A unit train, also called a block train or a trainload service, is a train in which all cars (wagons) carry the same commodity and are shipped from the same origin to the same destination, without being split up or stored en route.[1] They are distinct from wagonload trains, composed of differing numbers of cars for various customers.[2]
Unit trains enable railways to compete more effectively with road and internal waterway transport systems. Time and money are saved by avoiding the complexities and delays that would otherwise involve assembling and disassembling trains at rail yards near the origin and destination.
Unit trains are particularly efficient and economical for high-volume commodities. Since they often carry only one commodity, cars are of all the same type; often identical. Some commodities (e.g., coal) can be loaded at the origin while the train moves slowly on a loop track. The procedure is reversed at the receiving end, and because there generally isn't any commodity to be hauled in the opposite direction, the train returns empty. In the United States the Santa Fe is credited with operating the first true unit train, hauling coal from a mine near Raton, New Mexico to a steel mill at Fontana, California.[3]
Use
Unit trains are typically used for the transportation of bulk goods. These can be solid substances such as:
- Aggregate
- Coal from mines to power stations
- Coke from coking plants to steel mills
- Iron ore from mines to ports or steel mills
- Ore
- Phosphate from mines to fertilizer plants
- Potash
- Sand (e.g., for hydraulic fracturing[4])
- Steel
- Taconite
- Track ballast or gravel
Bulk liquids are transported in unit trains made up of tank cars, such as:
- Crude oil from oil fields to refineries (can be [60,000 barrels (9,500 m3)] of oil in a unit train of 100 tank cars)[5]
Food, such as:
- Fruit juice
- Corn
- Mineral oil products from the refineries to the storage facilities
- Refrigerated food
- Wheat
Other examples include:
- Automobiles in autoracks
- Intermodal containers, generally between a port and a truck depot
- Military Equipment (weapons)
- TOFC (Trailer on flat car)
- Waste (garbage), usually for recycling, often metals or paper
See also
- Drag freight, a type of unit train.
- Coke Express
- Merry-go-round train
- Railex
- Tropicana's Juice Train
References
- ^ "Unit train". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2014.
- ^ Oliver Wyman. "The Mixed Train Concept: The Best of Both Worlds for European Rail Freight?" (PDF). www.oliverwyman.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-06-26.
...trainload service (point to point, complete train for one customer) or wagonload service (single wagons for various customers, assembled into trains)
- ^ Patterson, Steve (February 2025). "A first for the Santa Fe". Trains (magazine). Vol. 86, no. 2. Firecrown Media. pp. 12–17.
- ^ Cook, Pete (December 1, 2015). "Insights into the Largest Frac Sand Unit Train on Record". Petroleum Connection. Retrieved September 5, 2016.
- ^ McGurty, Janet; Adler, Lynn; Gregorio, David (2011-07-22). "Union Pacific sees rail oil shipments quadrupling". Reuters.
- ^ Thompson, Stephen (September 2006). "Keep on Truckin': Ethanol boom creates transportation challenges". United States Department of Agriculture. Archived from the original on 2011-05-19.