Australia In 1933, as many as 140 inventions were reviewed by Australian federal and state railway commissions to overcome the breaks of gauge between the different states. None were accepted. About 20 of these devices were adjustable wheels/axles of some kind or another, which may be analogous to the modern
VGA. VGA systems were mostly intended for Broad Gauge and Standard Gauge lines. Break of Gauge stations were installed at
Port Pirie,
Peterborough and
Albury; these were fairly manual in operation. The newest installation was at
Dry Creek and was of a more automatic design. The Talgo RD design is even more automatic and efficient.
Belarus/Poland A
Talgo gauge changing facility is installed at
Brest near the Belarusian-Polish border. It is used by
Russian Railways' fast trains connecting Moscow and Berlin. Orders for 7 Talgo VGA trainsets placed were placed in 2011. The trains under the brand "
Strizh" are in service since 2016.
Canada Variable gauge axles were used for a while on the
Grand Trunk Railway in the 1860s in
Canada to connect and
standard gauge without transshipment. Five hundred vehicles were fitted with "adjustable gauge trucks" but following heavy day-in, day-out use the system proved unsatisfactory, particularly in cold and snowy weather. The system used telescoping axles with wide hubs that allowed the wheels to be squeezed or stretched apart through a gauge-changer, after holding pins had been manually released. Railway operations over the
Niagara Bridge were also complicated.
Finland/Sweden In 1999, a gauge-changer was installed at
Tornio at the Finnish end of the dual-gauge section between
Haparanda and Tornio, for use with variable gauge freight wagons. The Tornio gauge changer is a
Rafil design from Germany; a similar
Talgo-RD gauge changer at the Haparanda end used to exist, but was removed as it required de-icing in winter.
Train ferry traffic operated by
SeaRail and arriving from Germany and Sweden by sea used
bogie exchange facilities in the
Port of Turku.
Georgia A new gauge changer has been put in place in Akhalkalaki for
Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway. Northwestern end has rails apart, southeastern end has rails apart. Both bogie exchange and variable gauge adapters are provided.
Japan The "Gauge Change Train" is a project started in Japan in the 1990s to investigate the feasibility of producing an
electric multiple unit (EMU) train capable of operating both the
Shinkansen high-speed network at and the original network at . See . The first-generation train was tested from 1998 to 2006, including on the US High-speed Test Track in 2002. The second-generation train, intended to run at a maximum speed of , was test-run in various locations in Japan between 2006 and 2013. A third-generation train has been undergoing reliability trials since 2014 in preparation for potential introduction to service on the planned
Kyushu Shinkansen extension to Nagasaki.
Gallery File:Free Gauge Train GCT-01 at kamogawa.jpg|The first-generation "Gauge Change Train" EMU in May 2003 File:Gauge Changing Train 20120912.jpg|The second-generation "Gauge Change Train" EMU in September 2012
Lithuania/Poland A gauge changing facility of the Polish
SUW 2000 system is installed at
Mockava north of the Lithuanian-Polish border. VGA passenger trains between Lithuania and Poland were running between October 1999 and May 2005, and VGA goods trains between early 2000s and 2009.
Poland/Ukraine There are two gauge changing facilities of the Polish SUW 2000 system installed on the Polish-Ukrainian border, one of them in
Dorohusk (Poland) on the Warsaw-Kiyv line, another in
Mostyska (Ukraine) on the Kraków-Lviv line. On 14 December 2003 VGA passenger trains were introduced between
Kraków (Poland) and
Lviv (Ukraine) instead of
bogie exchange. VGA saves about 3 hours compared to bogie exchange. The trains last ran in 2016.
Spain Spain is the largest user of variable gauge systems. This is because of the need to connect older mainlines built to
Iberian gauge and extensive new
high-speed railway lines and connections to France, using the standard gauge. Two gauge changes are installed on lines to France and at all entrances/exits leading between the high-speed network and older lines. There are also significant lengths of secondary lines but these are not connected to the main network. In February 2004, RENFE placed orders for: • Forty-five CAF/Alstom 25 kV AC/3 kV DC, variable gauge EMUs for 250 km/h regional services, between October 2006 and May 2009 (€580 million) • Twenty-six 25 kV AC variable gauge trains for long-distance services using two Bombardier power cars and
Talgo Series VII trailer cars (€370 million) Gauges involved are and . •
Olmedo to
Medina del Campo in
Valladolid, Spanish test track. • July 2009 –
Talgo 250 supplied with
Voith Turbo SZH-692 gauge change final drives. There is also a circular test track in Spain.
Switzerland Variable gauge bogies are implemented on the Montreux–Gstaad–Zweisimmen–Spiez–Interlaken line. Trains automatically switch from to at
Zweisimmen. The bogie has no axles, which allow the bogie half frames holding the wheels on both sides to slide sideways relative to each other. The EV09-Prose gauge changer at Zweisimmen was satisfactorily tested on 19 June 2019. The system, designed to allow operation on both
Montreux Oberland Bernois Railway's (MOB) 1000mm gauge line and
BLS AG 1435mm gauge infrastructure, was first implemented on 11 December 2022. Moreover, while the gauge is being automatically changed at Zweisimmen, the air spring mounted on the bogie cross member is automatically adjusted by 200 mm to match the body height with the platform height on the MOB or BLS AG portion of the GoldenPass Express.
United Kingdom John Fowler mentions in 1886 at attempt by the GWR to develop a "telescopical" axle. Trams ran between
Leeds () and
Bradford ( gauge) following a successful trial in 1906 using Bradford tram car number 124. The system was later patented by – GB190601695 (A) of 1906. This system was improved again in patent GB190919655 (A) of 1909 by introducing a locking system acting on the wheel and axle rather than just the wheel rim. This provided a more effective grip where the wheel was free to move along the
splined axle. == Comparison with bogie exchange ==