TURNTABLE (RAILROAD)

A small turntable at the Orange Empire Railway Museum in Perris, CA

A larger turntable in front of a roundhouse, 1909

A small turntable at the Textilmuseum Bocholt

Wagon turntable at the Welsh Slate Museum on gauge track

Drivers turning cable car on a turntable at San Francisco

In rail terminology, a 'turntable' is a device used to turn railroad rolling stock. When steam locomotives were still in wide use, many railroads needed a way to turn the locomotives around for return trips as their controls were often not configured for extended periods of running in reverse and in many locomotives the top speed was lower in reverse motion. Turntables were also used to turn observation cars so that their windowed lounge ends faced toward the rear of the train.

Contents
Overview
Unusual Turntables
See also

Overview


The turntable bridge (the part of the turntable that included the tracks and that swiveled to turn the equipment) could span anywhere from 6 to 120 feet, depending on the railroad's needs. Larger turntables were installed in the locomotive maintenance facilities for longer locomotives, while short line and narrow gauge railroads typically used smaller turntables as their equipment was smaller. Turntables as small as 6 feet in diameter have been installed in some industrial facilities where the equipment is small enough to be pushed one at a time by human or horse power.
In engine maintenance facilities, a turntable was usually surrounded, in part or in whole, by a roundhouse. It was more common for the roundhouse to only cover a portion of the land around a turntable but fully circular roundhouses exist, such as these preserved roundhouses:

★ the roundhouse that serves as the basis for the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Museum in Baltimore, MD

The Roundhouse in London, England, now an arts centre.
Turntables still in use are more common in North America than in Europe, where locomotive design favors configurations with a controller cabin on both ends or in the middle.
In Britain, where steam hauled trains generally have vacuum operated brakes, it was quite common for turntables to be operated by vacuum powered motors worked from the locomotive's vacuum ejector or pump via a flexible hose or pipe although a few manually and electrically operated examples exist. Several working examples remain; many on Heritage railways in Great Britain. Examples include: -

★ Aberdeen

★ Aviemore

Barrow Hill

★ Carnforth

Churston

Didcot

★ Fort William

★ Hornsey

Kidderminster

Keighley

Neville Hill

NRM York

Old Oak Common

★ Perth

Pickering

★ Scarborough

★ St Blazey

Swanage

Tyseley

Wansford

Yeovil Junction

Unusual Turntables



★ In one location in France, lack of space forced the installation of an asymetric turntable, where the pivot point was about one-third along its length. Such a turntable cannot rotate 360 degrees.

★ At Ventnor railway station, due to lack of space a small turntable was provided to allow steam engines to run around their trains.

See also



Wye - a way of turning whole trains.

Transfer table (UK: 'traverser') - provides access to two or more parallel tracks in a space saving manner like a turntable, but without the ability to turn.

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