
Advanced Passenger Train - Wikipedia
The Advanced Passenger Train (APT) was a tilting high speed train developed by British Rail during the 1970s and early 1980s, for use on the West Coast Main Line (WCML). The WCML contains many curves, and the APT pioneered the concept of active tilting to address these, a feature that has since been copied on designs around the world.
British Rail Class 370 - Wikipedia
British Rail's Class 370 tilting trains, also referred to as APT-P (meaning Advanced Passenger Train Prototype), were the pre-production Advanced Passenger Train units. Unlike the earlier experimental gas-turbine APT-E unit, these units were electric multiple unit sets, powered by 25 kV AC overhead electrification and were used on the West ...
ROSÉ & Bruno Mars - APT. (Official Music Video) - YouTube
ROSÉ & Bruno Mars - APT.Download/stream: https://rosesarerosie.lnk.to/APTIDOrder APT. single CD: https://rosesarerosie.lnk.to/APT-CDID'rosie' - the first st...
Prototype Advanced Passenger Train (APT-P)
See www.APT-E.org for more information about the Experimental Advanced Passenger Train (APT-E).
British Rail APT-E & APT-P - Worldwide Rails
The British Rail Advanced Passenger Trains were two experimental train sets that utilized tilting technology, allowing the trains to navigate tight turns at high speeds. Four sets were built, the gas-turbine powered APT-E, and three of the electric powered APT-P.
UK | APT - The lean machine - BBC News
2001年12月7日 · It was the train-spotters' answer to Concorde, but for one key difference - the revolutionary tilting APT was scrapped shortly after its launch, 20 years ago on Friday, writes BBC News Online's...
APT Introduction
Unveiled in June 1978, the APT, as it is normally referred to, was an InterCity Development train, uniquely designed to provide faster journey times on the West Coast Main Line, culminating in a passenger relief service between London and Glasgow three days a week between 1983–85.
British Rail's APT
The braking system for APT is designed to stop the train from 250km/h within the existing signalling distances specified for conventional 160km/h trains. Hydrokinetic (water turbine) brakes are used to meet the very high energy dissipation and …
BR APT-E | TrainStation Wiki | Fandom
The Advanced Passenger Train (APT) was an experimental tilting high speed train developed by British Rail during the 1970s and early 1980s. The introduction into service of the Advanced Passenger Train was to be a three-stage project. Phase 1, the development of an experimental APT, the APT-E, was completed.
The Advanced Passenger Train (APT) - traintesting.com
The Advanced Passenger Train (APT) was a tilting high speed train developed by British Rail during the 1970s and early 1980s, for use on the West Coast Main Line (WCML). The WCML contains many curves and the APT pioneered the concept of active tilting to address these, a feature that has since appeared on designs around the world.