Upcoming Games

(UTC times)


Full list
Add a game

Upcoming Events

No events to display

Who's Online

TLAs - i.e. three letter acronyms

You are here: Home > Forum > General > General questions, comments, and issues > TLAs - i.e. three letter acronyms

Page 1 of 1

TLAs - i.e. three letter acronyms 26/03/2013 at 13:26 #42730
MikeW
Avatar
65 posts
Can some kind soul help my tottering memory and remind me what COY stands for in timetable train descriptions? (I had my work cut out with EWD - thought DB Schenker had renamed to England Wales Deutschland in one mad moment - and the recent discussion on MGR cleared up the merry-go-rounds for me).

But COY still eludes me.

Grateful for enlightenment.

Mike

Last edited: 26/03/2013 at 13:28 by MikeW
Reason: Egregious typo

Log in to reply
TLAs - i.e. three letter acronyms 26/03/2013 at 13:32 #42731
GoochyB
Avatar
222 posts
I think COY is just an abbreviation (for Company, as in a train carrying a single company's product), rather than a TLA .

But just to confuse matters it is usually shown in capitals!

Log in to reply
TLAs - i.e. three letter acronyms 26/03/2013 at 14:22 #42734
jc92
Avatar
3690 posts
it is indeed a company train, like blue Circles PCA workings off hope for instance, which are run specially for a single company using its own stock (I think FHH might actually own them in this case?).
"We don't stop camborne wednesdays"
Log in to reply
TLAs - i.e. three letter acronyms 26/03/2013 at 18:48 #42745
58050
Avatar
2659 posts
2 or 3 letter abbreviations are commonplace in Working Timetables & other official railway publications & in some cases you can tell the rough date the train(s) were running due to the abbreviations used. I'll put up a short list below to try & show you what you may see:-

MGR - Merry Go Round
EWD - Every Week Day
WTT - Working Timetable
FLT - Freightliner or Freightliner Terminal
COY - Company Owned Train
LD - Light Diesel
LE - Light Electric
EMU - Electric Multiple Unit
DMU - Diesel Multiple Unit
ECS - Empty Coaching Stock
NPCCS - Non Passenger Carrying Coaching Stock(usually parcel, postal or newspaper vans)
Dept'l - Departmental train(engineers or infastructure traffic)
ABS - Air Braked Service(used in the 1970s & early 1980s)
SLK - Speedlink train(used from the mid 1980s until the Speedlink network finished. This term replaced 'ABS')
BV - Brake Van
DB - Dual Braked
Pcls - Parcels
SLEP - Sleeper Service
HST - High Speed Train
APT - Advanced Passenger Train
TMD - Traction Maintenance Depot
SD - Servicing Depot
LIP - Locomotive Inspection Point
CS - Carriage Sdgs
HS - Holding Sdgs (for locos)
EDMU - Empty Diesel Multiple Unit
LDS - Light Diesel Shunt loco (mid to late 1970s)

There are other 2 or 3 letter abbreviations for running lines as well. Usually a list of abbreviations can be found on one of the first pages in the WTT. Hope this helps.

Last edited: 26/03/2013 at 19:02 by 58050
Log in to reply
The following user said thank you: AndyG
TLAs - i.e. three letter acronyms 26/03/2013 at 18:52 #42746
jc92
Avatar
3690 posts
for the era it applies to, LBV is loco(s) and brake van(s)
"We don't stop camborne wednesdays"
Log in to reply
TLAs - i.e. three letter acronyms 26/03/2013 at 19:19 #42747
postal
Avatar
5265 posts
" said:
Usually a list of abbreviations can be found on one of the first pages in the WTT.
Now that the WTT is available on-line, each book is split into sections (e.g. CB00/CB01/CB02 etc.) The section serialised 00 contains the abbreviations and other information like maps covering the individual sections within the group. The WTT books (01/02 etc) normally only contain the actual table with no supporting key or list of abbreviations.

“In life, there is always someone out there, who won’t like you, for whatever reason, don’t let the insecurities in their lives affect yours.” – Rashida Rowe
Log in to reply
TLAs - i.e. three letter acronyms 26/03/2013 at 19:34 #42748
Foulounoux
Avatar
26 posts
Just remember you have XTLA's as well

X for Extended. Ie more than 3 letters.

Log in to reply
TLAs - i.e. three letter acronyms 27/03/2013 at 00:11 #42760
MikeW
Avatar
65 posts
Many thanks to all who replied. As usual, more information than you can shake a stick at, and all very interesting!

Best wishes, Mike

Log in to reply