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Which is faster a tram or a train?

Trams are a type of light rail system designed to operate at least partially on roads alongside road traffic and pedestrians. They're smaller, lighter and slower than most trains and have certain important safety features like powerful track brakes so they can avoid collisions with cars and people.



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Trams, which are also known as trolley cars, are much shorter and lighted in comparison. Travelling much slower than trains (in respect for the vehicular traffic around them) trams are powered by an overhead electrical apparatus or occasionally by diesel.

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For many car trips trams will give a journey faster than driving (including parking time) for some people.

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Also known as streetcars or light rail (there's debate around the nomenclature, naturally), trams offer riders speed and reliability, are cheaper (though not cheap) and easier to install than rail, and offer side benefits like no emissions and can help underpin neighborhood regeneration projects — though the latter's ...

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I think the main difference between a tram and a train is that a train (heavy rail) has a dedicated locomotive that carries no passengers or freight (besides the operator) but tows unpowered passenger or freight cars, while a tram has just one or two powered passenger cars with an operator's cabin at each end.

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Trams cannot go around obstacles, they don't mix well with bikes, they take up too much space and “they cost a fortune,” as Washington DC can tell you.

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The advent of personal motor vehicles and the improvements in motorized buses caused the rapid disappearance of the tram from most western and Asian countries by the end of the 1950s (for example the first major UK city to completely abandon its trams was Manchester by January 1949).

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Trams cannot go around obstacles, they don't mix well with bikes, they take up too much space and “they cost a fortune,” as Washington DC can tell you.

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1: Shanghai Maglev - 460 kph/286 mph (China) The world's fastest public train is also unique – it's the only link in the world currently carrying passengers using magnetic levitation (Maglev) rather than conventional steel wheels on steel rails.

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Japan: L0 Series Maglev (374 mph) Although not yet in regular service, this Japanese train, which is currently being developed and tested by the Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central), holds the land speed record for rail vehicles, clocking in at 374 mph.

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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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Today, most trams use electrical power, usually fed by a pantograph sliding on an overhead line; older systems may use a trolley pole or a bow collector. In some cases, a contact shoe on a third rail is used.

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Much lighter than trains, without the need for often cost prohibitive and energy-intensive underground tunnels that a metro system requires. Trams run on hard wheels and rails that can be fully recycled and have much lower rolling resistance than soft rubber tyres.

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The maximum operational speed of InterCity trains on the IÉ rail network is 160 km/h (100 mph), although the design speed of the Mark 4 carriages is 201 km/h (125 mph).

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Trains may run at slower speeds at night for a few different reasons: Safety: Running trains at slower speeds at night can help to reduce the risk of accidents, particularly in areas where visibility is limited or where there are potential hazards such as wildlife or debris on the tracks.

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For a variety of reasons the practice is less common in the 21st century, although a community of freight-train riders still exists. Typically, hoppers will go to a rail yard where trains stop to pick up and unload freight and switch out crew.

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