesel locomotives. The first high-speed railway system was introduced in Japan in 1964, and high-speed rail lines now connect many cities in Europe, East Asia, and the eastern United States. Following some decline due to competition from cars and airplanes, rail transport has had a revival in recent decades due to road congestion and rising fuel prices, as well as governments investing in rail as a means of reducing CO2 emissions.

History edit

Smooth, durable road surfaces have been made for wheeled vehicles since prehistoric times. In some cases, they were narrow and in pairs to support only the wheels. That is, they were wagonways or tracks. Some had grooves or flanges or other mechanical means to keep the wheels on track.

For example, evidence indicates that a 6 to 8.5 km long Diolkos paved trackway transported boats across the Isthmus of Corinth in Greece from around 600 BC. The Diolkos was in use for over 650 years, until at least the 1st century AD.[3] Paved trackways were also later built in Roman Egypt.[4]

Pre-steam modern systems edit

Wooden rails introduced edit

 
A 16th-century minecart, an early example of unpowered rail transport

In 1515, Cardinal Matthäus Lang wrote a description of the Reisszug, a funicular railway at the Hohensalzburg Fortress in Austria. The line originally used wooden rails and a hemp haulage rope and was operated by human or animal power, through a treadwheel.[5] The line still exists and is operational, although in updated form and is possibly the oldest operational railway.[6]

Wagonways (or tramways) using wooden rails, hauled by horses, started appearing in the 1550s to facilitate the transport of ore tubs to and from mines and soon became popular in Europe. Such an operation was illustrated in Germany in 1556 by Georgius Agricola in his work De re metallica.[7] This line used "Hund" carts with unflanged wheels running on wooden planks and a vertical pin on the truck fitting into the gap between the planks to keep it going the right way. The miners called the wagons Hunde ("dogs") from the noise they made on the tracks.[8]

There are many references to their use in central Europe in the 16th century.[9] Such a transport system was later used by German miners at Caldbeck, Cumbria, England, perhaps from the 1560s.[10] A wagonway was built at Prescot, near Liverpool, sometime around 1600, possibly as early as 1594. Owned by Philip Layton, the line carried coal from a pit near Prescot Hall to a terminus about one-half mile (800 m) away.[11] A funicular railway was also made at Broseley in Shropshire some time before 1604. This carried coal for James Clifford from his mines down to the River Severn to be loaded onto barges and carried to riverside towns.[12] The Wollaton Wagonway, completed in 1604 by Huntingdon Beaumont, has sometimes erroneously been cited as the earliest British railway. It ran from Strelley to Wollaton near Nottingham.[13]

The Middleton Railway in Leeds, which was built in 1758, later became the world's oldest operational railway (other than funiculars), albeit now in an upgraded form. In 1764, the first railway in the Americas was built in Lewiston, New York.[14]

Metal rails introduced edit

 
A replica of a "Little Eaton Tramway" wagon; the tracks are plateways.
 
A cast iron fishbelly edge rail manufactured by Outram at the Butterley Company for the Cromford and High Peak Railway in 1831; these are smooth edge rails for wheels with flanges.

In the late 1760s, the Coalbrookdale Company began to fix plates of cast iron to the upper surface of the wooden rails. This allowed a variation of gauge to be used. At first only balloon loops could be used for turning, but later, movable points were taken into use that allowed for switching.[15]

A system was introduced in which unflanged wheels ran on L-shaped metal plates, which came to be known as plateways. John Curr, a Sheffield colliery manager, invented this flanged rail in 1787, though the exact date of this is disputed. The plate rail was taken up by Benjamin Outram for wagonways serving his canals, manufacturing them at his Butterley ironworks. In 1803, William Jessop opened the Surrey Iron Railway, a double track plateway, erroneously sometimes cited as world's first public railway, in south London.[16]

William Jessop had earlier used a form of all-iron edge rail and flanged wheels successfully for an extension to the Charnwood Forest Canal at Nanpantan, Loughborough, Leicestershire in 1789. In 1790, Jessop and his partner Outram began to manufacture edge rails. Jessop became a partner in the Butterley Company in 1790. The first public edgeway (thus also first public railway) built was Lake Lock Rail Road in 1796. Although the primary purpose of the line was to carry coal, it also carried passengers.

These two systems of constructing iron railways, the "L" plate-rail and the smooth edge-rail, continued to exist side by side until well into the early 19th century. The flanged wheel and edge-rail eventually proved its superiority and became the standard for railways.

Cast iron used in rails proved unsatisfactory because it was brittle and broke under heavy loads. The wrought iron invented by John Birkinshaw in 1820 replaced cast iron. Wrought iron, usually simply referred to as "iron", was a ductile material that could undergo considerable deformation before breaking, making it more suitable for iron rails. But iron was expensive to produce until Henry Cort patented the puddling process in 1784. In 1783 Cort also patented the rolling process, which was 15 times faster at consolidating and shaping iron than hammering.[17] These processes greatly lowered the cost of producing iron and rails. The next important development in iron production was hot blast developed by James Beaumont Neilson (patented 1828), which considerably reduced the amount of coke (fuel) or charcoal needed to produce pig iron.[18] Wrought iron was a soft material that contained slag or dross. The softness and dross tended to make iron rails distort and delaminate and they lasted less than 10 years. Sometimes they lasted as little as one year under high traffic. All these developments in the production of iron eventually led to the replacement of composite wood/iron rails with superior all-iron rails. The introduction of the Bessemer process, enabling steel to be made inexpensively, led to the era of great expansion of railways that began in the late 1860s. Steel rails lasted several times longer than iron.[19][20][21] Steel rails made heavier locomotives possible, allowing for longer trains and improving the productivity of railroads.[22] The Bessemer process introduced nitrogen into the steel, which caused the steel to become brittle with age. The open hearth furnace began to replace the Bessemer process near the end of the 19th century, improving the quality of steel and further reducing costs. Thus steel completely replaced the use of iron in rails, becoming standard for all railways.

The first passenger horsecar or tram, Swansea and Mumbles Railway was opened between Swansea and Mumbles in Wales in 1807.[23] Horses remained the preferable mode for tram transport even after the arrival of steam engines until the end of the 19th century, because they were cleaner compared to steam-driven trams which caused smoke in city streets.

Steam power introduced edit

 
A replica of Trevithick's engine at the National Waterfront Museum in Swansea, Wales

In 1784 James Watt, a Scottish inventor and mechanical engineer, patented a design for a steam locomotive. Watt had improved the steam engine of Thomas Newcomen, hitherto used to pump water out of mines, and developed a reciprocating engine in 1769 capable of powering a wheel. This was a large stationary engine, powering cotton mills and a variety of machinery; the state of boiler technology necessitated the use of low-pressure steam acting upon a vacuum in the cylinder, which required a separate condenser and an air pump. Nevertheless, as the construction of boilers improved, Watt investigated the use of high-pressure steam acting directly upon a piston, raising the possibility of a smaller engine that might be used to power a vehicle. Following his patent, Watt's employee William Murdoch produced a working model of a self-propelled steam carriage in that year.[24]

The first full-scale working railway steam locomotive was built in the United Kingdom in 1804 by Richard Trevithick, a British engineer born in Cornwall. This used high-pressure steam to drive the engine by one power stroke. The transmission system employed a large flywheel to even out the action of the piston rod. On 21 February 1804, the world's first steam-powered railway journey took place when Trevithick's unnamed steam locomotive hauled a train along the tramway of the Penydarren ironworks, near Merthyr Tydfil in South Wales.[25][26] Trevithick later demonstrated a locomotive operating upon a piece of circular rail track in Bloomsbury, London, the Catch Me Who Can, but never got beyond the experimental stage with railway locomotives, not least because his engines were too heavy for the cast-iron plateway track then in use.[27]

The first commercially successful steam locomotive was Matthew Murray's rack locomotive Salamanca built for the Middleton Railway in Leeds in 1812. This twin-cylinder locomotive was light enough to not break the edge-rails track and solved the problem of adhesion by a cog-wheel using teeth cast on the side of one of the rails. Thus it was also the first rack railway.

This was followed in 1813 by the locomotive Puffing Billy built by Christopher Blackett and William Hedley for the Wylam Colliery Railway, the first successful locomotive running by adhesion only. This was accomplished by the distribution of weight between a number of wheels. Puffing Billy is now on display in the Science Museum in London, and is the oldest locomotive in existence.[28][29]

In 1814 George Stephenson, inspired by the early locomotives of Trevithick, Murray and Hedley, persuaded the manager of the Killingworth colliery where he worked to allow him to build a steam-powered machine. Stephenson played a pivotal role in the development and widespread adoption of the steam locomotive. His designs considerably improved on the work of the earlier pioneers. He built the locomotive Blücher, also a successful flanged-wheel adhesion locomotive. In 1825 he built the locomotive Locomotion for the Stockton and Darlington Railway in the northeast of England, which became the first public steam railway in the world in 1825, although it used both horse power and steam power on different runs. In 1829, he built the locomotive Rocket, which entered in and won the Rainhill Trials. This success led to Stephenson establishing his company as the pre-eminent builder of steam locomotives for railways in Great Britain and Ireland, the United States, and much of Europe.[30]: 24–30  The first public railway which used only steam locomotives, all the time, was Liverpool and Manchester Railway, built in 1830.[31]

Steam power continued to be the dominant power system in railways around the world for more than a century.

Electric power introduced edit

 
Lichterfelde tram, 1882

The first known electric locomotive was built in 1837 by chemist Robert Davidson of Aberdeen in Scotland, and it was powered by galvanic cells (batteries). Thus it was also the earliest battery-electric locomotive. Davidson later built a larger locomotive named Galvani, exhibited at the Royal Scottish Society of Arts Exhibition in 1841. The seven-ton vehicle had two direct-drive reluctance motors, with fixed electromagnets acting on iron bars attached to a wooden cylinder on each axle, and simple commutators. It hauled a load of six tons at four miles per hour (6 kilometers per hour) for a distance of one and a half miles (2.4 kilometres). It was tested on the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway in September of the following year, but the limited power from batteries prevented its general use. It was destroyed by railway workers, who saw it as a threat to their job security.[32][33][34]

Werner von Siemens demonstrated an electric railway in 1879 in Berlin. The world's first electric tram line, Gross-Lichterfelde Tramway, opened in Lichterfelde near Berlin, Germany, in 1881. It was built by Siemens. The tram ran on 180 volts DC, which was supplied by running rails. In 1891 the track was equipped with an overhead wire and the line was extended to Berlin-Lichterfelde West station. The Volk's Electric Railway opened in 1883 in Brighton, England. The railway is still operational, thus making it the oldest operational electric railway in the world. Also in 1883, Mödling and Hinterbrühl Tram opened near Vienna in Austria. It was the first tram line in the world in regular service powered from an overhead line. Five years later, in the U.S. electric trolleys were pioneered in 1888 on the Richmond Union Passenger Railway, using equipment designed by Frank J. Sprague.[35]

The first use of electrification on a main line was on a four-mile section of the Baltimore Belt Line of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) in 1895 connecting the main portion of the B&O to the new line to New York through a series of tunnels around the edges of Baltimore's downtown. Electricity quickly became the power supply of choice for subways, abetted by the Sprague's invention of multiple-unit train control in 1897. By the early 1900s most street railways were electrified.

 
Passengers waiting to board a tube train on the London Underground in the early 1900s (sketch by unknown artist)

The London Underground, the world's oldest underground railway, opened in 1863, and it began operating electric services using a fourth rail system in 1890 on the City and South London Railway, now part of the London Underground Northern line. This was the first major railway to use electric traction. The world's first deep-level electric railway, it runs from the City of London, under the River Thames, to Stockwell in south London.[36]

The first practical AC electric locomotive was designed by Charles Brown, then working for Oerlikon, Zürich. In 1891, Brown had demonstrated long-distance power transmission, using three-phase AC, between a hydro-electric plant at Lauffen am Neckar and Frankfurt am Main West, a distance of 280 km (170 mi). Using experience he had gained while working for Jean Heilmann on steam-electric locomotive designs, Brown observed that three-phase motors had a higher power-to-weight ratio than DC motors and, because of the absence of a commutator, were simpler to manufacture and maintain.[b] However, they were much larger than the DC motors of the time and could not be mounted in underfloor bogies: they could only be carried within locomotive bodies.[38]

In 1894, Hungarian engineer Kálmán Kandó developed a new type 3-phase asynchronous electric drive motors and generators for electric locomotives. Kandó's early 1894 designs were first applied in a short three-phase AC tramway in Évian-les-Bains (France), which was constructed between 1896 and 1898.[39][40]

In 1896, Oerlikon installed the first commercial example of the system on the Lugano Tramway. Each 30-tonne locomotive had two 110 kW (150 hp) motors run by three-phase 750 V 40 Hz fed from double overhead lines. Three-phase motors run at a constant speed and provide regenerative braking, and are well suited to steeply graded routes, and the first main-line three-phase locomotives were supplied by Brown (by then in partnership with Walter Boveri) in 1899 on the 40 km Burgdorf–Thun line, Switzerland.

 
A prototype of a Ganz AC electric locomotive in Valtellina, Italy, 1901

Italian railways were the first in the world to introduce electric traction for the entire length of a main line rather than a short section. The 106 km Valtellina line was opened on 4 September 1902, designed by Kandó and a team from the Ganz works.[41][42] The electrical system was three-phase at 3 kV 15 Hz. In 1918,[43] Kandó invented and developed the rotary phase converter, enabling electric locomotives to use three-phase motors whilst supplied via a single overhead wire, carrying the simple industrial frequency (50 Hz) single phase AC of the high voltage national networks.[42]

An important contribution to the wider adoption of AC traction came from SNCF of France after World War II. The company conducted trials at AC 50 Hz, and established it as a standard. Following SNCF's successful trials, 50 Hz, now also called industrial frequency was adopted as standard for main-lines across the world.[44]

Diesel power introduced edit

 
Swiss & German co-production: world's first functional diesel–electric railcar 1914

Earliest recorded examples of an internal combustion engine for railway use included a prototype designed by William Dent Priestman, which was examined by Sir William Thomson in 1888 who described it as a "[Priestman oil engine] mounted upon a truck which is worked on a temporary line of rails to show the adaptation of a petroleum engine for locomotive purposes."[45][46] In 1894, a 20 hp (15 kW) two axle machine built by Priestman Brothers was used on the Hull Docks.[47]

In 1906, Rudolf Diesel, Adolf Klose and the steam and diesel engine manufacturer Gebrüder Sulzer founded Diesel-Sulzer-Klose GmbH to manufacture diesel-powered locomotives. Sulzer had been manufacturing diesel engines since 1898. The Prussian State Railways ordered a diesel locomotive from the company in 1909. The world's first diesel-powered locomotive was operated in the summer of 1912 on the Winterthur–Romanshorn railway in Switzerland, but was not a commercial success.[48] The locomotive weight was 95 tonnes and the power was 883 kW with a maximum speed of 100 km/h (62 mph).[49] Small numbers of prototype diesel locomotives were produced in a number of countries through the mid-1920s. The Soviet Union operated three experimental units of different designs since late 1925, though only one of them (the E el-2) proved technically viable.[50]

A significant breakthrough occurred in 1914, when Hermann Lemp, a General Electric electrical engineer, developed and patented a reliable direct current electrical control system (subsequent improvements were also patented by Lemp).[51] Lemp's design used a single lever to control both engine and generator in a coordinated fashion, and was the prototype for all diesel–electric locomotive control systems. In 1914, world's first functional diesel–electric railcars were produced for the Königlich-Sächsische Staatseisenbahnen (Royal Saxon State Railways) by Waggonfabrik Rastatt with electric equipment from Brown, Boveri & Cie and diesel engines from Swiss Sulzer AG. They were classified as DET 1 and DET 2 (de.wiki). The first regular used diesel-electric locomotives were switcher (shunter) locomotives. General Electric produced several small switching locomotives in the 1930s (the famous "44-tonner" switcher was introduced in 1940) Westinghouse Electric and Baldwin collaborated to build switching locomotives starting in 1929.

In 1929, the Canadian National Railways became the first North American railway to use diesels in mainline service with two units, 9000 and 9001, from Westinghouse.[52]

High-speed rail edit

Although steam and diesel services reaching speeds up to 200 km/h (120 mph) were started before the 1960s in Europe, they were not very successful.[citation needed]

 
0-Series Shinkansen, introduced in 1964, triggered the intercity train travel boom.

The first electrified high-speed rail Tōkaidō Shinkansen was introduced in 1964 between Tokyo and Osaka in Japan. Since then high-speed rail transport, functioning at speeds up to and above 300 km/h (190 mph), has been built in Japan, Spain, France, Germany, Italy, the People's Republic of China, Taiwan (Republic of China), the United Kingdom, South Korea, Scandinavia, Belgium and the Netherlands. The construction of many of these lines has resulted in the dramatic decline of short-haul flights and automotive traffic between connected cities, such as the London–Paris–Brussels corridor, Madrid–Barcelona, Milan–Rome–Naples, as well as many other major lines.[citation needed]

High-speed trains normally operate on standard gauge tracks of continuously welded rail on grade-separated right-of-way that incorporates a large turning radius in its design. While high-speed rail is most often designed for passenger travel, some high-speed systems also offer freight service.

Preservation edit

Since 1980, rail transport has changed dramatically, but a number of heritage railways continue to operate as part of living history to preserve and maintain old railway lines for services of tourist trains.

Trains edit

A train is a connected series of rail vehicles that move along the track. Propulsion for the train is provided by a separate locomotive or from individual motors in self-propelled multiple units. Most trains carry a revenue load, although non-revenue cars exist for the railway's own use, such as for maintenance-of-way purposes. The engine driver (engineer in North America) controls the locomotive or other power cars, although people movers and some rapid transits are under automatic control.

Haulage edit

Traditionally, trains are pulled using a locomotive. This involves one or more powered vehicles being located at the front of the train, providing sufficient tractive force to haul the weight of the full train. This arrangement remains dominant for freight trains and is often used for passenger trains. A push–pull train has the end passenger car equipped with a driver's cab so that the engine driver can remotely control the locomotive. This allows one of the locomotive-hauled train's drawbacks to be removed, since the locomotive need not be moved to the front of the train each time the train changes direction. A railroad car is a vehicle used for the haulage of either passengers or freight.

A multiple unit has powered wheels throughout the whole train. These are used for rapid transit and tram systems, as well as many both short- and long-haul passenger trains. A railcar is a single, self-powered car, and may be electrically propelled or powered by a diesel engine. Multiple units have a driver's cab at each end of the unit, and were developed following the ability to build electric motors and other engines small enough to fit under the coach. There are only a few freight multiple units, most of which are high-speed post trains.

Motive power edit

Steam locomotives are locomotives with a steam engine that provides adhesion. Coal, petroleum, or wood is burned in a firebox, boiling water in the boiler to create pressurized steam. The steam travels through the smokebox before leaving via the chimney or smoke stack. In the process, it powers a piston that transmits power directly through a connecting rod (US: main rod) and a crankpin (US: wristpin) on the driving wheel (US main driver) or to a crank on a driving axle. Steam locomotives have been phased out in most parts of the world for economical and safety reasons, although many are preserved in working order by heritage railways.

Electric locomotives draw power from a stationary source via an overhead wire or third rail. Some also or instead use a battery. In locomotives that are powered by high voltage alternating current, a transformer in the locomotive converts the high voltage, low current power to low voltage, high current used in the traction motors that power the wheels. Modern locomotives may use three-phase AC induction motors or direct current motors. Under certain conditions, electric locomotives are the most powerful traction.[citation needed] They are also the cheapest to run and provide less noise and no local air pollution.[citation needed] However, they require high capital investments both for the overhead lines and the supporting infrastructure, as well as the generating station that is needed to produce electricity. Accordingly, electric traction is used on urban systems, lines with high traffic and for high-speed rail.

Diesel locomotives use a diesel engine as the prime mover. The energy transmission may be either diesel-electric, diesel-mechanical or diesel-hydraulic but diesel-electric is dominant. Electro-diesel locomotives are built to run as diesel-electric on unelectrified sections and as electric locomotives on electrified sections.

Alternative methods of motive power include magnetic levitation, horse-drawn, cable, gravity, pneumatics and gas turbine.

Passenger trains edit

 
Interior view of a high-speed bullet train, manufactured in China

A passenger train stops at stations where passengers may embark and disembark. The oversight of the train is the duty of a guard/train manager/conductor. Passenger trains are part of public transport and often make up the stem of the service, with buses feeding to stations. Passenger trains provide long-distance intercity travel, daily commuter trips, or local urban transit services, operating with a diversity of vehicles, operating speeds, right-of-way requirements, and service frequency. Service frequencies are often expressed as a number of trains per hour (tph).[53] Passenger trains can usually can be into two types of operation, intercity railway and intracity transit. Whereas intercity railway involve higher speeds, longer routes, and lower frequency (usually scheduled), intracity transit involves lower speeds, shorter routes, and higher frequency (especially during peak hours).[54]

Intercity trains are long-haul trains that operate with few stops between cities. Trains typically have amenities such as a dining car. Some lines also provide over-night services with sleeping cars. Some long-haul trains have been given a specific name. Regional trains are medium distance trains that connect cities with outlying, surrounding areas, or provide a regional service, making more stops and having lower speeds. Commuter trains serve suburbs of urban areas, providing a daily commuting service. Airport rail links provide quick access from city centres to airports.

 
The VR Class Sm3 Pendolino high-speed train at the Central Railway Station of Tampere, Finland

High-speed rail are special inter-city trains that operate at much higher speeds than conventional railways, the limit being regarded at 200 to 350 kilometres per hour (120 to 220 mph). High-speed trains are used mostly for long-haul service and most systems are in Western Europe and East Asia. Magnetic levitation trains such as the Shanghai maglev train use under-riding magnets which attract themselves upward towards the underside of a guideway and this line has achieved somewhat higher peak speeds in day-to-day operation than conventional high-speed railways, although only over short distances. Due to their heightened speeds, route alignments for high-speed rail tend to have broader curves than conventional railways, but may have steeper grades that are more easily climbed by trains with large kinetic energy.

High kinetic energy translates to higher horsepower-to-ton ratios (e.g. 20 horsepower per short ton or 16 kilowatts per tonne); this allows trains to accelerate and maintain higher speeds and negotiate steep grades as momentum builds up and recovered in downgrades (reducing cut and fill and tunnelling requirements). Since lateral forces act on curves, curvatures are designed with the highest possible radius. All these features are dramatically different from freight operations, thus justifying exclusive high-speed rail lines if it is economically feasible.[54]

Higher-speed rail services are intercity rail services that have top speeds higher than conventional intercity trains but the speeds are not as high as those in the high-speed rail services. These services are provided after improvements to the conventional rail infrastructure to support trains that can operate safely at higher speeds.

Rapid transit is an intracity system built in large cities and has the highest capacity of any passenger transport system. It is usually grade-separated and commonly built underground or elevated. At street level, smaller trams can be used. Light rails are upgraded trams that have step-free access, their own right-of-way and sometimes sections underground. Monorail systems are elevated, medium-capacity systems. A people mover is a driverless, grade-separated train that serves only a few stations, as a shuttle. Due to the lack of uniformity of rapid transit systems, route alignment varies, with diverse rights-of-way (private land, side of road, street median) and geometric characteristics (sharp or broad curves, steep or gentle grades). For instance, the Chicago 'L' trains are designed with extremely short cars to negotiate the sharp curves in the Loop. New Jersey's PATH has similar-sized cars to accommodate curves in the trans-Hudson tunnels. San Francisco's BART operates large cars on its routes.[54]

Freight trains edit

 
Bulk cargo of minerals on a train

Freight trains carry cargo using freight cars specialized for the type of goods. Freight trains are very efficient, with economy of scale and high energy efficiency.[55] However, their use can be reduced by lack of flexibility, if there is need of transshipment at both ends of the trip due to lack of tracks to the points of pick-up and delivery. Authorities often encourage the use of cargo rail transport due to its efficiency and to reduce road traffic.[56]

Container trains have become widely used in many places for general freight, particularly in North America, where double stacking reduces costs. Containers can easily be transshipped between other modes, such as ships and trucks, and at breaks of gauge. Containers have succeeded the boxcar (wagon-load), where the cargo had to be loaded and unloaded into the train manually. The intermodal containerization of cargo has revolutionized the supply chain logistics industry, reducing shipping costs significantly. In Europe, the sliding wall wagon has largely superseded the ordinary covered wagons. Other types of cars include refrigerator cars, stock cars for livestock and autoracks for road vehicles. When rail is combined with road transport, a roadrailer will allow trailers to be driven onto the train, allowing for easy transition between road and rail.

Bulk handling represents a key advantage for rail transport. Low or even zero transshipment costs combined with energy efficiency and low inventory costs allow trains to handle bulk much cheaper than by road. Typical bulk cargo includes coal, ore, grains and liquids. Bulk is transported in open-topped cars, hopper cars and tank cars.

Infrastructure edit

 
Map of world railway network as of 2022

Right-of-way edit

Railway tracks are laid upon land owned or leased by the railway company. Owing to the desirability of maintaining modest grades, in hilly or mountainous terrain rails will often be laid in circuitous routes . Route length and grade requirements can be reduced by the use of alternating cuttings, bridges and tunnels – all of which can greatly increase the capital expenditures required to develop a right-of-way, while significantly reducing operating costs and allowing higher speeds on longer radius curves. In densely urbanised areas, railways are sometimes laid in tunnels to minimise the effects on existing properties.

Track edit

 
 
Left: Railway turnouts; Right: Chicago Transit Authority control box guides elevated Chicago 'L' north and southbound Purple and Brown lines intersecting with east and westbound Pink and Green lines and the looping Orange line above the Wells and Lake street intersection in the loop at an elevated right of way.

Track consists of two parallel steel rails, anchored perpendicular to members called sleepers (ties) of timber, concrete, steel, or plastic to maintain a consistent distance apart, or rail gauge. Other variations are also possible, such as "slab track", in which the rails are fastened to a concrete foundation resting on a prepared subsurface.

Rail gauges are usually categorized as standard gauge (used on approximately 70% of the world's existing railway lines), broad gauge, and narrow gauge.[57] In addition to the rail gauge, the tracks will be laid to conform with a loading gauge which defines the maximum height and width for railway vehicles and their loads to ensure safe passage through bridges, tunnels and other structures.

The track guides the conical, flanged wheels, keeping the cars on the track without active steering and therefore allowing trains to be much longer than road vehicles. The rails and ties are usually placed on a foundation made of compressed earth on top of which is placed a bed of ballast to distribute the load from the ties and to prevent the track from buckling as the ground settles over time under the weight of the vehicles passing above.

The ballast also serves as a means of drainage. Some more modern track in special areas is attached directly without ballast. Track may be prefabricated or assembled in place. By welding rails together to form lengths of continuous welded rail, additional wear and tear on rolling stock caused by the small surface gap at the joints between rails can be counteracted; this also makes for a quieter ride.

On curves, the outer rail may be at a higher level than the inner rail. This is called superelevation or cant. This reduces the forces tending to displace the track and makes for a more comfortable ride for standing livestock and standing or seated passengers. A given amount of superelevation is most effective over a limited range of speeds.

Points and switches – also known as turnouts – are the means of directing a train onto a diverging section of track. Laid similar to normal track, a point typically consists of a frog (common crossing), check rails and two switch rails. The switch rails may be moved left or right, under the control of the signalling system, to determine which path the train will follow.

Spikes in wooden ties can loosen over time, but split and rotten ties may be individually replaced with new wooden ties or concrete substitutes. Concrete ties can also develop cracks or splits, and can also be replaced individually. Should the rails settle due to soil subsidence, they can be lifted by specialized machinery and additional ballast tamped under the ties to level the rails.

Periodically, ballast must be removed and replaced with clean ballast to ensure adequate drainage. Culverts and other passages for water must be kept clear lest water is impounded by the trackbed, causing landslips. Where trackbeds are placed along rivers, additional protection is usually placed to prevent streambank erosion during times of high water. Bridges require inspection and maintenance, since they are subject to large surges of stress in a short period of time when a heavy train crosses.

Gauge incompatibility edit

The use of different track gauges in different regions of the world, and sometimes within the same country, can impede the movement of passengers and freight. Often elaborate transfer mechanisms are installed where two lines of different gauge meet to facilitate movement across the break of gauge. Countries with multiple gauges in use, such as India and Australia, have invested heavily to unify their rail networks. China is developing a modernized Eurasian Land Bridge to move goods by rail to Western Europe.

Train inspection systems edit

 
A Hot bearing detector with dragging equipment unit

The inspection of railway equipment is essential for the safe movement of trains. Many types of defect detectors are in use on the world's railroads. These devices use technologies that vary from a simplistic paddle and switch to infrared and laser scanning, and even ultrasonic audio analysis. Their use has avoided many rail accidents over the 70 years they have been used.

Signalling edit

 
Bardon Hill box in England (seen here in 2009) is a Midland Railway box dating from 1899, although the original mechanical lever frame has been replaced by electrical switches.

Railway signalling is a system used to control railway traffic safely to prevent trains from colliding. Being guided by fixed rails which generate low friction, trains are uniquely susceptible to collision since they frequently operate at speeds that do not enable them to stop quickly or within the driver's sighting distance; road vehicles, which encounter a higher level of friction between their rubber tyres and the road surface, have much shorter braking distances. Most forms of train control involve movement authority being passed from those responsible for each section of a rail network to the train crew. Not all methods require the use of signals, and some systems are specific to single track railways.

The signalling process is traditionally carried out in a signal box, a small building that houses the lever frame required for the signalman to operate switches and signal equipment. These are placed at various intervals along the route of a railway, controlling specified sections of track. More recent technological developments have made such operational doctrine superfluous, with the centralization of signalling operations to regional control rooms. This has been facilitated by the increased use of computers, allowing vast sections of track to be monitored from a single location. The common method of block signalling divides the track into zones guarded by combinations of block signals, operating rules, and automatic-control devices so that only one train may be in a block at any time.

Electrification edit

The electrification system provides electrical energy to the trains, so they can operate without a prime mover on board. This allows lower operating costs, but requires large capital investments along the lines. Mainline and tram systems normally have overhead wires, which hang from poles along the line. Grade-separated rapid transit sometimes use a ground third rail.

Power may be fed as direct (DC) or alternating current (AC). The most common DC voltages are 600 and 750 V for tram and rapid transit systems, and 1,500 and 3,000 V for mainlines. The two dominant AC systems are 15 kV and 25 kV.

Stations edit

 
Goods station in Lucerne, Switzerland

A railway station serves as an area where passengers can board and alight from trains. A goods station is a yard which is exclusively used for loading and unloading cargo. Large passenger stations have at least one building providing conveniences for passengers, such as purchasing tickets and food. Smaller stations typically only consist of a platform. Early stations were sometimes built with both passenger and goods facilities.[58]

Platforms are used to allow easy access to the trains, and are connected to each other via underpasses, footbridges and level crossings. Some large stations are built as culs-de-sac, with trains only operating out from one direction. Smaller stations normally serve local residential areas, and may have connection to feeder bus services. Large stations, in particular central stations, serve as the main public transport hub for the city, and have transfer available between rail services, and to rapid transit, tram or bus services.

Operations edit

Ownership edit

Since the 1980s, there has been an increasing trend to split up railway companies, with companies owning the rolling stock separated from those owning the infrastructure. This is particularly true in Europe, where this arrangement is required by the European Union. This has allowed open access by any train operator to any portion of the European railway network. In the UK, the railway track is state owned, with a public controlled body (Network Rail) running, maintaining and developing the track, while Train Operating Companies have run the trains since privatization in the 1990s.[59]

In the U.S., virtually all rail networks and infrastructure outside the Northeast corridor are privately owned by freight lines. Passenger lines, primarily Amtrak, operate as tenants on the freight lines. Consequently, operations must be closely synchronized and coordinated between freight and passenger railroads, with passenger trains often being dispatched by the host freight railroad. Due to this shared system, both are regulated by the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) and may follow the AREMA recommended practices for track work and AAR standards for vehicles.[54]

Financing edit

The main source of income for railway companies is from ticket revenue (for passenger transport) and shipment fees for cargo.[citation needed] Discounts and monthly passes are sometimes available for frequent travellers (e.g. season ticket and rail pass). Freight revenue may be sold per container slot or for a whole train. Sometimes, the shipper owns the cars and only rents the haulage. For passenger transport, advertisement income can be significant.

Governments may choose to give subsidies to rail operation, since rail transport has fewer externalities than other dominant modes of transport. If the railway company is state-owned, the state may simply provide direct subsidies in exchange for increased production. If operations have been privatised, several options are available. Some countries have a system where the infrastructure is owned by a government agency or company – with open access to the tracks for any company that meets safety requirements. In such cases, the state may choose to provide the tracks free of charge, or for a fee that does not cover all costs. This is seen as analogous to the government providing free access to roads. For passenger operations, a direct subsidy may be paid to a public-owned operator, or public service obligation tender may be held, and a time-limited contract awarded to the lowest bidder. Total EU rail subsidies amounted to €73 billion in 2005.[60]

Via Rail Canada and US passenger rail service Amtrak are private railroad companies chartered by their respective national governments. As private passenger services declined because of competition from cars and airlines, they became shareholders of Amtrak either with a cash entrance fee or relinquishing their locomotives and rolling stock. The government subsidises Amtrak by supplying start-up capital and making up for losses at the end of the fiscal year.[61][page needed]

Safety edit

 
According to Eurostat and the European Railway Agency, the fatality risk for passengers and occupants on European railways is 28 times lower when compared with car usage (based on data by EU-27 member nations, 2008–2010).[62][63]

Some trains travel faster than road vehicles. They are heavy and unable to deviate from the track, and have longer stopping distances. Possible accidents include derailment (jumping the track) and collisions with another train or a road vehicle, or with pedestrians at level crossings, which account for the majority of all rail accidents and casualties. To minimize the risk, the most important safety measures are strict operating rules, e.g. railway signalling, and gates or grade separation at crossings. Train whistles, bells, or horns warn of the presence of a train, while trackside signals maintain the distances between trains. Another method used to increase safety is the addition of platform screen doors to separate the platform from train tracks. These prevent unauthorised incursion on to the train tracks which can result in accidents that cause serious harm or death, as well as providing other benefits such as preventing litter build up on the tracks which can pose a fire risk.

On many high-speed inter-city networks, such as Japan's Shinkansen, the trains run on dedicated railway lines without any level crossings. This is an important element in the safety of the system as it effectively eliminates the potential for collision with automobiles, other vehicles, or pedestrians, and greatly reduces the probability of collision with other trains. Another benefit is that services on the inter-city network remain punctual.

Maintenance edit

As in any infrastructure asset, railways must keep up with periodic inspection and maintenance to minimise the effect of infrastructure failures that can disrupt freight revenue operations and passenger services. Because passengers are considered the most crucial cargo and usually operate at higher speeds, steeper grades, and higher capacity/frequency, their lines are especially important. Inspection practices include track geometry cars or walking inspection. Curve maintenance especially for transit services includes gauging, fastener tightening, and rail replacement.

Rail corrugation is a common issue with transit systems due to the high number of light-axle, wheel passages which result in grinding of the wheel/rail interface. Since maintenance may overlap with operations, maintenance windows (nighttime hours, off-peak hours, altering train schedules or routes) must be closely followed. In addition, passenger safety during maintenance work (inter-track fencing, proper storage of materials, track work notices, hazards of equipment near states) must be regarded at all times. At times, maintenance access problems can emerge due to tunnels, elevated structures, and congested cityscapes. Here, specialised equipment or smaller versions of conventional maintenance gear are used.[54]

Unlike highways or road networks where capacity is disaggregated into unlinked trips over individual route segments, railway capacity is fundamentally considered a network system. As a result, many components are causes and effects of system disruptions. Maintenance must acknowledge the vast array of a route's performance (type of train service, origination/destination, seasonal impacts), a line's capacity (length, terrain, number of tracks, types of train control), trains throughput (max speeds, acceleration/ deceleration rates), and service features with shared passenger-freight tracks (sidings, terminal capacities, switching routes, and design type).[54]

Social, economical, and energetic aspects edit

Energy edit

Transport by rail is an energy-efficient[64] but capital-intensive[65] means of mechanized land transport. The tracks provide smooth and hard surfaces on which the wheels of the train can roll with a relatively low level of friction.

A typical modern wagon can hold up to 113 tonnes (125 short tons) of freight on two four-wheel bogies. The track distributes the weight of the train evenly, allowing significantly greater loads per axle and wheel than in road transport, leading to greater energy efficiency. Trains have a smaller frontal area in relation to the load they are carrying, which reduces air resistance and thus energy usage.

In addition, the presence of track guiding the wheels allows for very long trains to be pulled by one or a few engines and driven by a single operator, even around curves, which allows for economies of scale in both manpower and energy use; by contrast, in road transport, more than two articulations causes fishtailing and makes the vehicle unsafe.

Energy efficiency edit

Considering only the energy spent to move the means of transport, and using the example of the urban area of Lisbon, electric trains seem to be on average 20 times more efficient than automobiles for transportation of passengers, if we consider energy spent per passenger-distance with similar occupation ratios.[66] Considering an automobile with a consumption of around 6 L/100 km (47 mpg‑imp; 39 mpg‑US) of fuel, the average car in Europe has an occupancy of around 1.2 passengers per automobile (occupation ratio around 24%) and that one litre of fuel amounts to about 8.8 kWh (32 MJ), equating to an average of 441 Wh (1,590 kJ) per passenger-km. This compares to a modern train with an average occupancy of 20% and a consumption of about 8.5 kW⋅h/km (31 MJ/km; 13.7 kW⋅h/mi), equating to 21.5 Wh (77 kJ) per passenger-km, 20 times less than the automobile.

Usage edit

 
A Sr1-pulled lumber train crossing the drawbridge along the Savonia railway in Kuopio, Finland

Due to these benefits, rail transport is a major form of passenger and freight transport in many countries.[65] It is ubiquitous in Europe, with an integrated network covering virtually the whole continent. In India, China, South Korea and Japan, many millions use trains as regular transport. In North America, freight rail transport is widespread and heavily used, but intercity passenger rail transport is relatively scarce outside the Northeast Corridor, due to increased preference of other modes, particularly automobiles and airplanes.[61][page needed][67] However, implementing new and improved ways such as making it easily accessible within neighborhoods can aid in reducing commuters from using private vehicles and airplanes.[68]

South Africa, northern Africa and Argentina have extensive rail networks, but some railways elsewhere in Africa and South America are isolated lines. Australia has a generally sparse network befitting its population density but has some areas with significant networks, especially in the southeast. In addition to the previously existing east–west transcontinental line in Australia, a line from north to south has been constructed. The highest railway in the world is the line to Lhasa, in Tibet,[69] partly running over permafrost territory. Western Europe has the highest railway density in the world and many individual trains there operate through several countries despite technical and organizational differences in each national network.

Social and economic impact edit

Modernization edit

Historically, railways have been considered central to modernity and ideas of progress.[70] The process of modernization in the 19th century involved a transition from a spatially oriented world to a time-oriented world. Timekeeping became of heightened importance, resulting in clock towers for railway stations, clocks in public places, and pocket watches for railway workers and travellers. Trains followed exact schedules and never left early, whereas in the premodern era, passenger ships left whenever the captain had enough passengers. In the premodern era, local time was set at noon, when the sun was at its highest; this changed with the introduction of standard time zones. Printed timetables were a convenience for travellers, but more elaborate timetables, called train orders, were essential for train crews, the maintenance workers, the station personnel, and for the repair and maintenance crews. The structure of railway timetables were later adapted for different uses, such as schedules for buses, ferries, and airplanes, for radio and television programmes, for school schedules, and for factory time clocks.[71]

The invention of the electrical telegraph in the early 19th century also was crucial for the development and operation of railroad networks. If bad weather disrupted the system, telegraphers relayed immediate corrections and updates throughout the system. Additionally, most railroads were single-track, with sidings and signals to allow lower priority trains to be sidetracked and have scheduled meets.

Nation-building edit

Scholars have linked railroads to successful nation-building efforts by states.[72]

Model of corporate management edit

According to historian Henry Adams, a railroad network needed:

the energies of a generation, for it required all the new machinery to be created – capital, banks, mines, furnaces, shops, power-houses, technical knowledge, mechanical population, together with a steady remodelling of social and political habits, ideas, and institutions to fit the new scale and suit the new conditions. The generation between 1865 and 1895 was already mortgaged to the railways, and no one knew it better than the generation itself.[73]

The impact can be examined through five aspects: shipping, finance, management, careers, and popular reaction.

Shipping freight and passengers edit

Railroads form an efficient network for shipping freight and passengers across a large national market; their development thus was beneficial to many aspects of a nation's economy, including manufacturing, retail and wholesale, agriculture, and finance. By the 1940s, the United States had an integrated national market comparable in size to that of Europe, but free of internal barriers or tariffs, and supported by a common language, financial system, and legal system.[74]

Financial system edit

Financing of railroads provided the basis for a dramatic expansion of the private (non-governmental) financial system. Construction of railroads was far more expensive than factories: in 1860, the combined total of railroad stocks and bonds was $1.8 billion; in 1897, it reached $10.6 billion (compared to a total national debt of $1.2 billion).[75]

Funding came from financiers in the Northeastern United States and from Europe, especially Britain.[76] About 10 percent of the funding came from the government, particularly in the form of land grants that were realized upon completion of a certain amount of trackage.[77] The emerging American financial system was based on railroad bonds, and by 1860, New York was the dominant financial market. The British invested heavily in railroads around the world, but nowhere more than in the United States; the total bond value reached about $3 billion by 1914. However, in 1914–1917, the British liquidated their American assets to pay for war supplies.[78][79]

Modern management edit

Railroad management designed complex systems that could handle far more complicated simultaneous relationships than those common in other industries at the time. Civil engineers became the senior management of railroads. The leading American innovators were the Western Railroad of Massachusetts and the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in the 1840s, the Erie Railroad in the 1850s, and the Pennsylvania Railroad in the 1860s.[80]

Career paths edit

The development of railroads led to the emergence of private-sector careers for both blue-collar workers and white-collar workers. Railroading became a lifetime career for young men; women were almost never hired. A typical career path would see a young man hired at age 18 as a shop labourer, be promoted to skilled mechanic at age 24, brakemen at 25, freight conductor at 27, and passenger conductor at age 57. White-collar career paths likewise were delineated: educated young men started in clerical or statistical work and moved up to station agents or bureaucrats at the divisional or central headquarters, acquiring additional knowledge, experience, and human capital at each level. Being very hard to replace, they were virtually guaranteed permanent jobs and provided with insurance and medical care.

Hiring, firing, and wage rates were set not by foremen, but by central administrators, to minimize favouritism and personality conflicts. Everything was done by the book, whereby an increasingly complex set of rules dictated to everyone exactly what should be done in every circumstance, and exactly what their rank and pay would be. By the 1880s, career railroaders began retiring, and pension systems were invented for them.[81]

Transportation edit

Railways contribute to social vibrancy and economic competitiveness by transporting multitudes of customers and workers to city centres and inner suburbs. Hong Kong has recognized rail as "the backbone of the public transit system" and as such developed their franchised bus system and road infrastructure in comprehensive alignment with their rail services.[82] China's large cities such as Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou recognize rail transit lines as the framework and bus lines as the main body to their metropolitan transportation systems.[83] The Japanese Shinkansen was built to meet the growing traffic demand in the "heart of Japan's industry and economy" situated on the Tokyo-Kobe line.[84]

Military role edit

 
German soldiers in a railway car on the way to the front in August 1914. The message on the car reads Von München über Metz nach Paris ("From Munich via Metz to Paris").

Rail transport can be important for military activity. During the 1860s, railways provided a means for rapid movement of troops and supplies during the American Civil War,[85] as well as in the Austro-Prussian and Franco-Prussian Wars[86] Throughout the 20th century, rail was a key element of war plans for rapid military mobilization, allowing for the quick and efficient transport of large numbers of reservists to their mustering-points, and infantry soldiers to the front lines.[87] So-called strategic railways were or are constructed for a primarily military purpose. The Western Front in France during World War I required many trainloads of munitions a day.[88] Conversely, owing to their strategic value, rail yards and bridges in Germany and occupied France were major targets of Allied air raids during World War II.[89] Rail transport and infrastructure continues to play an important role in present-day conflicts like the Russian invasion of Ukraine, where sabotage of railways in Belarus and in Russia also influenced the course of the war.

Positive impacts edit

Railways channel growth towards dense city agglomerations and along their arteries.[citation needed] This contrasts with highway expansion, indicative of the U.S. transportation policy post-World War II, which instead encourages development of suburbs at the periphery of metropolitan areas, contributing to increased vehicle miles travelled, carbon emissions, development of greenfield spaces, and depletion of natural reserves.[dubious ][citation needed] These arrangements revalue city spaces, local taxes,[90] housing values, and promotion of mixed use development.[91][92]

Negative impacts edit

There has also been some opposition to the development of railway networks. For instance, the arrival of railways and steam locomotives to Austria during the 1840s angered locals because of the noise, smell, and pollution caused by the trains and the damage to homes and the surrounding land caused by the engine's soot and fiery embers; and since most travel did not occur over long distances, few people utilized the new line.[93]

Pollution edit

A 2018 study found that the opening of the Beijing Metro caused a reduction in "most of the air pollutants concentrations (PM2.5, PM10, SO2, NO2, and CO) but had little effect on ozone pollution."[94]

Modern rail as economic development indicator edit

European development economists have argued that the existence of modern rail infrastructure is a significant indicator of a country's economic advancement: this perspective is illustrated notably through the Basic Rail Transportation Infrastructure Index (known as BRTI Index).[95]

Subsidies edit

In 2010, annual rail spending in China was ¥840 billion (US$167 billion in 2019), from 2014 to 2017 China had an annual target of ¥800 billion (US$158 billion in 2019) and planned to spend ¥3.5 trillion (US$29 trillion in 2019) over 2016–2020.[96]

The Indian Railways are subsidized by around ₹260 billion (US$5 billion in 2019), of which around 60% goes to commuter rail and short-haul trips.[97]

 
European rail subsidies in euros per passenger-km for 2008[98]

According to the 2017 European Railway Performance Index for intensity of use, quality of service and safety performance, the top tier European national rail systems consists of Switzerland, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Austria, Sweden, and France.[99] Performance levels reveal a positive correlation between public cost and a given railway system's performance, and also reveal differences in the value that countries receive in return for their public cost. Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, and Switzerland capture relatively high value for their money, while Luxembourg, Belgium, Latvia, Slovakia, Portugal, Romania, and Bulgaria underperform relative to the average ratio of performance to cost among European countries.[99]

Country Subsidy in billions of Euros Year
  Germany 17.0 2014[100]
  France 13.2 2013[101]
  Italy 8.1 2009[102]
   Switzerland 5.8 2012[103]
  Spain 5.1 2015[104]
  United Kingdom 4.5 2015[105]
  Belgium 3.4 2008[98]
  Netherlands 2.5 2014[106]
  Austria 2.3 2009[98]
  Denmark 1.7 2008[98]
  Sweden 1.6 2009[107]
  Poland 1.4 2008[108]
  Ireland 0.91 2008[108]

Russia edit

In 2016 Russian Railways received 94.9 billion roubles (around US$1.4 billion) from the government.[109]

North America edit

United States edit

In 2015, funding from the U.S. federal government for Amtrak was around US$1.4 billion.[110] By 2018, appropriated funding had increased to approximately US$1.9 billion.[111]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ According to [Norman Bradbury (November 2002). (PDF). Railwatch (Report). Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 October 2010.], railways are the safest on both a per-mile and per-hour basis, whereas air transport is safe only on a per-mile basis.
  2. ^ Heilmann evaluated both AC and DC electric transmission for his locomotives, but eventually settled on a design based on Thomas Edison's DC system.[37]

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Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Burton, Anthony. Railway Empire: How the British Gave Railways to the World (2018) excerpt
  • Chant, Christopher. The world's railways: the history and development of rail transport (Chartwell Books, 2001).
  • Faith, Nicholas. The World the Railways Made (2014) excerpt
  • Freeman, Michael. "The Railway as Cultural Metaphor: 'What Kind of Railway History?' Revisited." Journal of Transport History 20.2 (1999): 160–167.
  • Mukhopadhyay, Aparajita. Imperial Technology and 'Native'Agency: A Social History of Railways in Colonial India, 1850–1920 (Taylor & Francis, 2018).
  • Nock, O. S. Railways then and now: a world history (1975) online
  • Nock, O. S. World atlas of railways (1978) online
  • Nock, O. S. 150 years of main line railways (1980) online
  • Pirie, Gordon. "Tracking railway histories." Journal of Transport History 35.2 (2014): 242–248.
  • Sawai, Minoru, ed. The Development of Railway Technology in East Asia in Comparative Perspective (#Sringer, 2017)
  • Trains Magazine. The Historical Guide to North American Railroads (3rd ed. 2014)
  • Wolmar, Christian. Blood, iron, and gold: How the railroads transformed the world (Public Affairs, 2011).

External links edit

rail, transport, railway, railroad, redirect, here, other, uses, railway, disambiguation, railroad, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced. Railway and Railroad redirect here For other uses see Railway disambiguation and Railroad disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Rail transport news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Rail transport also known as train transport is a means of transport using wheeled vehicles running in tracks which usually consist of two parallel steel rails 1 Rail transport is one of the two primary means of land transport next to road transport It is used for about 8 of passenger and freight transport globally 2 thanks to its energy efficiency 2 and potentially high speed A train in Alaska transporting crude oil in March 2006Rolling stock on rails generally encounters lower frictional resistance than rubber tyred road vehicles allowing rail cars to be coupled into longer trains Power is usually provided by diesel or electrical locomotives While railway transport is capital intensive and less flexible than road transport it can carry heavy loads of passengers and cargo with greater energy efficiency and safety a Precursors of railways driven by human or animal power have existed since antiquity but modern rail transport began with the invention of the steam locomotive in Great Britain around 1800 The first passenger railway the Stockton and Darlington Railway opened in 1825 The quick spread of railways throughout Europe and North America following the 1830 opening of the first intercity connection in England was a key component of the Industrial Revolution The adoption of rail transport lowered shipping costs compared to water transport leading to national markets in which prices varied less from city to city In the 1880s railway electrification began with tramways and rapid transit systems Starting in the 1940s steam locomotives were replaced by diesel locomotives The first high speed railway system was introduced in Japan in 1964 and high speed rail lines now connect many cities in Europe East Asia and the eastern United States Following some decline due to competition from cars and airplanes rail transport has had a revival in recent decades due to road congestion and rising fuel prices as well as governments investing in rail as a means of reducing CO2 emissions Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre steam modern systems 1 1 1 Wooden rails introduced 1 1 2 Metal rails introduced 1 2 Steam power introduced 1 3 Electric power introduced 1 4 Diesel power introduced 1 5 High speed rail 1 6 Preservation 2 Trains 2 1 Haulage 2 2 Motive power 2 3 Passenger trains 2 4 Freight trains 3 Infrastructure 3 1 Right of way 3 2 Track 3 3 Gauge incompatibility 3 4 Train inspection systems 3 5 Signalling 3 6 Electrification 3 7 Stations 4 Operations 4 1 Ownership 4 2 Financing 4 3 Safety 4 4 Maintenance 5 Social economical and energetic aspects 5 1 Energy 5 1 1 Energy efficiency 5 2 Usage 5 3 Social and economic impact 5 3 1 Modernization 5 3 2 Nation building 5 3 3 Model of corporate management 5 3 3 1 Shipping freight and passengers 5 3 3 2 Financial system 5 3 3 3 Modern management 5 3 3 4 Career paths 5 3 4 Transportation 5 3 5 Military role 5 3 6 Positive impacts 5 3 7 Negative impacts 5 4 Pollution 5 5 Modern rail as economic development indicator 5 6 Subsidies 5 6 1 Russia 5 6 2 North America 5 6 2 1 United States 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory editMain article History of rail transport Smooth durable road surfaces have been made for wheeled vehicles since prehistoric times In some cases they were narrow and in pairs to support only the wheels That is they were wagonways or tracks Some had grooves or flanges or other mechanical means to keep the wheels on track For example evidence indicates that a 6 to 8 5 km long Diolkos paved trackway transported boats across the Isthmus of Corinth in Greece from around 600 BC The Diolkos was in use for over 650 years until at least the 1st century AD 3 Paved trackways were also later built in Roman Egypt 4 Pre steam modern systems edit See also Funicular Wagonway Tramway industrial and Plateway Wooden rails introduced edit nbsp A 16th century minecart an early example of unpowered rail transportIn 1515 Cardinal Matthaus Lang wrote a description of the Reisszug a funicular railway at the Hohensalzburg Fortress in Austria The line originally used wooden rails and a hemp haulage rope and was operated by human or animal power through a treadwheel 5 The line still exists and is operational although in updated form and is possibly the oldest operational railway 6 Wagonways or tramways using wooden rails hauled by horses started appearing in the 1550s to facilitate the transport of ore tubs to and from mines and soon became popular in Europe Such an operation was illustrated in Germany in 1556 by Georgius Agricola in his work De re metallica 7 This line used Hund carts with unflanged wheels running on wooden planks and a vertical pin on the truck fitting into the gap between the planks to keep it going the right way The miners called the wagons Hunde dogs from the noise they made on the tracks 8 There are many references to their use in central Europe in the 16th century 9 Such a transport system was later used by German miners at Caldbeck Cumbria England perhaps from the 1560s 10 A wagonway was built at Prescot near Liverpool sometime around 1600 possibly as early as 1594 Owned by Philip Layton the line carried coal from a pit near Prescot Hall to a terminus about one half mile 800 m away 11 A funicular railway was also made at Broseley in Shropshire some time before 1604 This carried coal for James Clifford from his mines down to the River Severn to be loaded onto barges and carried to riverside towns 12 The Wollaton Wagonway completed in 1604 by Huntingdon Beaumont has sometimes erroneously been cited as the earliest British railway It ran from Strelley to Wollaton near Nottingham 13 The Middleton Railway in Leeds which was built in 1758 later became the world s oldest operational railway other than funiculars albeit now in an upgraded form In 1764 the first railway in the Americas was built in Lewiston New York 14 Metal rails introduced edit nbsp A replica of a Little Eaton Tramway wagon the tracks are plateways nbsp A cast iron fishbelly edge rail manufactured by Outram at the Butterley Company for the Cromford and High Peak Railway in 1831 these are smooth edge rails for wheels with flanges In the late 1760s the Coalbrookdale Company began to fix plates of cast iron to the upper surface of the wooden rails This allowed a variation of gauge to be used At first only balloon loops could be used for turning but later movable points were taken into use that allowed for switching 15 A system was introduced in which unflanged wheels ran on L shaped metal plates which came to be known as plateways John Curr a Sheffield colliery manager invented this flanged rail in 1787 though the exact date of this is disputed The plate rail was taken up by Benjamin Outram for wagonways serving his canals manufacturing them at his Butterley ironworks In 1803 William Jessop opened the Surrey Iron Railway a double track plateway erroneously sometimes cited as world s first public railway in south London 16 William Jessop had earlier used a form of all iron edge rail and flanged wheels successfully for an extension to the Charnwood Forest Canal at Nanpantan Loughborough Leicestershire in 1789 In 1790 Jessop and his partner Outram began to manufacture edge rails Jessop became a partner in the Butterley Company in 1790 The first public edgeway thus also first public railway built was Lake Lock Rail Road in 1796 Although the primary purpose of the line was to carry coal it also carried passengers These two systems of constructing iron railways the L plate rail and the smooth edge rail continued to exist side by side until well into the early 19th century The flanged wheel and edge rail eventually proved its superiority and became the standard for railways Cast iron used in rails proved unsatisfactory because it was brittle and broke under heavy loads The wrought iron invented by John Birkinshaw in 1820 replaced cast iron Wrought iron usually simply referred to as iron was a ductile material that could undergo considerable deformation before breaking making it more suitable for iron rails But iron was expensive to produce until Henry Cort patented the puddling process in 1784 In 1783 Cort also patented the rolling process which was 15 times faster at consolidating and shaping iron than hammering 17 These processes greatly lowered the cost of producing iron and rails The next important development in iron production was hot blast developed by James Beaumont Neilson patented 1828 which considerably reduced the amount of coke fuel or charcoal needed to produce pig iron 18 Wrought iron was a soft material that contained slag or dross The softness and dross tended to make iron rails distort and delaminate and they lasted less than 10 years Sometimes they lasted as little as one year under high traffic All these developments in the production of iron eventually led to the replacement of composite wood iron rails with superior all iron rails The introduction of the Bessemer process enabling steel to be made inexpensively led to the era of great expansion of railways that began in the late 1860s Steel rails lasted several times longer than iron 19 20 21 Steel rails made heavier locomotives possible allowing for longer trains and improving the productivity of railroads 22 The Bessemer process introduced nitrogen into the steel which caused the steel to become brittle with age The open hearth furnace began to replace the Bessemer process near the end of the 19th century improving the quality of steel and further reducing costs Thus steel completely replaced the use of iron in rails becoming standard for all railways The first passenger horsecar or tram Swansea and Mumbles Railway was opened between Swansea and Mumbles in Wales in 1807 23 Horses remained the preferable mode for tram transport even after the arrival of steam engines until the end of the 19th century because they were cleaner compared to steam driven trams which caused smoke in city streets Steam power introduced edit See also Steam locomotive nbsp A replica of Trevithick s engine at the National Waterfront Museum in Swansea WalesIn 1784 James Watt a Scottish inventor and mechanical engineer patented a design for a steam locomotive Watt had improved the steam engine of Thomas Newcomen hitherto used to pump water out of mines and developed a reciprocating engine in 1769 capable of powering a wheel This was a large stationary engine powering cotton mills and a variety of machinery the state of boiler technology necessitated the use of low pressure steam acting upon a vacuum in the cylinder which required a separate condenser and an air pump Nevertheless as the construction of boilers improved Watt investigated the use of high pressure steam acting directly upon a piston raising the possibility of a smaller engine that might be used to power a vehicle Following his patent Watt s employee William Murdoch produced a working model of a self propelled steam carriage in that year 24 The first full scale working railway steam locomotive was built in the United Kingdom in 1804 by Richard Trevithick a British engineer born in Cornwall This used high pressure steam to drive the engine by one power stroke The transmission system employed a large flywheel to even out the action of the piston rod On 21 February 1804 the world s first steam powered railway journey took place when Trevithick s unnamed steam locomotive hauled a train along the tramway of the Penydarren ironworks near Merthyr Tydfil in South Wales 25 26 Trevithick later demonstrated a locomotive operating upon a piece of circular rail track in Bloomsbury London the Catch Me Who Can but never got beyond the experimental stage with railway locomotives not least because his engines were too heavy for the cast iron plateway track then in use 27 The first commercially successful steam locomotive was Matthew Murray s rack locomotive Salamanca built for the Middleton Railway in Leeds in 1812 This twin cylinder locomotive was light enough to not break the edge rails track and solved the problem of adhesion by a cog wheel using teeth cast on the side of one of the rails Thus it was also the first rack railway This was followed in 1813 by the locomotive Puffing Billy built by Christopher Blackett and William Hedley for the Wylam Colliery Railway the first successful locomotive running by adhesion only This was accomplished by the distribution of weight between a number of wheels Puffing Billy is now on display in the Science Museum in London and is the oldest locomotive in existence 28 29 In 1814 George Stephenson inspired by the early locomotives of Trevithick Murray and Hedley persuaded the manager of the Killingworth colliery where he worked to allow him to build a steam powered machine Stephenson played a pivotal role in the development and widespread adoption of the steam locomotive His designs considerably improved on the work of the earlier pioneers He built the locomotive Blucher also a successful flanged wheel adhesion locomotive In 1825 he built the locomotive Locomotion for the Stockton and Darlington Railway in the northeast of England which became the first public steam railway in the world in 1825 although it used both horse power and steam power on different runs In 1829 he built the locomotive Rocket which entered in and won the Rainhill Trials This success led to Stephenson establishing his company as the pre eminent builder of steam locomotives for railways in Great Britain and Ireland the United States and much of Europe 30 24 30 The first public railway which used only steam locomotives all the time was Liverpool and Manchester Railway built in 1830 31 Steam power continued to be the dominant power system in railways around the world for more than a century Electric power introduced edit See also Electric locomotive and Railway electrification system nbsp Lichterfelde tram 1882The first known electric locomotive was built in 1837 by chemist Robert Davidson of Aberdeen in Scotland and it was powered by galvanic cells batteries Thus it was also the earliest battery electric locomotive Davidson later built a larger locomotive named Galvani exhibited at the Royal Scottish Society of Arts Exhibition in 1841 The seven ton vehicle had two direct drive reluctance motors with fixed electromagnets acting on iron bars attached to a wooden cylinder on each axle and simple commutators It hauled a load of six tons at four miles per hour 6 kilometers per hour for a distance of one and a half miles 2 4 kilometres It was tested on the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway in September of the following year but the limited power from batteries prevented its general use It was destroyed by railway workers who saw it as a threat to their job security 32 33 34 Werner von Siemens demonstrated an electric railway in 1879 in Berlin The world s first electric tram line Gross Lichterfelde Tramway opened in Lichterfelde near Berlin Germany in 1881 It was built by Siemens The tram ran on 180 volts DC which was supplied by running rails In 1891 the track was equipped with an overhead wire and the line was extended to Berlin Lichterfelde West station The Volk s Electric Railway opened in 1883 in Brighton England The railway is still operational thus making it the oldest operational electric railway in the world Also in 1883 Modling and Hinterbruhl Tram opened near Vienna in Austria It was the first tram line in the world in regular service powered from an overhead line Five years later in the U S electric trolleys were pioneered in 1888 on the Richmond Union Passenger Railway using equipment designed by Frank J Sprague 35 The first use of electrification on a main line was on a four mile section of the Baltimore Belt Line of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad B amp O in 1895 connecting the main portion of the B amp O to the new line to New York through a series of tunnels around the edges of Baltimore s downtown Electricity quickly became the power supply of choice for subways abetted by the Sprague s invention of multiple unit train control in 1897 By the early 1900s most street railways were electrified nbsp Passengers waiting to board a tube train on the London Underground in the early 1900s sketch by unknown artist The London Underground the world s oldest underground railway opened in 1863 and it began operating electric services using a fourth rail system in 1890 on the City and South London Railway now part of the London Underground Northern line This was the first major railway to use electric traction The world s first deep level electric railway it runs from the City of London under the River Thames to Stockwell in south London 36 The first practical AC electric locomotive was designed by Charles Brown then working for Oerlikon Zurich In 1891 Brown had demonstrated long distance power transmission using three phase AC between a hydro electric plant at Lauffen am Neckar and Frankfurt am Main West a distance of 280 km 170 mi Using experience he had gained while working for Jean Heilmann on steam electric locomotive designs Brown observed that three phase motors had a higher power to weight ratio than DC motors and because of the absence of a commutator were simpler to manufacture and maintain b However they were much larger than the DC motors of the time and could not be mounted in underfloor bogies they could only be carried within locomotive bodies 38 In 1894 Hungarian engineer Kalman Kando developed a new type 3 phase asynchronous electric drive motors and generators for electric locomotives Kando s early 1894 designs were first applied in a short three phase AC tramway in Evian les Bains France which was constructed between 1896 and 1898 39 40 In 1896 Oerlikon installed the first commercial example of the system on the Lugano Tramway Each 30 tonne locomotive had two 110 kW 150 hp motors run by three phase 750 V 40 Hz fed from double overhead lines Three phase motors run at a constant speed and provide regenerative braking and are well suited to steeply graded routes and the first main line three phase locomotives were supplied by Brown by then in partnership with Walter Boveri in 1899 on the 40 km Burgdorf Thun line Switzerland nbsp A prototype of a Ganz AC electric locomotive in Valtellina Italy 1901Italian railways were the first in the world to introduce electric traction for the entire length of a main line rather than a short section The 106 km Valtellina line was opened on 4 September 1902 designed by Kando and a team from the Ganz works 41 42 The electrical system was three phase at 3 kV 15 Hz In 1918 43 Kando invented and developed the rotary phase converter enabling electric locomotives to use three phase motors whilst supplied via a single overhead wire carrying the simple industrial frequency 50 Hz single phase AC of the high voltage national networks 42 An important contribution to the wider adoption of AC traction came from SNCF of France after World War II The company conducted trials at AC 50 Hz and established it as a standard Following SNCF s successful trials 50 Hz now also called industrial frequency was adopted as standard for main lines across the world 44 Diesel power introduced edit See also Diesel locomotive and Dieselisation Rail transport nbsp Swiss amp German co production world s first functional diesel electric railcar 1914Earliest recorded examples of an internal combustion engine for railway use included a prototype designed by William Dent Priestman which was examined by Sir William Thomson in 1888 who described it as a Priestman oil engine mounted upon a truck which is worked on a temporary line of rails to show the adaptation of a petroleum engine for locomotive purposes 45 46 In 1894 a 20 hp 15 kW two axle machine built by Priestman Brothers was used on the Hull Docks 47 In 1906 Rudolf Diesel Adolf Klose and the steam and diesel engine manufacturer Gebruder Sulzer founded Diesel Sulzer Klose GmbH to manufacture diesel powered locomotives Sulzer had been manufacturing diesel engines since 1898 The Prussian State Railways ordered a diesel locomotive from the company in 1909 The world s first diesel powered locomotive was operated in the summer of 1912 on the Winterthur Romanshorn railway in Switzerland but was not a commercial success 48 The locomotive weight was 95 tonnes and the power was 883 kW with a maximum speed of 100 km h 62 mph 49 Small numbers of prototype diesel locomotives were produced in a number of countries through the mid 1920s The Soviet Union operated three experimental units of different designs since late 1925 though only one of them the E el 2 proved technically viable 50 A significant breakthrough occurred in 1914 when Hermann Lemp a General Electric electrical engineer developed and patented a reliable direct current electrical control system subsequent improvements were also patented by Lemp 51 Lemp s design used a single lever to control both engine and generator in a coordinated fashion and was the prototype for all diesel electric locomotive control systems In 1914 world s first functional diesel electric railcars were produced for the Koniglich Sachsische Staatseisenbahnen Royal Saxon State Railways by Waggonfabrik Rastatt with electric equipment from Brown Boveri amp Cie and diesel engines from Swiss Sulzer AG They were classified as DET 1 and DET 2 de wiki The first regular used diesel electric locomotives were switcher shunter locomotives General Electric produced several small switching locomotives in the 1930s the famous 44 tonner switcher was introduced in 1940 Westinghouse Electric and Baldwin collaborated to build switching locomotives starting in 1929 In 1929 the Canadian National Railways became the first North American railway to use diesels in mainline service with two units 9000 and 9001 from Westinghouse 52 High speed rail edit Main article High speed rail Although steam and diesel services reaching speeds up to 200 km h 120 mph were started before the 1960s in Europe they were not very successful citation needed nbsp 0 Series Shinkansen introduced in 1964 triggered the intercity train travel boom The first electrified high speed rail Tōkaidō Shinkansen was introduced in 1964 between Tokyo and Osaka in Japan Since then high speed rail transport functioning at speeds up to and above 300 km h 190 mph has been built in Japan Spain France Germany Italy the People s Republic of China Taiwan Republic of China the United Kingdom South Korea Scandinavia Belgium and the Netherlands The construction of many of these lines has resulted in the dramatic decline of short haul flights and automotive traffic between connected cities such as the London Paris Brussels corridor Madrid Barcelona Milan Rome Naples as well as many other major lines citation needed High speed trains normally operate on standard gauge tracks of continuously welded rail on grade separated right of way that incorporates a large turning radius in its design While high speed rail is most often designed for passenger travel some high speed systems also offer freight service Preservation edit See also Heritage railways Since 1980 rail transport has changed dramatically but a number of heritage railways continue to operate as part of living history to preserve and maintain old railway lines for services of tourist trains Trains editMain article Train A train is a connected series of rail vehicles that move along the track Propulsion for the train is provided by a separate locomotive or from individual motors in self propelled multiple units Most trains carry a revenue load although non revenue cars exist for the railway s own use such as for maintenance of way purposes The engine driver engineer in North America controls the locomotive or other power cars although people movers and some rapid transits are under automatic control Haulage edit Traditionally trains are pulled using a locomotive This involves one or more powered vehicles being located at the front of the train providing sufficient tractive force to haul the weight of the full train This arrangement remains dominant for freight trains and is often used for passenger trains A push pull train has the end passenger car equipped with a driver s cab so that the engine driver can remotely control the locomotive This allows one of the locomotive hauled train s drawbacks to be removed since the locomotive need not be moved to the front of the train each time the train changes direction A railroad car is a vehicle used for the haulage of either passengers or freight A multiple unit has powered wheels throughout the whole train These are used for rapid transit and tram systems as well as many both short and long haul passenger trains A railcar is a single self powered car and may be electrically propelled or powered by a diesel engine Multiple units have a driver s cab at each end of the unit and were developed following the ability to build electric motors and other engines small enough to fit under the coach There are only a few freight multiple units most of which are high speed post trains Motive power edit Steam locomotives are locomotives with a steam engine that provides adhesion Coal petroleum or wood is burned in a firebox boiling water in the boiler to create pressurized steam The steam travels through the smokebox before leaving via the chimney or smoke stack In the process it powers a piston that transmits power directly through a connecting rod US main rod and a crankpin US wristpin on the driving wheel US main driver or to a crank on a driving axle Steam locomotives have been phased out in most parts of the world for economical and safety reasons although many are preserved in working order by heritage railways Electric locomotives draw power from a stationary source via an overhead wire or third rail Some also or instead use a battery In locomotives that are powered by high voltage alternating current a transformer in the locomotive converts the high voltage low current power to low voltage high current used in the traction motors that power the wheels Modern locomotives may use three phase AC induction motors or direct current motors Under certain conditions electric locomotives are the most powerful traction citation needed They are also the cheapest to run and provide less noise and no local air pollution citation needed However they require high capital investments both for the overhead lines and the supporting infrastructure as well as the generating station that is needed to produce electricity Accordingly electric traction is used on urban systems lines with high traffic and for high speed rail Diesel locomotives use a diesel engine as the prime mover The energy transmission may be either diesel electric diesel mechanical or diesel hydraulic but diesel electric is dominant Electro diesel locomotives are built to run as diesel electric on unelectrified sections and as electric locomotives on electrified sections Alternative methods of motive power include magnetic levitation horse drawn cable gravity pneumatics and gas turbine Passenger trains edit Main article Passenger train nbsp Interior view of a high speed bullet train manufactured in ChinaA passenger train stops at stations where passengers may embark and disembark The oversight of the train is the duty of a guard train manager conductor Passenger trains are part of public transport and often make up the stem of the service with buses feeding to stations Passenger trains provide long distance intercity travel daily commuter trips or local urban transit services operating with a diversity of vehicles operating speeds right of way requirements and service frequency Service frequencies are often expressed as a number of trains per hour tph 53 Passenger trains can usually can be into two types of operation intercity railway and intracity transit Whereas intercity railway involve higher speeds longer routes and lower frequency usually scheduled intracity transit involves lower speeds shorter routes and higher frequency especially during peak hours 54 Intercity trains are long haul trains that operate with few stops between cities Trains typically have amenities such as a dining car Some lines also provide over night services with sleeping cars Some long haul trains have been given a specific name Regional trains are medium distance trains that connect cities with outlying surrounding areas or provide a regional service making more stops and having lower speeds Commuter trains serve suburbs of urban areas providing a daily commuting service Airport rail links provide quick access from city centres to airports nbsp The VR Class Sm3 Pendolino high speed train at the Central Railway Station of Tampere FinlandHigh speed rail are special inter city trains that operate at much higher speeds than conventional railways the limit being regarded at 200 to 350 kilometres per hour 120 to 220 mph High speed trains are used mostly for long haul service and most systems are in Western Europe and East Asia Magnetic levitation trains such as the Shanghai maglev train use under riding magnets which attract themselves upward towards the underside of a guideway and this line has achieved somewhat higher peak speeds in day to day operation than conventional high speed railways although only over short distances Due to their heightened speeds route alignments for high speed rail tend to have broader curves than conventional railways but may have steeper grades that are more easily climbed by trains with large kinetic energy High kinetic energy translates to higher horsepower to ton ratios e g 20 horsepower per short ton or 16 kilowatts per tonne this allows trains to accelerate and maintain higher speeds and negotiate steep grades as momentum builds up and recovered in downgrades reducing cut and fill and tunnelling requirements Since lateral forces act on curves curvatures are designed with the highest possible radius All these features are dramatically different from freight operations thus justifying exclusive high speed rail lines if it is economically feasible 54 Higher speed rail services are intercity rail services that have top speeds higher than conventional intercity trains but the speeds are not as high as those in the high speed rail services These services are provided after improvements to the conventional rail infrastructure to support trains that can operate safely at higher speeds Rapid transit is an intracity system built in large cities and has the highest capacity of any passenger transport system It is usually grade separated and commonly built underground or elevated At street level smaller trams can be used Light rails are upgraded trams that have step free access their own right of way and sometimes sections underground Monorail systems are elevated medium capacity systems A people mover is a driverless grade separated train that serves only a few stations as a shuttle Due to the lack of uniformity of rapid transit systems route alignment varies with diverse rights of way private land side of road street median and geometric characteristics sharp or broad curves steep or gentle grades For instance the Chicago L trains are designed with extremely short cars to negotiate the sharp curves in the Loop New Jersey s PATH has similar sized cars to accommodate curves in the trans Hudson tunnels San Francisco s BART operates large cars on its routes 54 Freight trains edit Main article Rail freight transport nbsp Bulk cargo of minerals on a trainFreight trains carry cargo using freight cars specialized for the type of goods Freight trains are very efficient with economy of scale and high energy efficiency 55 However their use can be reduced by lack of flexibility if there is need of transshipment at both ends of the trip due to lack of tracks to the points of pick up and delivery Authorities often encourage the use of cargo rail transport due to its efficiency and to reduce road traffic 56 Container trains have become widely used in many places for general freight particularly in North America where double stacking reduces costs Containers can easily be transshipped between other modes such as ships and trucks and at breaks of gauge Containers have succeeded the boxcar wagon load where the cargo had to be loaded and unloaded into the train manually The intermodal containerization of cargo has revolutionized the supply chain logistics industry reducing shipping costs significantly In Europe the sliding wall wagon has largely superseded the ordinary covered wagons Other types of cars include refrigerator cars stock cars for livestock and autoracks for road vehicles When rail is combined with road transport a roadrailer will allow trailers to be driven onto the train allowing for easy transition between road and rail Bulk handling represents a key advantage for rail transport Low or even zero transshipment costs combined with energy efficiency and low inventory costs allow trains to handle bulk much cheaper than by road Typical bulk cargo includes coal ore grains and liquids Bulk is transported in open topped cars hopper cars and tank cars Infrastructure edit nbsp Map of world railway network as of 2022Right of way edit Main article Right of way transportation Railway tracks are laid upon land owned or leased by the railway company Owing to the desirability of maintaining modest grades in hilly or mountainous terrain rails will often be laid in circuitous routes Route length and grade requirements can be reduced by the use of alternating cuttings bridges and tunnels all of which can greatly increase the capital expenditures required to develop a right of way while significantly reducing operating costs and allowing higher speeds on longer radius curves In densely urbanised areas railways are sometimes laid in tunnels to minimise the effects on existing properties Track edit Main article Track nbsp nbsp Left Railway turnouts Right Chicago Transit Authority control box guides elevated Chicago L north and southbound Purple and Brown lines intersecting with east and westbound Pink and Green lines and the looping Orange line above the Wells and Lake street intersection in the loop at an elevated right of way Track consists of two parallel steel rails anchored perpendicular to members called sleepers ties of timber concrete steel or plastic to maintain a consistent distance apart or rail gauge Other variations are also possible such as slab track in which the rails are fastened to a concrete foundation resting on a prepared subsurface Rail gauges are usually categorized as standard gauge used on approximately 70 of the world s existing railway lines broad gauge and narrow gauge 57 In addition to the rail gauge the tracks will be laid to conform with a loading gauge which defines the maximum height and width for railway vehicles and their loads to ensure safe passage through bridges tunnels and other structures The track guides the conical flanged wheels keeping the cars on the track without active steering and therefore allowing trains to be much longer than road vehicles The rails and ties are usually placed on a foundation made of compressed earth on top of which is placed a bed of ballast to distribute the load from the ties and to prevent the track from buckling as the ground settles over time under the weight of the vehicles passing above The ballast also serves as a means of drainage Some more modern track in special areas is attached directly without ballast Track may be prefabricated or assembled in place By welding rails together to form lengths of continuous welded rail additional wear and tear on rolling stock caused by the small surface gap at the joints between rails can be counteracted this also makes for a quieter ride On curves the outer rail may be at a higher level than the inner rail This is called superelevation or cant This reduces the forces tending to displace the track and makes for a more comfortable ride for standing livestock and standing or seated passengers A given amount of superelevation is most effective over a limited range of speeds Points and switches also known as turnouts are the means of directing a train onto a diverging section of track Laid similar to normal track a point typically consists of a frog common crossing check rails and two switch rails The switch rails may be moved left or right under the control of the signalling system to determine which path the train will follow Spikes in wooden ties can loosen over time but split and rotten ties may be individually replaced with new wooden ties or concrete substitutes Concrete ties can also develop cracks or splits and can also be replaced individually Should the rails settle due to soil subsidence they can be lifted by specialized machinery and additional ballast tamped under the ties to level the rails Periodically ballast must be removed and replaced with clean ballast to ensure adequate drainage Culverts and other passages for water must be kept clear lest water is impounded by the trackbed causing landslips Where trackbeds are placed along rivers additional protection is usually placed to prevent streambank erosion during times of high water Bridges require inspection and maintenance since they are subject to large surges of stress in a short period of time when a heavy train crosses Gauge incompatibility edit Main article Break of gauge The use of different track gauges in different regions of the world and sometimes within the same country can impede the movement of passengers and freight Often elaborate transfer mechanisms are installed where two lines of different gauge meet to facilitate movement across the break of gauge Countries with multiple gauges in use such as India and Australia have invested heavily to unify their rail networks China is developing a modernized Eurasian Land Bridge to move goods by rail to Western Europe Train inspection systems edit Main article Train inspection system nbsp A Hot bearing detector with dragging equipment unitThe inspection of railway equipment is essential for the safe movement of trains Many types of defect detectors are in use on the world s railroads These devices use technologies that vary from a simplistic paddle and switch to infrared and laser scanning and even ultrasonic audio analysis Their use has avoided many rail accidents over the 70 years they have been used Signalling edit nbsp Bardon Hill box in England seen here in 2009 is a Midland Railway box dating from 1899 although the original mechanical lever frame has been replaced by electrical switches Main article Railway signalling Railway signalling is a system used to control railway traffic safely to prevent trains from colliding Being guided by fixed rails which generate low friction trains are uniquely susceptible to collision since they frequently operate at speeds that do not enable them to stop quickly or within the driver s sighting distance road vehicles which encounter a higher level of friction between their rubber tyres and the road surface have much shorter braking distances Most forms of train control involve movement authority being passed from those responsible for each section of a rail network to the train crew Not all methods require the use of signals and some systems are specific to single track railways The signalling process is traditionally carried out in a signal box a small building that houses the lever frame required for the signalman to operate switches and signal equipment These are placed at various intervals along the route of a railway controlling specified sections of track More recent technological developments have made such operational doctrine superfluous with the centralization of signalling operations to regional control rooms This has been facilitated by the increased use of computers allowing vast sections of track to be monitored from a single location The common method of block signalling divides the track into zones guarded by combinations of block signals operating rules and automatic control devices so that only one train may be in a block at any time Electrification edit Main article Railway electrification system The electrification system provides electrical energy to the trains so they can operate without a prime mover on board This allows lower operating costs but requires large capital investments along the lines Mainline and tram systems normally have overhead wires which hang from poles along the line Grade separated rapid transit sometimes use a ground third rail Power may be fed as direct DC or alternating current AC The most common DC voltages are 600 and 750 V for tram and rapid transit systems and 1 500 and 3 000 V for mainlines The two dominant AC systems are 15 kV and 25 kV Stations edit Main article Train station nbsp Goods station in Lucerne SwitzerlandA railway station serves as an area where passengers can board and alight from trains A goods station is a yard which is exclusively used for loading and unloading cargo Large passenger stations have at least one building providing conveniences for passengers such as purchasing tickets and food Smaller stations typically only consist of a platform Early stations were sometimes built with both passenger and goods facilities 58 Platforms are used to allow easy access to the trains and are connected to each other via underpasses footbridges and level crossings Some large stations are built as culs de sac with trains only operating out from one direction Smaller stations normally serve local residential areas and may have connection to feeder bus services Large stations in particular central stations serve as the main public transport hub for the city and have transfer available between rail services and to rapid transit tram or bus services Operations editOwnership edit Since the 1980s there has been an increasing trend to split up railway companies with companies owning the rolling stock separated from those owning the infrastructure This is particularly true in Europe where this arrangement is required by the European Union This has allowed open access by any train operator to any portion of the European railway network In the UK the railway track is state owned with a public controlled body Network Rail running maintaining and developing the track while Train Operating Companies have run the trains since privatization in the 1990s 59 In the U S virtually all rail networks and infrastructure outside the Northeast corridor are privately owned by freight lines Passenger lines primarily Amtrak operate as tenants on the freight lines Consequently operations must be closely synchronized and coordinated between freight and passenger railroads with passenger trains often being dispatched by the host freight railroad Due to this shared system both are regulated by the Federal Railroad Administration FRA and may follow the AREMA recommended practices for track work and AAR standards for vehicles 54 Financing edit The main source of income for railway companies is from ticket revenue for passenger transport and shipment fees for cargo citation needed Discounts and monthly passes are sometimes available for frequent travellers e g season ticket and rail pass Freight revenue may be sold per container slot or for a whole train Sometimes the shipper owns the cars and only rents the haulage For passenger transport advertisement income can be significant Governments may choose to give subsidies to rail operation since rail transport has fewer externalities than other dominant modes of transport If the railway company is state owned the state may simply provide direct subsidies in exchange for increased production If operations have been privatised several options are available Some countries have a system where the infrastructure is owned by a government agency or company with open access to the tracks for any company that meets safety requirements In such cases the state may choose to provide the tracks free of charge or for a fee that does not cover all costs This is seen as analogous to the government providing free access to roads For passenger operations a direct subsidy may be paid to a public owned operator or public service obligation tender may be held and a time limited contract awarded to the lowest bidder Total EU rail subsidies amounted to 73 billion in 2005 60 Via Rail Canada and US passenger rail service Amtrak are private railroad companies chartered by their respective national governments As private passenger services declined because of competition from cars and airlines they became shareholders of Amtrak either with a cash entrance fee or relinquishing their locomotives and rolling stock The government subsidises Amtrak by supplying start up capital and making up for losses at the end of the fiscal year 61 page needed Safety edit nbsp According to Eurostat and the European Railway Agency the fatality risk for passengers and occupants on European railways is 28 times lower when compared with car usage based on data by EU 27 member nations 2008 2010 62 63 Some trains travel faster than road vehicles They are heavy and unable to deviate from the track and have longer stopping distances Possible accidents include derailment jumping the track and collisions with another train or a road vehicle or with pedestrians at level crossings which account for the majority of all rail accidents and casualties To minimize the risk the most important safety measures are strict operating rules e g railway signalling and gates or grade separation at crossings Train whistles bells or horns warn of the presence of a train while trackside signals maintain the distances between trains Another method used to increase safety is the addition of platform screen doors to separate the platform from train tracks These prevent unauthorised incursion on to the train tracks which can result in accidents that cause serious harm or death as well as providing other benefits such as preventing litter build up on the tracks which can pose a fire risk On many high speed inter city networks such as Japan s Shinkansen the trains run on dedicated railway lines without any level crossings This is an important element in the safety of the system as it effectively eliminates the potential for collision with automobiles other vehicles or pedestrians and greatly reduces the probability of collision with other trains Another benefit is that services on the inter city network remain punctual Maintenance edit As in any infrastructure asset railways must keep up with periodic inspection and maintenance to minimise the effect of infrastructure failures that can disrupt freight revenue operations and passenger services Because passengers are considered the most crucial cargo and usually operate at higher speeds steeper grades and higher capacity frequency their lines are especially important Inspection practices include track geometry cars or walking inspection Curve maintenance especially for transit services includes gauging fastener tightening and rail replacement Rail corrugation is a common issue with transit systems due to the high number of light axle wheel passages which result in grinding of the wheel rail interface Since maintenance may overlap with operations maintenance windows nighttime hours off peak hours altering train schedules or routes must be closely followed In addition passenger safety during maintenance work inter track fencing proper storage of materials track work notices hazards of equipment near states must be regarded at all times At times maintenance access problems can emerge due to tunnels elevated structures and congested cityscapes Here specialised equipment or smaller versions of conventional maintenance gear are used 54 Unlike highways or road networks where capacity is disaggregated into unlinked trips over individual route segments railway capacity is fundamentally considered a network system As a result many components are causes and effects of system disruptions Maintenance must acknowledge the vast array of a route s performance type of train service origination destination seasonal impacts a line s capacity length terrain number of tracks types of train control trains throughput max speeds acceleration deceleration rates and service features with shared passenger freight tracks sidings terminal capacities switching routes and design type 54 Social economical and energetic aspects editEnergy edit Transport by rail is an energy efficient 64 but capital intensive 65 means of mechanized land transport The tracks provide smooth and hard surfaces on which the wheels of the train can roll with a relatively low level of friction A typical modern wagon can hold up to 113 tonnes 125 short tons of freight on two four wheel bogies The track distributes the weight of the train evenly allowing significantly greater loads per axle and wheel than in road transport leading to greater energy efficiency Trains have a smaller frontal area in relation to the load they are carrying which reduces air resistance and thus energy usage In addition the presence of track guiding the wheels allows for very long trains to be pulled by one or a few engines and driven by a single operator even around curves which allows for economies of scale in both manpower and energy use by contrast in road transport more than two articulations causes fishtailing and makes the vehicle unsafe Energy efficiency edit Main article Energy efficiency in transportation Trains Considering only the energy spent to move the means of transport and using the example of the urban area of Lisbon electric trains seem to be on average 20 times more efficient than automobiles for transportation of passengers if we consider energy spent per passenger distance with similar occupation ratios 66 Considering an automobile with a consumption of around 6 L 100 km 47 mpg imp 39 mpg US of fuel the average car in Europe has an occupancy of around 1 2 passengers per automobile occupation ratio around 24 and that one litre of fuel amounts to about 8 8 kWh 32 MJ equating to an average of 441 Wh 1 590 kJ per passenger km This compares to a modern train with an average occupancy of 20 and a consumption of about 8 5 kW h km 31 MJ km 13 7 kW h mi equating to 21 5 Wh 77 kJ per passenger km 20 times less than the automobile Usage edit nbsp A Sr1 pulled lumber train crossing the drawbridge along the Savonia railway in Kuopio FinlandDue to these benefits rail transport is a major form of passenger and freight transport in many countries 65 It is ubiquitous in Europe with an integrated network covering virtually the whole continent In India China South Korea and Japan many millions use trains as regular transport In North America freight rail transport is widespread and heavily used but intercity passenger rail transport is relatively scarce outside the Northeast Corridor due to increased preference of other modes particularly automobiles and airplanes 61 page needed 67 However implementing new and improved ways such as making it easily accessible within neighborhoods can aid in reducing commuters from using private vehicles and airplanes 68 South Africa northern Africa and Argentina have extensive rail networks but some railways elsewhere in Africa and South America are isolated lines Australia has a generally sparse network befitting its population density but has some areas with significant networks especially in the southeast In addition to the previously existing east west transcontinental line in Australia a line from north to south has been constructed The highest railway in the world is the line to Lhasa in Tibet 69 partly running over permafrost territory Western Europe has the highest railway density in the world and many individual trains there operate through several countries despite technical and organizational differences in each national network Social and economic impact edit Modernization edit Historically railways have been considered central to modernity and ideas of progress 70 The process of modernization in the 19th century involved a transition from a spatially oriented world to a time oriented world Timekeeping became of heightened importance resulting in clock towers for railway stations clocks in public places and pocket watches for railway workers and travellers Trains followed exact schedules and never left early whereas in the premodern era passenger ships left whenever the captain had enough passengers In the premodern era local time was set at noon when the sun was at its highest this changed with the introduction of standard time zones Printed timetables were a convenience for travellers but more elaborate timetables called train orders were essential for train crews the maintenance workers the station personnel and for the repair and maintenance crews The structure of railway timetables were later adapted for different uses such as schedules for buses ferries and airplanes for radio and television programmes for school schedules and for factory time clocks 71 The invention of the electrical telegraph in the early 19th century also was crucial for the development and operation of railroad networks If bad weather disrupted the system telegraphers relayed immediate corrections and updates throughout the system Additionally most railroads were single track with sidings and signals to allow lower priority trains to be sidetracked and have scheduled meets Nation building edit Scholars have linked railroads to successful nation building efforts by states 72 Model of corporate management edit According to historian Henry Adams a railroad network needed the energies of a generation for it required all the new machinery to be created capital banks mines furnaces shops power houses technical knowledge mechanical population together with a steady remodelling of social and political habits ideas and institutions to fit the new scale and suit the new conditions The generation between 1865 and 1895 was already mortgaged to the railways and no one knew it better than the generation itself 73 The impact can be examined through five aspects shipping finance management careers and popular reaction Shipping freight and passengers edit Railroads form an efficient network for shipping freight and passengers across a large national market their development thus was beneficial to many aspects of a nation s economy including manufacturing retail and wholesale agriculture and finance By the 1940s the United States had an integrated national market comparable in size to that of Europe but free of internal barriers or tariffs and supported by a common language financial system and legal system 74 Financial system edit Financing of railroads provided the basis for a dramatic expansion of the private non governmental financial system Construction of railroads was far more expensive than factories in 1860 the combined total of railroad stocks and bonds was 1 8 billion in 1897 it reached 10 6 billion compared to a total national debt of 1 2 billion 75 Funding came from financiers in the Northeastern United States and from Europe especially Britain 76 About 10 percent of the funding came from the government particularly in the form of land grants that were realized upon completion of a certain amount of trackage 77 The emerging American financial system was based on railroad bonds and by 1860 New York was the dominant financial market The British invested heavily in railroads around the world but nowhere more than in the United States the total bond value reached about 3 billion by 1914 However in 1914 1917 the British liquidated their American assets to pay for war supplies 78 79 Modern management edit Railroad management designed complex systems that could handle far more complicated simultaneous relationships than those common in other industries at the time Civil engineers became the senior management of railroads The leading American innovators were the Western Railroad of Massachusetts and the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in the 1840s the Erie Railroad in the 1850s and the Pennsylvania Railroad in the 1860s 80 Career paths edit The development of railroads led to the emergence of private sector careers for both blue collar workers and white collar workers Railroading became a lifetime career for young men women were almost never hired A typical career path would see a young man hired at age 18 as a shop labourer be promoted to skilled mechanic at age 24 brakemen at 25 freight conductor at 27 and passenger conductor at age 57 White collar career paths likewise were delineated educated young men started in clerical or statistical work and moved up to station agents or bureaucrats at the divisional or central headquarters acquiring additional knowledge experience and human capital at each level Being very hard to replace they were virtually guaranteed permanent jobs and provided with insurance and medical care Hiring firing and wage rates were set not by foremen but by central administrators to minimize favouritism and personality conflicts Everything was done by the book whereby an increasingly complex set of rules dictated to everyone exactly what should be done in every circumstance and exactly what their rank and pay would be By the 1880s career railroaders began retiring and pension systems were invented for them 81 Transportation edit Railways contribute to social vibrancy and economic competitiveness by transporting multitudes of customers and workers to city centres and inner suburbs Hong Kong has recognized rail as the backbone of the public transit system and as such developed their franchised bus system and road infrastructure in comprehensive alignment with their rail services 82 China s large cities such as Beijing Shanghai and Guangzhou recognize rail transit lines as the framework and bus lines as the main body to their metropolitan transportation systems 83 The Japanese Shinkansen was built to meet the growing traffic demand in the heart of Japan s industry and economy situated on the Tokyo Kobe line 84 Military role edit nbsp German soldiers in a railway car on the way to the front in August 1914 The message on the car reads Von Munchen uber Metz nach Paris From Munich via Metz to Paris Rail transport can be important for military activity During the 1860s railways provided a means for rapid movement of troops and supplies during the American Civil War 85 as well as in the Austro Prussian and Franco Prussian Wars 86 Throughout the 20th century rail was a key element of war plans for rapid military mobilization allowing for the quick and efficient transport of large numbers of reservists to their mustering points and infantry soldiers to the front lines 87 So called strategic railways were or are constructed for a primarily military purpose The Western Front in France during World War I required many trainloads of munitions a day 88 Conversely owing to their strategic value rail yards and bridges in Germany and occupied France were major targets of Allied air raids during World War II 89 Rail transport and infrastructure continues to play an important role in present day conflicts like the Russian invasion of Ukraine where sabotage of railways in Belarus and in Russia also influenced the course of the war Positive impacts edit Railways channel growth towards dense city agglomerations and along their arteries citation needed This contrasts with highway expansion indicative of the U S transportation policy post World War II which instead encourages development of suburbs at the periphery of metropolitan areas contributing to increased vehicle miles travelled carbon emissions development of greenfield spaces and depletion of natural reserves dubious discuss citation needed These arrangements revalue city spaces local taxes 90 housing values and promotion of mixed use development 91 92 Negative impacts edit There has also been some opposition to the development of railway networks For instance the arrival of railways and steam locomotives to Austria during the 1840s angered locals because of the noise smell and pollution caused by the trains and the damage to homes and the surrounding land caused by the engine s soot and fiery embers and since most travel did not occur over long distances few people utilized the new line 93 Pollution edit A 2018 study found that the opening of the Beijing Metro caused a reduction in most of the air pollutants concentrations PM2 5 PM10 SO2 NO2 and CO but had little effect on ozone pollution 94 Modern rail as economic development indicator edit European development economists have argued that the existence of modern rail infrastructure is a significant indicator of a country s economic advancement this perspective is illustrated notably through the Basic Rail Transportation Infrastructure Index known as BRTI Index 95 Subsidies edit Main article Rail subsidiesIn 2010 annual rail spending in China was 840 billion US 167 billion in 2019 from 2014 to 2017 China had an annual target of 800 billion US 158 billion in 2019 and planned to spend 3 5 trillion US 29 trillion in 2019 over 2016 2020 96 The Indian Railways are subsidized by around 260 billion US 5 billion in 2019 of which around 60 goes to commuter rail and short haul trips 97 nbsp European rail subsidies in euros per passenger km for 2008 98 According to the 2017 European Railway Performance Index for intensity of use quality of service and safety performance the top tier European national rail systems consists of Switzerland Denmark Finland Germany Austria Sweden and France 99 Performance levels reveal a positive correlation between public cost and a given railway system s performance and also reveal differences in the value that countries receive in return for their public cost Denmark Finland France Germany the Netherlands Sweden and Switzerland capture relatively high value for their money while Luxembourg Belgium Latvia Slovakia Portugal Romania and Bulgaria underperform relative to the average ratio of performance to cost among European countries 99 Country Subsidy in billions of Euros Year nbsp Germany 17 0 2014 100 nbsp France 13 2 2013 101 nbsp Italy 8 1 2009 102 nbsp Switzerland 5 8 2012 103 nbsp Spain 5 1 2015 104 nbsp United Kingdom 4 5 2015 105 nbsp Belgium 3 4 2008 98 nbsp Netherlands 2 5 2014 106 nbsp Austria 2 3 2009 98 nbsp Denmark 1 7 2008 98 nbsp Sweden 1 6 2009 107 nbsp Poland 1 4 2008 108 nbsp Ireland 0 91 2008 108 Russia edit In 2016 Russian Railways received 94 9 billion roubles around US 1 4 billion from the government 109 North America edit United States edit For rail subsidies in the United States see Amtrak public funding and Modern US rail history In 2015 funding from the U S federal government for Amtrak was around US 1 4 billion 110 By 2018 appropriated funding had increased to approximately US 1 9 billion 111 See also edit nbsp Trains portal nbsp Transport portal nbsp Lists portalDerailment Environmental design in rail transportation History of transport International Union of Railways List of countries by rail transport network size List of countries by rail usage List of railroad related periodicals List of railway companies List of railway industry occupations Passenger rail terminology Rail transport by country Mega project Mine railway Outline of rail transport Railway systems engineering Track gauge Highway dimensionNotes edit According to Norman Bradbury November 2002 Face the facts on transport safety PDF Railwatch Report Archived from the original PDF on 11 October 2010 railways are the safest on both a per mile and per hour basis whereas air transport is safe only on a per mile basis Heilmann evaluated both AC and DC electric transmission for his locomotives but eventually settled on a design based on Thomas Edison s DC system 37 References edit Railroad History Invention amp Facts Britannica www britannica com 27 November 2023 Archived from the original on 1 October 2023 Retrieved 2 December 2023 a b IEA 2019 The Future of Rail Paris International Energy Agency Archived from the original on 17 November 2023 Retrieved 2 December 2023 Lewis M J T 2001 Railways in the Greek and Roman world PDF In Guy A Rees J eds Early Railways A Selection of Papers from the First International Early Railways Conference pp 8 19 Archived from the original PDF on 21 July 2011 Fraser P M December 1961 The DIOLKOS of Alexandria The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 47 134 138 doi 10 2307 3855873 JSTOR 3855873 Der Reiszug Part 1 Presentation Funimag Archived from the original on 20 October 2021 Retrieved 22 April 2009 Kriechbaum Reinhard 15 May 2004 Die grosse Reise auf den Berg der Tagespost in German Archived from the original on 28 June 2012 Retrieved 22 April 2009 Georgius Agricola trans Hoover De re metallica 1913 p 156 Lee Charles E 1943 The Evolution of Railways 2 ed London p 16 OCLC 1591369 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help CS1 maint location missing publisher link Lewis Early wooden railways pp 8 10 Warren Allison Samuel Murphy and Richard Smith An Early Railway in the German Mines of Caldbeck in G Boyes ed Early Railways 4 Papers from the 4th International Early Railways Conference 2008 Six Martlets Sudbury 2010 pp 52 69 Jones Mark 2012 Lancashire Railways The History of Steam Newbury Countryside Books p 5 ISBN 978 1 84674 298 9 Peter King The First Shropshire Railways in G Boyes ed Early Railways 4 Papers from the 4th International Early Railways Conference 2008 Six Martlets Sudbury 2010 pp 70 84 Huntingdon Beaumont s Wollaton to Strelley Waggonway Nottingham Hidden History 30 July 2013 Archived from the original on 27 November 2022 Retrieved 23 August 2017 Porter Peter 1914 Landmarks of the Niagara Frontier The Author ISBN 978 0 665 78347 0 Vaughan A 1997 Railwaymen Politics and Money London John Murray ISBN 978 0 7195 5746 0 Surrey Iron Railway 200th 26th July 2003 Early Railways Stephenson Locomotive Society Archived from the original on 12 May 2009 Landes David S 1969 The Unbound Prometheus Technological Change and Industrial Development in Western Europe from 1750 to the Present Cambridge New York Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge p 91 ISBN 978 0 521 09418 4 Landes 1969 pp 92 Wells David A 1891 Recent Economic Changes and Their Effect on Production and Distribution of 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original on 15 April 2011 Steam train anniversary begins BBC 21 February 2004 Archived from the original on 3 June 2020 Retrieved 13 June 2009 A south Wales town has begun months of celebrations to mark the 200th anniversary of the invention of the steam locomotive Merthyr Tydfil was the location where on 21 February 1804 Richard Trevithick took the world into the railway age when he set one of his high pressure steam engines on a local iron master s tram rails Hamilton Ellis 1968 The Pictorial Encyclopedia of Railways The Hamlyn Publishing Group p 12 Puffing Billy locomotive Science Museum Group Collection collection sciencemuseumgroup org uk Archived from the original on 19 May 2023 Retrieved 26 May 2021 Hamilton Ellis 1968 The Pictorial Encyclopedia of Railways The Hamlyn Publishing Group pp 20 22 Ellis Hamilton 1968 The Pictorial Encyclopedia of Railways Hamlyn Publishing Group First in the world The making of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway Science and Industry Museum 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Retrieved 22 February 2016 The evolution of public funding to the rail sector in 5 European countries a comparison PDF p 6 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 27 January 2016 a b European rail study report PDF pp 44 45 Archived from the original PDF on 3 May 2013 Includes both Railway subsidies and Public Service Obligations Government support for Russian Railways Archived from the original on 26 November 2018 Retrieved 26 November 2018 FY15 Budget Business Plan 2015 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 4 February 2016 Retrieved 9 March 2016 Management s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations and Consolidated Financial Statements With Report of Independent Auditors PDF Amtrak 28 January 2019 p 33 Archived PDF from the original on 3 November 2019 Retrieved 3 November 2019 Sources editDuffy Michael C 2003 Electric Railways 1880 1990 IET ISBN 978 0 85296 805 5 Further reading editBurton Anthony Railway Empire How the British Gave Railways to the World 2018 excerpt Chant Christopher The world s railways the history and development of rail transport Chartwell Books 2001 Faith Nicholas The World the Railways Made 2014 excerpt Freeman Michael The Railway as Cultural Metaphor What Kind of Railway History Revisited Journal of Transport History 20 2 1999 160 167 Mukhopadhyay Aparajita Imperial Technology and Native Agency A Social History of Railways in Colonial India 1850 1920 Taylor amp Francis 2018 Nock O S Railways then and now a world history 1975 online Nock O S World atlas of railways 1978 online Nock O S 150 years of main line railways 1980 online Pirie Gordon Tracking railway histories Journal of Transport History 35 2 2014 242 248 Sawai Minoru ed The Development of Railway Technology in East Asia in Comparative Perspective Sringer 2017 Trains Magazine The Historical Guide to North American Railroads 3rd ed 2014 Wolmar Christian Blood iron and gold How the railroads transformed the world Public Affairs 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Rail transport nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rail transport nbsp Look up railway in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Rail travel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rail transport amp oldid 1205826255, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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