tilting magazine - meaning and definition. What is tilting magazine
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What (who) is tilting magazine - definition

TYPE OF TRAIN THAT CAN TILT IN CURVES
Leaning trains; High speed tilting train; Tilting trains; Leaning train; Tilting EMU; Tilting technology; High-speed tilting train
  • 611]] 508 in Nuremberg
  • APT-P
  • CBQ No. 6000, one of three experimental Pendulum cars, at Vancouver in the 1940s.
  • [[ETR 401]] near Ancona
  • An [[Electric Tilt Train]]. In 1999, an Electric Tilt Train set an Australian speed record of 210 km/h, making it the fastest narrow-gauge train in service.
  • ICE-T]] (DB class 411) leaves a curve, showing cars tilted to different degrees.
  • A Swiss [[SBB RABDe 500]] on the [[Hauenstein railway line]] in May 2007
  • The JR Shikoku 2000 series DMU negotiating a tight curve on Shikoku's mountainous railway network.
  • The 381 series, the first tilting EMU to enter regular service globally.
  • The KiHa 201 DMU, a unique application of active suspension technology to a commuter train.
  • Demonstration of the Tilting-Technology of a SBB RABDe 500 in stand.
  • A [[ČD Class 680]] [[Pendolino]] train in July 2006
  • Class 390 Alstom Pendolino]] is the flagship train of the [[West Coast Main Line]] in the United Kingdom
  • An [[ICE TD]] in regular service in 2002
  • The JR N700 Series Shinkansen, the first tilting train on Japan's high speed network.
  • The Taiwanese TEMU1000 Series, based on the JR Kyushu 885 Series
  • Talgo Pendular]] in Prague, 1993
  • The [[X 2000]] train on a US tour at [[Chicago Union Station]], [[Illinois]], in 1993. This composite image shows the extent to which the train can tilt in either direction.
  • The Swedish X2 at Graversfors

Tilting         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Tilting (disambiguation)
·noun The act of one who tilts; a tilt.
II. Tilting ·p.pr. & ·vb.n. of Tilt.
III. Tilting ·noun The process by which blister steel is rendered ductile by being forged with a tilt hammer.
Tilting train         
A tilting train is a train that has a mechanism enabling increased speed on regular rail tracks. As a train (or other vehicle) rounds a curve at speed, objects inside the train experience centrifugal force.
tilting train         
A tilting train is a type of train that can travel faster than ordinary trains because it tilts when the track curves.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Tilting train

A tilting train is a train that has a mechanism enabling increased speed on regular rail tracks. As a train (or other vehicle) rounds a curve at speed, objects inside the train experience centrifugal force. This can cause packages to slide about or seated passengers to feel squashed by the outboard armrest, and standing passengers to lose their balance. Tilting trains are designed to counteract this by tilting the carriages towards the inside of the curve, thus compensating for the g-force. The train may be constructed such that inertial forces cause the tilting (passive tilt), or it may have a computer-controlled powered mechanism (active tilt).

The first passive tilting car design was built in the US in 1937, and an improved version was built in 1939. The beginning of World War II ended development. Talgo introduced a version based on their articulated bogie design in 1950s, and this concept was used on a number of commercial services. Among these was the UAC TurboTrain, which was the first (albeit short-lived) tilting train to enter commercial service in 1968 in the US and Canada. Parallel experiments in Japan and Italy through the 591 Series and the Fiat Y 0160 developed into the highly successful 381 series which began services in 1973 and is in service today, and the Pendolino family currently being used in 11 countries since 1976. All of these had problems with short curves like those in switchyards, where they tended to sway about. Also, because of the way the carriages always swung outward, they placed more weight on the outside of the curve, which limited their improvement in cornering speed to about 20%.

Starting in the late 1960s, British Rail began experiments with its Advanced Passenger Train (APT) which pioneered the active-tilt concept. This used hydraulic rams on the bottoms of the carriages to tilt them, rotating them around their centre point rather than swinging outward. This had the advantage of keeping the carriage centred over the bogies, which reduced load on the rails, and could be turned off when navigating switches. Due to lengthy delays, the APT did not begin test runs until 1981 and entered commercial service only briefly in 1985. By this time, the Canadian LRC design had become the first active tilting train to enter full commercial service, starting with Via Rail in 1981.

Fiat developed their Pendolino design into the most successful type of tilting train, with over 500 trains active in Europe. The concept of active tilt as a whole has been independently developed by many companies. Active tilting systems are widely used today.