A work train (departmental train or engineering train/vehicles in the UK[1]) is one or more rail cars intended for internal non-revenue use by the railroad's operator. Work trains serve functions such as track maintenance, maintenance of way, revenue collection, system cleanup and waste removal, heavy duty hauling, and crew member transport.[2][3][4][5][6]
A number of railroad vehicles are used in the inspection of railroad tracks and infrastructure to identify flaws and areas in need of routine maintenance.
Ballast hopper - A specialized hopper car that is designed to spread ballast between rails and to the sides of rails, and the ability control ballast flow.[3]
Rail grinders - Uses grinding wheels to restore rails back to a ideal shape, extending life time of the rail.[4]
Spreaders - Rail based plow that is used to move ballast and create ditches beside train tracks.[3]
Side dump cars - Rail car that was built so that it can dump it's load, often ballast, to the side, at any location.[3]
Continuous welded rail trains - Specially modified flatcars for carrying long sections of continuously welded rail for installation, often accompanied by flatcars with equipment for welding sections of rail together.[4]
Track renewal train - A train capable of doing multiple tasks to replace multiple track components (ties, rails, spikes, etc).[3][4][5]
The uncontrolled growth of weeds and other vegetation along railroad right-of-ways can cause significant issues with drainage, obstruct worker access and become a nuisance to adjacent property owners.
Weed spraying trains - Trains that deploy weed killer in order to control the growth of weeds on railroad tracks and ditches along tracks.
Bush cutters - Used to cut weeds and other vegetation from railroad tracks and ditches along tracks, using blades or saws.
In addition to specialized equipment above, most railroad has have allocated regular rail cars and locomotives to railroad maintenance duties. This is often older equipment that has either reached the age limit that prohibits it from interchange with other railroad, and is required to stay on the railroad that owns it, or equipment that has been rendered obsolete by newer, often higher capacity versions: tank cars, * flatcars, hoppers, gondola, boxcars as well as locomotives.[10][2][3]
Railroads have historical kept rail mounted cranes of various sizes, to assist with maintenance work, major construction projects as well as respond to derailments and natural disasters. These have in large part been displaced by a mixture of road biased mobile cranes and sideboom bulldozers.[11]
Beyond typical railroad cars, hi-rail technology has allowed railroads to put conventional heavy equipment such as excavators, mobile cranes, bucket trucks, Concrete mixers, etc, right onto the tracks.[7]
In addition to variety of equipment above, subways often have specialized equipment intended to address unique issues within subway systems, such as the difficulty in removing trash from underground stations.
Trash collection trains - Trains that visit stations to remove trash.[10]
Revenue collection cars - Trains that visit stations to collect money collected from turnstiles and ticket sales.[10]
Vacuum cars - A rail car that vacuums up litter and dropped objects from the tracks, as they accumulate in the closed environment of a subway tunnel.[10]
Flood cleanup cars (reach cars, pump cars, hose cars) - Trains deployed to remove water following tunnel flooding.[10]
^Ellis, Ian (2010). British Railway Engineering Encyclopedia (Second ed.). Lulu Enterprises Incorporated. pp. 108, 140–141. ISBN978-1-4461-8190-4.
^ abcdefSolomon, Brian (2001). "2 - Detecting Track Defects". Railway Maintenance: The Men and Machines that Keep the Railroads Running. St. Paul, MN: MBI Publishing. pp. 21–37. ISBN0760309752.
^ abcdefghijkSolomon, Brian (2001). "3 - Ballast and Roadbed Maintenance". Railway Maintenance: The Men and Machines that Keep the Railroads Running. St. Paul, MN: MBI Publishing. pp. 38–53. ISBN0760309752.
^ abcdefgSolomon, Brian (2001). "4 - Surfacing Equipment". Railway Maintenance: The Men and Machines that Keep the Railroads Running. St. Paul, MN: MBI Publishing. pp. 54–85. ISBN0760309752.
^ abSolomon, Brian (2001). "5- Rail Grinding". Railway Maintenance: The Men and Machines that Keep the Railroads Running. St. Paul, MN: MBI Publishing. pp. 86–99. ISBN0760309752.
^Middleton, William D. (April 1972). "The Assistant Division Engineer". Trains. No. 4. A.C. Kalmbach. pp. 20–27.
^ abSolomon, Brian (2001). "6 - Speeders and Hyrails". Railway Maintenance: The Men and Machines that Keep the Railroads Running. St. Paul, MN: MBI Publishing. pp. 110–112. ISBN0760309752.
^ abcdefSolomon, Brian (2001). "7 - Snowplows". Railway Maintenance: The Men and Machines that Keep the Railroads Running. St. Paul, MN: MBI Publishing. pp. 113–124. ISBN0760309752.
^ abcdeAscher, Kate (2005). "Moving People". The Works: Anatomy of a City. New York, New York: Penguin Books Ltd. p. 43. ISBN1-59420-071-8.
^Tatlow, Peter (2013). Railway Breakdown Cranes - Volume 2 (First ed.). Noodle Books. p. 505. ISBN978-1-906419-97-4.