Interesting question. At least in terms of cartoon violence, the damsels or other goodie-goodies usually escape from being tied to the train tracks. The hero always comes along at the last minute. If a bad guy used a knife instead, then even if the hero came along, the damage would already be done. Not that I am advocating for bad guys, at all... Good guys are a lot cooler. But that is a way that I can imagine a knife being more effective than train tracks.
Buy more train tracks
Because there is a magnetic force between the train and tracks. This also makes the train more efficient and so there is less friction.
If your car is stuck on the tracks, and a train is approaching- then YES- get OUT of the car and get off the tracks. It is not that the train engineer does not want to stop, it is that he CANNOT stop- it may take a mile or more in distance to fully stop a heavy train. You will lose the car, but you will keep your life.
F.M. means fouling mark or fouling point. It is the point beyond the converging point of two or more tracks before which train on one of those tracks have to be stopped so that train movement is not obstructed in other tracks.
Yes - and run away or toward direction train is coming from, if necessary. A train will crush the car, and may push it into other objects or plow it down the tracks, with the train taking anywhere from 500 feet to more than a mile to stop even after the collision. If you are in the car you will be severly injured or killed.
A rail is a what a train runs on. A pair of parallel rails is known as a track. A train is a collection of one or more vehicles, connected together, which run on railway tracks.
because the wheels connect to the track to keep the train stable and to give it more power.
Buses stop at railroad tracks to ensure that trains are not close by. Buses are longer than cars and therefore need more time to get across the tracks.
There is nothing that is specifically designed to keep the air pressure low under a train. A train is kept on the tracks by gravity, nothing more.
More information is needed! What track do you mean - race track, train track, etc?
Yes - and run away or toward direction train is coming from, if necessary. A train will crush the car, and may push it into other objects or plow it down the tracks, with the train taking anywhere from 500 feet to more than a mile to stop even after the collision. If you are in the car you will be severly injured or killed.
Yes - and run away or toward direction train is coming from, if necessary. A train will crush the car, and may push it into other objects or plow it down the tracks, with the train taking anywhere from 500 feet to more than a mile to stop even after the collision. If you are in the car you will be severly injured or killed.