Stop that train: Railroading is violent business
Railroading Railroading is violent business. Freight cars coupling sound like small explosions, diesel engines reverberate like distant thunder, and horns…
Read moreRailroading Railroading is violent business. Freight cars coupling sound like small explosions, diesel engines reverberate like distant thunder, and horns…
Read moreDiesel locomotives Elvis Presley may have had just one broken heart for sale back in 1963, but when it comes…
Read moreThe dynamics of dynamic braking A half-century ago, when diesel locomotives were replacing steam engines, a revolutionary breakthrough — dynamic…
Read moreTrain orders The train order, variously called the “flimsy” or the “tissue” — together with its attendant operators, train order…
Read moreRailroad reporting marks Railroad cars are identified by two, three, or four letters and by a number of up to…
Read moreAn EMD AR20 alternator from CSX SD70MAC 4549 at the railroad’s Huntington, W.Va., shop. Chris Guss Understanding brake horsepower: Diesel…
Read moreWe’ve all seen blue flags. A sign with words “STOP MEN AT WORK” clamped to the head of a rail,…
Read moreLocomotive prime movers are the engines inside all diesel-electric locomotives and are the heart of the entire locomotive. Prime movers…
Read moreEMD turbochargers For decades, railroads have adapted locomotives to meet the service to which they are assigned. As newer and…
Read morePositive Train Control With Positive Train Control (PTC) fully implemented on a large majority of the nation’s Class Is, passenger,…
Read moreLocomotives and rolling stock: There are a variety of reasons that dictate railroad equipment is better off being transported by…
Read moreElectrified freight service Hauling freight in the United States is almost exclusively a diesel locomotive affair today. However, a century…
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