Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q2142500> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 43 of
43
with 100 triples per page.
- Q2142500 subject Q8596688.
- Q2142500 subject Q8988093.
- Q2142500 abstract "A railroad crane (US: crane car or wrecker; UK: breakdown crane) is a type of crane used on a railroad for one of three primary purposes: freight handling in goods yards, permanent way (PW) maintenance, and accident recovery work. Although the design differs according to the type of work, the basic configuration is similar in all cases: a rotating crane body is mounted on a sturdy chassis fitted with flanged wheels. The body supports the jib (UK; US: boom) and provides all the lifting and operating mechanisms; on larger cranes, an operator's cabin is usually provided. The chassis is fitted with buffing (UK) and/or coupling gear to allow the crane to be moved by a locomotive, although many are also self-propelled to allow limited movement about a work site.For cranes with a jib that extends beyond the length of the chassis, a idler car (also known as a 'jib carrier' (UK) or 'boom car' (US)) is provided to protect the jib and to allow the crane to be coupled within a train. The idler car is usually a long, flat wagon (i.e. a flatcar) that provides a means of securing the jib for transportation; storage areas for special equipment or supplies are usually fitted too. It was not uncommon for the idler car to be built on a withdrawn revenue-earning wagon.".
- Q2142500 thumbnail Spr64.jpg?width=300.
- Q2142500 wikiPageExternalLink www.badgerequipment.com.
- Q2142500 wikiPageExternalLink www.crane-kirov.ru.
- Q2142500 wikiPageExternalLink www.littlegiantcorp.com.
- Q2142500 wikiPageExternalLink www.swingmastercorp.com.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q1011130.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q1079190.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q1239275.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q1392476.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q1426316.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q143609.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q160342.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q16926678.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q16952521.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q17019289.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q1729021.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q178692.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q192896.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q217421.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q220229.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q2562991.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q2945123.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q3565868.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q4042983.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q420962.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q4405445.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q4802339.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q5127466.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q7620524.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q766417.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q7689852.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q7794022.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q7988142.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q83065.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q8596688.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q8988093.
- Q2142500 wikiPageWikiLink Q917515.
- Q2142500 comment "A railroad crane (US: crane car or wrecker; UK: breakdown crane) is a type of crane used on a railroad for one of three primary purposes: freight handling in goods yards, permanent way (PW) maintenance, and accident recovery work. Although the design differs according to the type of work, the basic configuration is similar in all cases: a rotating crane body is mounted on a sturdy chassis fitted with flanged wheels.".
- Q2142500 label "Crane (rail)".
- Q2142500 depiction Spr64.jpg.