commuter railroad
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intercity transportation
- In railroad: Automated systems
…applied principally to busy urban commuter and rapid-transit routes and to European and Japanese intercity high-speed routes. A display in the cab reproduces either the aspects of signals ahead or up to 10 different instructions of speed to be maintained, decelerated to, or accelerated to, according to the state of…
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mass transit
- In mass transit: Growth in the 19th century
Trains were efficient for carrying large numbers of travelers because a single guideway (track) could carry many trains each day, and the number of workers did not have to increase in proportion to the number of vehicles: one motorman or engineer could operate a train…
Read More - In mass transit: Costs
Some communities have commuter rail systems, descendants of older intercity rail lines, which connect distant suburbs with downtown areas. The technology is identical or similar to intercity passenger trains, with diesel-electric locomotives pulling unpowered coaches. Speeds are high (35–40 mile/h average), stations are 2–5 miles apart, and guideways…
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passenger cars
- In railroad: Passenger cars
Commuter-service cars also have additional centre doors. Flexible connections between cars give passengers access to any car of a moving train, except when the coupling together of self-powered, reversible train-sets for multiple-unit operation makes passenger communication between one train-set and another impossible, because there is…
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