enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Emergency brake (train) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_brake_(train)

    Driver's brake handle in a class 317 electric multiple unit. On trains, the expression emergency brake has several meanings: . The maximum brake force available to the engine driver from the conventional braking system, usually operated by taking the brake handle to its furthest position, through a gate mechanism, or by pushing a separate plunger in the cab.

  3. Railroad Safety Appliance Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railroad_Safety_Appliance_Act

    The original law was amended by a subsequent act in 1903, whose first section provides that the requirements of the original act respecting train brakes, automatic couplers, and grab irons shall be held to apply to all trains and cars used on any railroad engaged in interstate commerce, unless a minor exception were satisfied.

  4. Railway air brake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railway_air_brake

    An emergency brake application brings in an additional component of each car's air brake system. The triple valve is divided into two portions: the service section, which contains the mechanism used during brake applications made during service reductions, and the emergency section, which senses the faster emergency reduction of train line ...

  5. Emergency brake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_brake

    Emergency brake (train), a term which can refer to a stronger-than-normal braking level, a separate backup braking system, or the lever used to engage the backup braking system; Train protection system, which engages an emergency brake in dangerous situations

  6. Kill switch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kill_switch

    An emergency switch in Japan. On railways, [1] an emergency stop is a full application of the brakes in order to bring a train to a stop as quickly as possible. [2] This occurs either by a manual emergency stop activation, such as a button being pushed on the train to start the emergency stop, or on some trains automatically, when the train has passed a red signal or the driver has failed to ...

  7. Electronically controlled pneumatic brakes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronically_controlled...

    In contrast, ECP braking uses electronic controls which make it possible to activate air-powered brakes on the cars. On an ECP-equipped train, the cars are equipped with a trainline cable that runs parallel to the brake pipe down the length of the train. This cable is used to supply power to the electronic components installed on the cars.

  8. Railway brake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railway_brake

    Hand brakes on tenders and tank locomotives are often designed as counterweight brakes. A manually operating parking brake is only suitable for securing static railway vehicles from rolling away. It can be designed as a hand wheel or as a spring-loaded brake. A direction-dependent pawl brake is often installed in vehicles on rack railways.

  9. Gladhand connector - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gladhand_connector

    A pair of gladhand connectors between railroad cars A gladhand connector on a trailer. A gladhand connector or gladhand coupler is an interlocking hose coupling fitted to hoses supplying pressurized air from a tractor unit to air brakes on a semi-trailer, [1] or from a locomotive to railway air brakes on railroad cars. [2]