in
Sweden Hungary Miskolc Tiszai railway station retains an active turntable as of December 2021.
India There was a turntable at the
Talaguppa end of the
Shimoga-Talaguppa railway, and one at
Howbagh Railway Station near
Jabalpur on the Balaghat-Jabalpur Narrow Gauge Line. Both were used to turn the
railbuses serving on these lines. After railbuses were replaced by
MEMUs, turntables were dismantled. In 2012, Mumbai Metro One, the
BOT operator of the
Mumbai Metro Line 1, announced that it had procured turntables to be used on the
Rapid Transit system.
Israel The
Israel Railway Museum, Haifa, has a turntable made by Metropolitan Carriage, Wagon & Finance Company, Old Park Works, Wednesbury. It was found buried in the grounds of the
Israel Defense Forces History Museum, on the site of the old Jaffa railway station yard.
Romania Like most ex-socialist countries of Eastern Europe, Romania still has several turntables in operational use. One can even see twin turntables, each with their own 180 degree roundhouse, like for one example at
Timisoara.
Sri Lanka In
Sri Lanka, most turntables which were used in the steam area have been abandoned. Most were situated at the major railway yards like
Kandy, Galle, Nanu Oya,
Anuradhapura, Maho, Galoya,
Trincomalee,
Batticaloa, Polgahawela Jnc, Badulla, Puttulam, and Bandarawela and depots in
Dematagoda 2no. and
Maradana. All turntables in
Sri Lanka Railways were operated manually. They were used to turn some rolling stock and non-dual cab locomotives. Most turntables were later scrapped, though some have been preserved in museums.
United Kingdom In Britain, where steam-hauled trains usually had
vacuum-operated brakes, it was quite common for turntables to be operated by
vacuum motors worked from the locomotive's vacuum ejector or pump via a flexible hose or pipe, although there are a few manually and electrically operated examples. The major manufacturers were
Ransomes and Rapier, Ipswich and Cowans Sheldon, Carlisle. The
Great Western Railway (GWR) built several tables for its own use; there is little evidence any other companies did so.
United States Due to the asymmetric design of many locomotives, turntables still in use are more common in North America than in Europe, where locomotive design favors configurations with a controller cabin on both ends or in the middle. In San Francisco, US, the Powell
cable car line uses turntables at the end of the routes, since the cable cars have operating controls at only one end of the car. The
Long Island Rail Road still has a turntable and roundhouse at the Richmond Hills yard. == Surviving turntables ==