Portal:Trains/Did you know/January 2012

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January 2012

F1200 at Gävle in 2009
Siemens train at Flinders Street Station in Metro livery in 2009
  • ...that about half of the stations on the Moscow Metro in Russia were built as shallow column stations with the distinguishing feature being an abundance of supplementary supports for the underground cavity following designs that employ metal columns or concrete and steel columns arranged in lines parallel to the long axis of the station?
Preserved Rolls-Royce Sentinel "Cattewater" in 2008
Two RABDe 12/12 "Mirage" on the S16 service heading towards Zurich in 2008
  • ...that with the introduction of the new double-decker S-Bahn trains in the 1990s, the RABDe 12/12 class trains lost their prestigious role working the Golden Coast Express along Lake Zurich where they had been used since the 1960s and were subsequently used on lines with low passenger frequencies, remaining in S-Bahn service around Zurich, Switzerland, until 2008 with the last being scrapped in 2010?
Preserved E332 in 2009
SECR P class loco No. 753 at Tenterden Town station in 2009
The tracks and platforms of Redfern railway station in 2011
  • ...that Redfern railway station, which opened in 1874 south of the city centre in Sydney, Australia, was originally designed to be the principal station for Sydney, but was found to be too far from the city centre, so a new station (the present Sydney Central Station) was built to the north and opened in 1906?
C&O 500
Hawkesbury River Railway Bridges north of Sydney, Australia, in 2005
The new Tanjung Malim railway station in 2007
a dogspike holding a rail to a wooden sleeper with a steel baseplate in between
  • ...that in the 17th and 18th centuries, before the advent of steam locomotives, rails were fastened to sleepers by pegs through holes in the rail, but as the flanged 'tee' rail was introduced in the 19th century, rail fastening systems evolved to use the various designs of spikes and spring clips that are now in use worldwide?
The Pacific Railroad completion ceremony at Promontory, Utah, on May 10, 1869
  • ...that it is unknown how many people attended the First Transcontinental Railroad completion ceremony at Promontory, Utah, on May 10, 1869, with estimates running from as low as 500 to as many as 3,000 government and railroad officials and track workers who were present to witness the event?
  • ...that a pocket track, which is a section of track that can be used to park trains, differs from a passing loop in that the pocket track is usually located between two main lines, rather than off to the side?