rolling-stock - meaning and definition. What is rolling-stock
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What (who) is rolling-stock - definition

RAILWAY VEHICLES, BOTH POWERED & UNPOWERED
Rollingstock; Rolling-stock; Rolling Stock; Rail vehicle; Railway vehicle
  • Variety of rolling stock in [[rail yard]]

rolling stock         
¦ noun
1. locomotives, carriages, or other vehicles used on a railway.
2. US the road vehicles of a trucking company.
rolling stock         
Rolling stock is all the engines and carriages that are used on a railway.
Many stations needed repairs or rebuilding and there was a shortage of rolling stock.
N-UNCOUNT
Rolling stock         
The term rolling stock in the rail transport industry refers to railway vehicles, including both powered and unpowered vehicles: for example, locomotives, freight and passenger cars (or coaches), and non-revenue cars. Passenger vehicles can be un-powered, or self-propelled, single or multiple units.

Wikipedia

Rolling stock

The term rolling stock in the rail transport industry refers to railway vehicles, including both powered and unpowered vehicles: for example, locomotives, freight and passenger cars (or coaches), and non-revenue cars. Passenger vehicles can be un-powered, or self-propelled, single or multiple units. A connected series of railway vehicles is a train (this term applied to a locomotive is a common misnomer).

In North America, Australia and other countries, the term consist ( KON-sist) is used to refer to the rolling stock in a train.: 1‑129 

In the United States, the term rolling stock has been expanded from the older broadly defined "trains" to include wheeled vehicles used by businesses on roadways.

The word stock in the term is used in a sense of inventory. Rolling stock is considered to be a liquid asset, or close to it, since the value of the vehicle can be readily estimated and then shipped to the buyer without much cost or delay. The term contrasts with fixed stock (infrastructure), which is a collective term for the track, signals, stations, other buildings, electric wires, etc., necessary to operate a railway.

Examples of use of rolling-stock
1. Merseyrail has spent 32million refurbishing its rolling stock.
2. Siemens recently advised Israel Railways of a third delay in supplying new rolling stock to Israel.
3. "From the point of view of modern rolling stock or wagons, then we have setbacks.
4. Between them, they lease '0% of Britain‘s rolling stock to train operators.
5. It has been widely introduced into railway transportation, machine–building industry and rolling stock production.