Passenger cars

print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

Also known as: railway

The first passenger cars were simply road coaches with flanged wheels. Almost from the beginning, railroads in the United States began to use longer, eight-wheel cars riding on two four-wheel trucks. In Britain and Europe, however, cars with more than six wheels were not introduced until the 1870s. Modern cars, for both local and long-distance service, have an entrance at one or both ends of the car. 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 a driving cab at the extremity of each unit.

In the United States modern passenger cars are usually 25 metres (85 feet) long. In continental Europe the standard length of cars for conventional locomotive-hauled main-line service is now about 26 metres (86 feet 7 inches), but the cars of some high-speed train-sets are shorter, as are those of many urban transport multiple-unit cars and of railcars for secondary local services. Modern British cars are roughly 19.5 or 22.5 metres (64 feet 6 inches or 75 feet) in length. The sharper curves of narrow-gauge railroads generally demand shorter length.

Reduction of the weight of a car’s mechanical structures has become important to minimize the energy consumed in traction, particularly for high-speed vehicles. Car bodies are still mostly of steel, but use of aluminum is increasing, especially for passenger cars and for high-speed train cars. Modular construction techniques, simplifying the adaptation of a car body to different interior layouts and furniture, has encouraged railroads to standardize basic car structures for a variety of service requirements. For this reason, construction of small numbers of special-purpose cars demanding nonstandard bodies is not favoured; an example is the dome observation car, with a raised, glass roof section, popular in North America.

Modern truck design is the product of lengthy research into the interaction of wheel and rail, and into suspension systems, with the dual objectives of stable ride quality and minimum wear of track and wheel sets, especially at very high speed. The trucks of many modern cars have air suspension or a combination of air and metal springing. The entrance doors of all modern European cars are power-operated and capable of interlocking from a central control by the train’s conductor to prevent improper passenger use when the train is moving. Efficient soundproofing and insulation of car interiors from external noise and undesirable climatic conditions have become a major concern, particularly because of more widespread air-conditioning of cars. Very-high-speed train-sets must have their entire interior, including intercar gangways, externally sealed to prevent passenger discomfort from air pressure changes when they thread tunnels.

Brake systems

There are two principal types of continuous train braking systems: vacuum, which now survives mostly on railroads in the developing world, and compressed air, the inherently greater efficiency of which has been improved by modern electric or electronic control systems. With either system brake application in the train’s driving cab is transmitted to all its vehicles; if a train becomes uncoupled on the move, interruption of the through-train connection of controls automatically applies brakes to both parts of the train. Modern passenger cars—and some freight cars—have disc brakes instead of wheel-tread shoes. Wheel sets of cars operating at 160 km (100 miles) per hour or more are fitted with devices to prevent wheel slip under heavy braking. On European cars designed for operation at 200 km (125 miles) per hour or more, and on Japanese Shinkansen train-sets, disc braking of wheel sets is supplemented by fitting electromagnetic track brakes to car trucks. Activated at the start of deceleration from high speed, these retard by the frictional resistance generated when bar magnets are lowered into contact with the rails. Some Shinkansen train-sets have eddy current instead of electromagnetic track brakes. The eddy-current brake makes no contact with the rail (so is not subject to frictional wear) and is more powerful, but it sets up strong electromagnetic fields that require reinforced immunization of signaling circuitry. Also, where operation of trains so equipped is intensive, there is a risk that eddy-current braking might heat rails to a degree that could cause them to deform.

Automatic body tilting

The permissible maximum speed of a passenger train through curves is the level beyond which a railroad considers passengers will suffer unacceptable centrifugal force; the limit beyond which derailment becomes a risk is considerably higher. On a line built for exclusive use of high-speed trains, curved track can be canted, or superelevated, to a degree specifically suited to those trains. The cant can be steeper than on a mixed-traffic route, where it must be a compromise between the ideal for fast passenger and slow, heavy freight trains, to avoid the latter bearing too severely on the curve’s inner rail. Consequently, on a dedicated high-speed passenger line, the extra degree of superelevation can raise quite significantly the curving speed possible without discomforting passengers from the effects of centrifugal force.

On existing mixed-traffic lines, however, passenger train speed through curves can be increased by equipping cars with devices that automatically tilt car bodies up to 9° toward the inward side of the curve, thereby adding to the degree of cant imparted by the track’s superelevation. There are two types of automatic body-tilting system. A passive system is more complex. It reacts to track curvature: that is, the body-tilting mechanism responds retroactively, if only by a fraction of a second, to its gauging of deficiency in the track’s superelevation relative to the speed at which the vehicle is traveling. An active system employs sensors to detect the transition to curved track and controls to measure the progressive degree of tilt applied by the tilt-operating mechanism in response to the sensor’s electronic signals as the curve itself is threaded. The sensors are usually fitted to the front vehicle of a tilt-body train-set, so that the tilt-body equipment on following vehicles operates in smooth, split-second anticipation of a track curve’s development. An active system can apply a higher degree of body-tilt than a passive system, but active systems impose constraints on some aspects of car design and add to the car’s capital and maintenance costs.