(CB&Q 9900, Budd 1934) The first fast train using this type of bogie was the German
Fliegender Hamburger in 1932. In the United States, such configurations were used throughout the twentieth century with some success on early
streamlined passenger trainsets, such as the
Pioneer Zephyr in 1934, various
Southern Pacific Daylight articulated cars, and
Union Pacific Railroad's
M-10000.
Dallas Area Rapid Transit rail trains originally used a center bogie in a two-car unit but these have been modified to add a lower center section for handicapped level entry making a 3-car unit with two Jacobs bogies. Vehicles featuring Jacobs bogies include the
British Rail Class 370, the
New Zealand EW class locomotive, the
Alstom-made
TGV,
KTX-I,
KTX-Sancheon and
Class 373 high-speed trains, the
Bombardier Talent series of multiple units, the
LINT41, the
Class 423 S-Bahn vehicles, the
Canadian CN Turbo-Trains, several
FLIRT trains,
IC3 by
Adtranz, the
JR Central L0 Series maglev and the
Škoda ForCity tram. In Australia, Jacobs bogies were first used in 1984–85 on
B class Melbourne trams, which were designed to run on two former suburban railways which had been converted to
light rail operation.
Not a Jacobs bogie A number of
intermodal freight trains, such as the
Pacer Stacktrain run by US logistics company
XPO, Inc., use
container well cars joined in groups of three to five, with four
side bearings on top of the
bolster of a standard North American
bogie between the individual cars. ==Locomotives==