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Translations:Air Brake System Overview/5/en: Difference between revisions

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Finally, every individual vehicle has one or more of its own brake cylinders. These are low volume vessels that put pressure on a piston, which presses the vehicle’s brake shoes against the wheels, causing it to slow down. A control valve reacts to changes in pressure in the brake pipe, pressurizing the brake cylinders with air accordingly, from specialized vessels found on each vehicle, called auxiliary reservoirs.
Brake cylinders are low volume vessels found on each individual vehicle, doing the actual {{pll|Monitoring|braking force application}}. When pressurized, by auxiliary reservoirs, cylinders press {{pll|Brake Shoes|brake shoes}} against wheels, causing vehicles to slow down.

Revision as of 00:26, 9 March 2025

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Message definition (Air Brake System Overview)
Brake cylinders are low volume vessels found on each individual vehicle, doing the actual braking force application. When pressurized by auxiliary reservoirs, cylinders press {{pll|Brake Shoes|brake shoes}} against wheels, causing vehicles to slow down.

Brake cylinders are low volume vessels found on each individual vehicle, doing the actual braking force application . When pressurized, by auxiliary reservoirs, cylinders press brake shoes against wheels, causing vehicles to slow down.