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How fast can a train stop in an emergency?

When it's moving at 55 miles an hour, it can take a mile or more to stop after the locomotive engineer fully applies the emergency brake. An 8-car passenger train moving at 80 miles an hour needs about a mile to stop.



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Applying the Emergency Brakes Modern trains feature access panels in the passenger cars so passengers can activate the emergency brakes in the event of an emergency. Look for a cover on the wall that's labeled “Emergency Brake.” Open up the cover to expose the button that activates the brakes.

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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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Trains can't stop quickly or swerve. The average freight train is about 1 to 1¼ miles in length (90 to 120 rail cars). When it's moving at 55 miles an hour, it can take a mile or more to stop after the locomotive engineer fully applies the emergency brake.

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Fact #4: Trains Can Stop, But Not Quickly That's the length of 18 football fields. So if you think a train can see you and stop in time, think again. Trains cannot stop quickly enough to avoid a collision, which is why vehicles should never drive around lowered gates or try to “beat” a train.

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It takes the average freight train traveling at 55 mph more than a mile to stop. That's the length of 18 football fields. So if you think a train can see you and stop in time, think again.

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Federal regulators limit the speed of trains with respect to the signaling method used. Passenger trains are limited to 59 mph and freight trains to 49 mph on track without block signal systems. (See dark territory.)

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The maximum speed currently possible in the UK is 186mph, achieved by Eurostar trains on the HS1 line between London and the Channel Tunnel . The HS1 line is used by Eurostar services and Javelin commuter services from Kent, although the latter have a max speed of 140mph.

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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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Pilatus Railway, Switzerland The Pilatus Railway runs from Alpnachstad on Lake Alpnach to the Esel station near the summit of the 6,800-foot-high Mount Pilatus in the Swiss canton of Obwalden. It takes the crown as the world's steepest rack railway with a maximum gradient of 48 percent.

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Pulling the alarm chain on a British train will pull a lever connected to the brake pipe flaps. Pulling the alarm activates a piston, causing the flaps to be opened and all the air pushed out the air tube, forcing the brakes on.

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You wait for the train to pass or try to back up and find a bridge that goes over the tracks. It's really the only thing that you can do. If your patient is stable you wait. If they are critical hopefully there is an alternate route with a bridge.

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The Glacier Express is the world's slowest train, taking more than eight hours to travel between Zermatt and St. Moritz in Switzerland at an average of 18mph. Along the way, it passes over nearly 300 bridges, travels through 91 tunnels and takes in endless stunning Alpine views.

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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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Modern trains have lots of stuff underneath. Motors, gearboxes, big boxes of power electronics, etc, etc. There is very little spare room under many trains, and chances are something will grab you and bundle you up into a disorganised mess of broken limbs. You probably won't die straight away, it'll take a while.

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