What is tram short for?

July 31, 2019 Off By idswater

What is tram short for?

TRAM

Acronym Definition
TRAM Tractor, Rubber-tired, Articulated steering, Multi-purpose
TRAM Transit Risk Assessment Methodology (emergency management)
TRAM Tree-Based Reliable Multicast Protocol (data transfer support)
TRAM Target Recognition & Attack Multisensor

What kind of train is Toby?

tram engine
Toby is the No. 7 brown tram engine. He’s square – old-fashioned both in looks and nature. Toby’s always happy to work and is usually found on the Quarry line with his faithful coach, Henrietta.

What locomotive is Toby based on?

J70 tram engine
Toby is based on a J70 tram engine from the Great Eastern Railway (GER Class C53). His cowcatchers and sideplates allow him to run on roadside tramways, which other engines are not allowed to do for safety reasons.

Why are trams called trams?

The word is, apparently, of northern descent. It was a local name for a special wagon; hence tramway “the road on which this wagon ran.” In coal-mining, a tram was a frame or truck for carrying coal baskets.

What fuel do trams use?

electricity
‘ Trams are powered by electricity with an overhead wire and earth return through the steel rails, there are no tail-pipe emissions and if the tram is powered by 100% renewable electricity, then there are zero carbon emissions. Trams are often criticised for their extraordinary cost.

Why use trams instead of buses?

While trains move lots of people quickly over a long distance and buses move smaller numbers of people, and for shorter journeys, trams are more flexible than trains – because they stop more often – and faster and more reliable than the bus. Trams are very popular and they encourage people to leave their cars behind.

Are trams better than buses?

While trains move lots of people quickly over a long distance and buses move smaller numbers of people, and for shorter journeys, trams are more flexible than trains – because they stop more often – and faster and more reliable than the bus. At the weekends, half of the tram passengers used to travel by car.

What kind of engine is a tram engine?

A tram engine is a steam locomotive specially built, or modified, to work on a street, or roadside, tramway.

Who was the first company to build a tram?

Other British builders of steam tram engines included: Hawthorn, Leslie & Co built steam tram locomotives for the Railway Operating Division in 1915 ; they were copies on SNCV type 18. The German firm Krauss built steam tram engines, including one for the Wolverton and Stony Stratford Tramway in England.

What was the legal speed of a tram engine?

In the steam locomotive era, tram engines had to comply with certain legal requirements, although these varied from country to country: The engine must be governed to a maximum speed of 16 kilometers per hour (9.9 mph) (12 km/h or 7.5 mph in the UK) No steam or smoke may be emitted. It must be free from noise produced by blast or clatter.

When did Kitson and co make the tram engine?

His engines were of the saddle-tank type and exhaust steam was condensed in a tank under the footplate by jets of cold water from the saddle-tank. Kitson & Co. started to build tram engines in 1878.