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How many train cars equal a mile?

Transit rail modes are measured in car-miles. Car-miles measure individual vehicle-miles in a train. A 10-car train traveling 1 mile would equal 1 train-mile and 10 car-miles.



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It would depend upon the length of each train car, of which modern train cars vary in length from 35 feet long to 90 feet long so if we take an average length of 60 feet per car the average length of a 100 car train would be approximately 6,140 feet long with two modern 70 foot long locomotives.

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In each incident, the trains were hauling more than 200 rail cars, were at least 12,250 feet long and weighed over 17,000 trailing tons.

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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. An 8-car passenger train moving at 80 miles an hour needs about a mile to stop.

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A train of 150 cars—the FRA's unofficial definition of a long train—carrying iron ore would run about 3,500 feet long, but an intermodal train of the same number of cars might measure 33,000 feet, according to John Gray, the AAR's senior vice president of policy and economics.

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These longer trains allow for more goods to move more efficiently, which lowers fuel use and costs for the railroads.

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Fastest Train in the World – 357.2 MPH The current world speed record for a commercial train on steel wheels is held by the French TGV at 574.8 km/h (357.2 mph), achieved on 3 April 2007 on the new LGV Est. The trainset, the track and the cantenary were modified to test new designs.

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