Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


Cable railway

Trwnc incline at the Vivian Quarry[1] showing two permanently attached platform wagons. Slate trucks were pushed onto the horizontal tops of these wagons to travel on the incline.

A cable railway is a railway that uses a cable, rope or chain to haul trains. It is a specific type of cable transportation.

The most common use for a cable railway is to move vehicles on a steeply graded line that is too steep for conventional locomotives to operate on – this form of cable railway is often called an incline or inclined plane, or, in New Zealand, a jigline,[2] or jig line.[3] One common form of incline is the funicular – an isolated passenger railway where the cars are permanently attached to the cable.[4] In other forms, the cars attach and detach to the cable at the ends of the cable railway. Some cable railways are not steeply graded - these are often used in quarries to move large numbers of wagons between the quarry to the processing plant.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference Carrington was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ "Lower Mangahao Dam site - view up jigline". collections.tepapa.govt.nz. 1920–1921. Retrieved 2023-11-02.
  3. ^ "The jig line. Nelson Evening Mail". paperspast.natlib.govt.nz. 26 August 1938. Retrieved 2023-11-02.
  4. ^ Walter Hefti: Schienenseilbahnen in aller Welt. Schiefe Seilebenen, Standseilbahnen, Kabelbahnen. Birkhäuser, Basel 1975, ISBN 3-7643-0726-9 (in German)

Previous Page Next Page






Schienenseilbahn German Ferrocarril por cable Spanish ケーブルカー Japanese 강삭철도 Korean 缆索铁路 WUU 地面纜車 Chinese 纜車 ZH-YUE

Responsive image

Responsive image