EBICab is a trademark registered by Alstom (former Bombardier) for the equipment on board a train used as a part of an Automatic Train Control system. Three different families exist, which are technically unrelated.

EBICab 500/600

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EBICab 500 is Bombardier's implementation of the German PZB, the train protection system widely used in Germany, Austria and other countries, allowing operation up to 160 km/h.

EBICab 600 is Bombardier's implementation of the German PZB and LZB as a combined STM. The LZB is used on high-speed tracks in Germany, up to 300 km/h.

EBICab 700/900

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EBICab 700 was originally derived from Ericsson's SLR system in Sweden. Most trains in Sweden and Norway use a similar on-board system, Ansaldo L10000 (more known as ATC-2) from Bombardier's competitor Ansaldo STS (now Hitachi Rail STS).[1] ATC-2 was also developed in Sweden.[2]

EBICab balise in the Mediterranean Corridor

These on-board systems use pairs of balises mounted on the sleepers. The pairs of balises distinguish signals in one direction from the other direction with semicontinuous speed supervision, using a wayside to train punctual transmission using wayside transponders.[3]

Versions

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EBICab comes in two versions, EBICab 700 in Sweden, Norway, Portugal and Bulgaria and EBICab 900 installed in the spanish Mediterranean Corridor (vmax= 220 km/h), and in Finland (Finnish: Junakulunvalvonta) under the name ATP-VR/RHK. In Portugal it is known as Convel [pt] (the contraction of Controlo de Velocidade, meaning Speed Control).

The EBICab 900 system uses wayside balises with signal encoders or series communications with electronic lookup table, and on-board equipment on the train. The transmission of data occurs between the passive wayside balises (between 2 and 4 per signal) and the antenna installed under the train, which powers the balises when it passes over the balises. The coupling between the balise and the on-board antenna is inductive.

In comparison with ASFA, a system which transmits only a limited amount of data per frequency, EBICAB uses an electronic lookup table, allowing for a much larger amount of data transmitted.

Adif/Renfe, in Spain, sometimes use the term ATP to refer to EBICAB 900, which is the first system on its network to provide Automatic Train Protection. The Manila MRT Line 3 in the Philippines also uses the ATP term to refer to EBICAB 900.[4]

Main Characteristics

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  • Transponders operating in the ISM band at 27 MHz amplitude modulated for the clock pulses and impulse frequency of 50 kHz.
  • Transmission of data to trains at 4,5 MHz at 50 kbit/s with 32 bit packets encoding 12 bits of information (EBICAB 700) or 255 bit packets encoding 180 bits of information (EBICab 900), including the necessary synchronisation bits.
  • The signals are linked (concatenated), but the signs, for example, for warnings and speed, are not necessarily linked (concatenated); it is acceptable to have 50% of the transponders linked to be safe against failures.
  • The driver may input characteristics such as train identification, length, speed type, maximum speed, braking characteristics, and train pressure.
  • The driver receives visual indications such as speed limit, target speed, overspeed, ASFA Alarm, braking reset, Permission to Pass, alarm signals, braking warning, red or alphanumeric indications.

Supervision

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  • Line velocity, as a function of line capacity and the vehicle's performance capabilities in situations of overspeed or the imposition of lower velocity for some types of trains.
  • Multiple objectives, including signaling information without wayside signals.
  • The system can enforce permanent, temporary and emergency speed restrictions by using unlinked (concatenated) transponders.
  • Stop Point.
  • Dynamic braking profile.
  • Status of the level crossing and landslide detectors.
  • Maneuvers.
  • Protection against wheel wear.
  • Slip/Slide compensation.
  • Authorization to pass a signal at Stop.

Warnings

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  • Acoustic warning at excess of 5 km/h, service braking at excess of 10 km/h and emergency brake application at excess of 15 km/h
  • The operator may release service braking when the speed is below one of the speed limits (Normally below the speed limit + 10 km/h in Portugal).

Differences

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The most important difference with EBICab 900, is that EBICab 700 can only transmit packets with 12 useful bits for a total of 32bits and allows up to 5 transponders per signal.

EBICab 2000

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The EBICab 2000 is Bombardier's implementation of a ETCS, operated in several European countries (Germany, Switzerland, United Kingdom, Belgium, Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Poland). It can read Eurobalises and can communicate by Euroradio with a RBC.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Sollander, Stefan (2008-04-18). "ATC-installationer i fordon" (PDF). Swedish Transport Agency (PDF; 150 kB) (in Swedish). Retrieved 2018-09-10.
  2. ^ Teknogram Twenty Years of Safe Train Control in Sweden Archived 2010-08-26 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Jernbaneverket / INFRASTRUKTURENS EGENSKAPER, 2001-02-05[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ Department of Transportation and Communications (March 2013). MRT3 System Temporary Maintenance Provider – One (1) Year (PDF) (Report). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 December 2021. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
This article incorporates information from a Ferropedia article Archived 2011-04-30 at the Wayback Machine, published in Castilian under a Creative Commons Compartir-Igual 3.0 license.

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Train protection system

country/region Australia - Queensland (AWS and EBICAB) Australia - South Australia (AWS) Australia - Western Australia (EBICAB) Austria (Indusi / PZB, ZUB 262, LZB)

Balise

telegram while passing over each Eurobalise. The earlier KER balises (KVB, EBICAB, RSDD) were specified to work up to 350 km/h (220 mph). The train's on-board

Eurobalise

balises of the Ebicab train protection system. The Ebicab system was developed in Sweden (and Norway) by LMEricson and SRT. The Ebicab system was developed

Automatic train protection

control British Rail's ATP system Continuous Automatic Warning System (CAWS) EBICAB European Train Control System (ETCS) Kavach Positive Train Control (PTC)

Finnish railway signalling

signs, used together with the Automatic Train Control system ATP-VR/RHK (an EBICAB 900 system better known as JKV, Finnish: junakulunvalvonta). The main signal

MRTC 3100 class

rheostatic Safety systems Alstom CITYFLO 250 fixed block with subsystems of EBICAB 900 ATP, EBI Screen 900 CTC, and EBI Lock 950 CBI Coupling system Scharfenberg

MRTC 3000 class

Single-arm pantograph by Faiveley Transport The trains are equipped with the EBICAB 900 Automatic Train Protection (ATP) system. Some onboard signaling equipment

Bombardier Transportation

CBTC Continuous Automatic Warning System Contrôle de vitesse par balises EBICAB IIATS Integra-Signum Interoperable Communications Based Signaling Crocodile