Where vehicles move to a different gauge, they must either be prepared for
bogie exchange or be prepared for
wheelset exchange. For example,
passenger trains moving between the in France and the gauge in Spain pass through an installation which adjusts their variable-gauge axles. This process is known as "gauge change".
Goods wagons are still subject to either bogie exchange or
wheelset exchange.
Steam locomotives in 1924, including the
600 class pictured here (right), were configured to permit easy conversion from broad gauge to standard gauge. The older
Rx class locomotive next to it was incapable of being converted because its frames were too wide for standard gauge. Some
steam locomotives were constructed to be reconfigured to a different gauge: for example, some
East African Railways locomotives;
Garratts; the large
500,
600 and
700 class locomotives of the
South Australian Railways introduced by
William Webb in 1926; Of these locomotives, only one R class was converted (when in preservation). Two unanticipated conversions to occur were the ten locomotives of the
South Australian Railways 740 class (from standard to broad gauge) and five narrow-gauge
T class locomotives, which became the Tx class on the broad gauge before they were eventually converted back again. Gauge-change in steam locomotives has a long lineage. In about 1860, the
Bristol and Exeter Railway converted five locomotives to gauge, and later converted them back again. Also in the 19th century, in the United States, some broad-gauge locomotives were designed for easy conversion to gauge, and in the United Kingdom some broad-gauge locomotive classes of the
Great Western Railway were designed for easy conversion to gauge. After
World War II, a number of captured
German 03 class Pacifics locomotives were re-gauged to the
Russian gauge.
Diesel and electric locomotives and trains Most diesel and electric rolling stock can undergo gauge conversion by
replacement of their bogies. Engines with fixed wheelbases are more difficult to convert. In Australia, diesel locomotives are regularly
re-gauged between broad, standard and narrow gauges.
Wagons and coaches Gauge conversion of wagons and coaches involves the replacement of the
wheelsets or the
bogies. In May 1892, wagons and coaches were converted when the gauge of the
Great Western Railway was abandoned. ==Gauge orphan==