Vacuum Brake

The vacuum brake is a braking system employed on trains and introduced in the mid-1860s. A variant, the automatic vacuum brake system, became almost universal in British train equipment and in countries influenced by British practice. Vacuum brakes also enjoyed a brief period of adoption in the USA, primarily on narrow gauge railroads. Its limitations caused it to be progressively superseded by compressed air systems starting in the United Kingdom from the 1970s onward. The vacuum brake system is now obsolete; it is not in large-scale usage anywhere in the world, other than in South Africa, largely supplanted by air brakes.

Read more about Vacuum Brake:  Overview, How The Automatic Vacuum Brake Works, Practical Considerations, Limitations, Dual Brakes, Twin Pipe Systems, Present-day Use of Vacuum Brakes

Famous quotes containing the word vacuum:

    Teenagers who are never required to vacuum are living in one.
    Fred G. Gosman (20th century)