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Does a train take a mile to stop?

Trains have the right-of-way because they cannot quickly stop for a motorist at crossings or for trespassers on the tracks. The average freight train, traveling at 55 MPH, takes anywhere from 1 to 1½ miles to stop. Traveling at the same speed, the average automobile can stop in only 200 feet.



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Long trains take longer time to stop than a single car because the braking effort is not synchronized.

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Here in the UK passenger stock is normally limited to a maximum deceleration of 9% of 1G for normal braking (about -0.88m/s/s). In emergency braking that can go up to 12%G (about -1.18m/s/s). Some trams have track brakes that can stop a LOT quicker than that.

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An average freight train traveling at 55 mph may take a mile (5,280 feet) or more to stop, the length of 18 football fields! Trains can stop, but they can't stop quickly.

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The shortest platform in the UK is at Beauly railway station near Inverness. Served by ScotRail! WFAT at the shortest platform in the UK - Beauly, The Scottish Highlands.

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Physics, the trains are very heavy, and therefore have a huge amount of rolling mass that produces momentum, there is also very little friction between steel wheels on steel rails, and it takes up to a mile of distance for a planned stop when traveling at speeds in excess of 50 MPH on a fully loaded freight train.

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No. The speed difference between the fastest aircraft and the fastest trains is about an order of magnitude. The atmospheric density at ground level would generate too much drag for a train to go as fast as a typical jetliner, let alone go supersonic.

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A 150-car freight train at 50 mph needs 8,000 feet (1 and 1/2 miles) to stop; an 8-car passenger train at 79 mph needs about 6,000 feet (1 and 1/8 miles) to stop.

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You can't outrun a train.

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Why can't trains stop quickly? Because there's not much friction available in the wheel-rail interface. Normally this is a good thing, the low rolling resistance of trains is why they're so efficient at moving heavy loads.

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The railways use a train detection systems which can tell signallers exactly where every train is and how fast they are going. There are also systems that can automatically stop trains if the driver doesn't take the correct course of action or passes through a red signal.

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“People assume that trains are loud, but that assumption is based on the fact that when a train's gone past them in a station it's noisy. That's because the noise a train makes is mainly projected to either side. When trains are moving directly towards you they are barely audible–until it's too late.”

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Every three minutes, a person or vehicle is struck by a train, according to rail safety advocates. As part of Rail Safety Weeks, drivers and pedestrians can learn to make safer decisions around train tracks. The number is staggering; the result, often deadly.

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The longest UK train journey is Aberdeen to Penzance. Covering 785 miles, this train journey takes about 13 hours and 20 minutes to complete (give or take a few minutes). It has 36 stops and spends about two hours in total waiting for passengers to embark and disembark at each railway station along the way.

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