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Scott C.
Gottlieb
Injury Law Attorney
29 Riverside Drive
Binghamton, NY 13905
Phone: 607-724-7700
Fax: 607-724-5370 |
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Glossary of Railroad Terms
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
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P Q
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T U
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W X
Y Z #
Click on the first letter of the word from the list above to
go to the appropriate section of the glossary. Contact us if you would like a
personal injury law glossary or one of other legal glossaries for your website.
Legal Glossaries Main Page
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B -
Baby Lifter: A brakeman.
Bad Order: A piece of rolling stock that needs
repair.
Bail: By moving the independent brake handle
sideways, the engineer can release locomotive brake
cylinder pressure that is due to an automatic brake
application (a brake pipe pressure reduction). The
bail has no effect on brake cylinder pressure that
is due to an independent brake application.
Bakehead: Fireman (because his head was near the
door of firebox when shoveling coal).
Beans: Going to eat a meal.
Bench Trial: A trial without a jury. The judge rules
on facts and evidence presented to him.
BIE: Brakes In Emergency; application of the
emergency braking system.
Big Boy: Union Pacific 4-8-8-4 600 ton steam freight
locomotive.
Big C: The conductor.
Big E: A railroad engineer.
Bighole: Emergency application of airbrakes, usually
when initiated by engineer.
BLE: Initials of Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers
union.
BLF&E: Initials of Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen
and Enginemen union.
Block Occupancy Indicator: An indicator used to
convey information regarding block occupancy.
Block Signal: A fixed signal at the entrance of a
block to govern trains and engines entering and
using that block.
Block System: A block or series of consecutive
blocks within APB, ABS, ACS, CTC or interlocking
limits.
Block: A length of track between consecutive block
signals or from a block signal to the end of block
system limits, governed by block signals, cab
signals or both.
Blue Flag: A blue flag or signal that is placed on a
car or locomotive when workers are around or under
it. When a car or locomotive is blue-flagged, then
it must not be coupled to or moved in any manner.
The only person allowed to remove a blue flag is the
person who put it there in the first place.
BMT: Brooklyn Manhattan Transit; a subdivision of
the New York City Transit Authority (NYCTA) subway.
Brains: The conductor.
Brake Beam: A cross-piece in the foundation brake
gear for a pair of wheels to which the leverage
delivers its force to be transmitted through the
attached brake head and brake shoes to the tread of
the wheels.
Brake Cylinder: A cast metal cylinder with a piston
that is forced outward by compressed air in applying
the brakes and returned by a release spring in
releasing the brakes.
Brake Pipe: Commonly called a train line, it is the
pipe, hose, connections, angle cocks, cut-out cocks,
fittings, etc., connecting the locomotive and all
cars from one end of the train to the other for the
passage of air to charge and control the brakes.
Brake Rigging: A term commonly used instead of
foundation brake gear.
Brakes, Automatic: Automatic brakes are the brake
controls in the locomotive that regulate the
pressure of the brake pipe and apply or release the
brakes for the entire train including the
locomotives.
Brakes, Independent: Independent brakes are the
brake controls in the locomotive that apply the
brakes on the locomotives only. The air hose marked
ACT or BR CYL enables the lead unit to control the
trailing unit brakes.
Branch Line: A secondary line of a railroad.
Branch: A portion of a division designated by a
timetable. Rules and instructions pertaining to
subdivisions apply on branches.
Brass Hat: AA railroad executive, usually a division
manager.
Brotherhood Notch: On steam locomotive, reverse gear
hooked up near dead center, light throttle, thus
using less steam, pulling light train, making it
easier on fireman.
BRT: Initials of Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen
union.
Burden of Proof: The obligation of one party in a
suit to prove all the requirements necessary to show
entitlement to recovery. If the burden is not met,
the party with the burden will lose the issue or the
case.
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