diamond crossover
English
Etymology
Named after the diamond crossing in its center.
Noun
diamond crossover (plural diamond crossovers)
- (rail transport) A superimposed pair of crossovers, resembling a letter X, permitting travel in either direction between a pair of parallel tracks.
- 1995 — Institution of Civil Engineers (Great Britain), The Channel Tunnel, →ISBN,p. 20.
- "Each chamber contains a diamond crossover designed for 60 km/h running."
- 2002 — Paul Jannotti, "Thinking outside the box on light rail: Hudson-Bergen project", Railway Track and Structures, August, 2002 .
- "The closed-deck ballasted bridge is double-tracked and opens up to a third track through a combination diamond-crossover and double-slip switch before it reaches the bulkhead on the Hoboken side."
- 2004 — U.S. Federal Register, v. 69 #101, May 25, 2004, p. 29780.
- "The reason given for the proposed changes is that the crossover and switches were installed to replace a diamond crossover. The BNSF is taking their north connecting track out of service, so the control point with the crossover is no longer needed."
- ~2005 — Robert Ferreira, "North Springs Branch", in "MARTA North Springs and Doraville Branches", http://world.nycsubway.org/us/atlanta/marta-northbranches.html.
- "In December, 1999 a new diamond crossover interlocking was placed into service at Medical Center."
Synonyms
See also
- "Crossover" at Wikipedia
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