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  2. Railway air brake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railway_air_brake

    Piping diagram from 1909 of a Westinghouse 6-ET Air Brake system on a locomotive Control handle and valve for a Westinghouse air brake. A railway air brake is a railway brake power braking system with compressed air as the operating medium. [1]

  3. General Code of Operating Rules - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Code_of_Operating...

    The GCOR is supplemented by System Special Instructions, Timetables, Hazardous Materials Instructions, Air Brake and Train Handling Instructions, and General Orders. These documents are issued by each individual railroad. System Special instructions, Timetables, and General Order can modify or amend the General Code of Operating Rules. GCOR 1.3 ...

  4. Railway brake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railway_brake

    A railway brake is a type of brake used on the cars of railway trains to enable deceleration, control acceleration (downhill) or to keep them immobile when parked. While the basic principle is similar to that on road vehicle usage, operational features are more complex because of the need to control multiple linked carriages and to be effective ...

  5. Electronically controlled pneumatic brakes - Wikipedia

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

    [citation needed] The New York Air Brake Company, based in Watertown, N.Y., is a unit of Knorr-Bremse, [5] based in Munich, Germany. Wabtec Railway Electronics, or WRE, a unit of Wabtec, [6] has facilities in Germantown, MD, and Cedar Rapids, Iowa. In the case of the Fortescue railway, the new ECP brakes are incompatible in several ways.

  6. Driver's brake valve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Driver's_brake_valve

    The driver's brake valve is a complicated valve system for controlling the compressed air brake of a railway vehicle. [1] Depending on its setting, it controls whether the brake pipes of a compressed air brake are evacuated and thus whether braking is applied or maintained; or if the brake pipes are connected to a compressed air reservoir, it ...

  7. Kunze–Knorr brake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kunze–Knorr_brake

    The Kunze-Knorr brake (Kunze-Knorr-Bremse or KK-Bremse) is an automatic compressed-air brake for goods, passenger and express trains. It was the first graduated brake for goods trains in Europe . When it was introduced after the First World War , goods train brakes switched from hand operation to compressed-air in various European countries.

  8. 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]

  9. Pearson's Coupling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearson's_Coupling

    If a train was accidentally divided, the drawing apart of the hose pipes would cause the brakes to be applied on both sections of the severed train. However, in shunting operations, it was necessary to have an arrangement by which the carriages may be disconnected when required, without the application of the brakes.