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Articulated vehicle

 
Wikipedia: Articulated vehicle
 
"Articulated" redirects here. For other uses, see Articulation.
Articulated well cars with containers
Tilting Talgo permanently coupled trainset

An articulated vehicle is a vehicle which has a permanent or semi-permanent pivoting joint in its construction, allowing the vehicle to turn more sharply. There are many kinds of articulated vehicles, from heavy equipment to buses, trams and trains. Steam locomotives were sometimes articulated in that the driving wheels could pivot around turns.

In a broader sense, any vehicle towing a trailer could be described as articulated (the word articulated comes from the Latin articulus : small joint). In the UK, the term "articulated lorry" refers to the combination of a tractor and a semi-trailer, abbreviated to "Artic". In the U.S., this is called a semi-trailer truck, "tractor-trailer" or "semi-truck" and would not necessarily be called articulated.

Contents

Type of vehicles

Buses

A Volvo articulated bus
Volvo front loader on which the front portion pivots for turning
Articulated lorry operated by the Czech haulage company Autodoprava Tumpach

Buses are articulated to allow for a much longer bus which can still navigate within the turning radius of a normal bus.

Trucks

In the UK, semi-trailers on tractor units are referred to as "articulated lorries."

Trains and rail

Many train cars are made with articulated connections, sharing a common truck between two cars. This reduces costs, weight, vibration and noise; and also enables higher speed running. One of the first examples of articulated railway carridges were used by London and North Eastern Railways in Great Britain on their Silver Link express trains in the 1930s; these trains (Locomotives and rolling stock) were designed by Sir Nigel Gresley and bulit at the LNER's Doncaster Works. These trains consisted of three or four sets of two articulated carridge sets coupled to a locomotive and tender, although not the same as modern high speed trains where all the carridges share common bogies, they are an early form of the now more common design.

Trams and Light Rail Vehicles have been made with articulated designs since the 1950s. This was instead of using trailers or multiple units, which had been attempted in the early 1900s. The articulated design allows passengers (and fare inspectors) to move the entire length of the vehicle.

Heavy equipment

Front loaders, graders, dump trucks and other vehicles have been made with articulated joints to greatly reduce their turning radius. The most Common models of articulated trucks are Caterpillar, Volvo, and Terex trucks ranging in tonnage from 25 to 40 ton.

Military vehicles

Some military vehicles, like for instance the US military M561 Gama Goat, were engineered with an articulated body for maximum rough terrain capability.

See also


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Articulated vehicle" Read more