Australia Between 1961 and 1995, Australia had five bogie exchange centres, which opened and closed as gauge conversion work proceeded. The gauges served were and , though the Queensland did acquire 100 bogie-exchange compatible QLX wagons just in case. All the wagons involved had wagon codes ending in "X", such as VLX. The centres were: •
Dynon,
Melbourne,
Victoria •
Wodonga near
Albury on state border. •
Port Pirie,
South Australia •
Peterborough,
South Australia •
Dry Creek,
Adelaide,
South Australia – the youngest and most modern The busiest facility was that at Dynon, in a typical year (1981–82), 24,110 wagons were bogie exchanged, an average of 66 per day. This was done by one shift of 18 men, compared with the 100 men required if the same amount of freight were transferred wagon to wagon.
Belarus •
Brest, Belarus – between gauge and at the border to
Poland Bolivia Bogie exchange was used between and gauge on the
Ferrocarril de Antofagasta a Bolivia Railway.
Canada • Between and the of the former
Newfoundland Railway (
Terra Transport) at
Port aux Basques China A bogie exchange station exists at the Chinese border to
Mongolia. Both the Moscow-
Beijing passenger train (
Trans-Siberian) and freight trains get their bogies exchanged. Mongolia has , China has . Also, a bogie exchange station was placed farther east at the Russian–Chinese border crossing at
Zabaykalsk/
Manzhouli. Also, China and ex-soviet countries use the different type coupler (
Janney and
SA-3). An
adapter may be used.
Finland A bogie exchange station exists in the
Port of Turku with a short stretch of gauge railway. Freight cars get their bogies exchanged.
SeaRail train ferries go from Germany and Sweden. They carry no passenger trains, and passengers must walk to
Turku Harbour railway station opposite the ferry terminals. Finland has
broad gauge. A similar station was built in
Tornio in 2022 to facilitate train transport between Sweden and Finland along the
dual-gauge Tornio–Haparanda railway and into Sweden's gauge network. The link had become more important as Finland closed its border with Russia.
Germany In 1898, Emil Breidsprecher, a director of the
Marienburg–
Mława railway and a future professor at the
Königliche Technische Hochschule zu Danzig, invented a system that allowed to change
wheelsets in wagons that travelled across a break of gauge, without the need to unload them first. In September 1901, a facility was installed at the then German-Russian border at
Iłowo. The system was used until 1914 on some railway border crossings between Russia and states using standard gauge. Known locations, in addition to Iłowo, are
Łódź (then an industrial centre served by both standard and broad gauge railway lines) and
Novoselytsia (then Austrian-Russian border). There were also some small installations to meet local demand. As of 1938, the sole facility operated at
Zdolbuniv at the then Polish-Soviet border. A bogie exchange station in the port of
Mukran serves
train ferries that go to and from Russia, Latvia, and Lithuania, which have broad gauge.
Iran •
Jolfa – , between and (
Russian gauge) •
Sarakhs – , between and (
Russian gauge) •
Zahedan – 2009, between and (
Indian gauge) •
Baku – 2012, To be developed in Amirabad port, Caspian Sea, between and (
Russian gauge)
Kazakhstan •
Druzhba, KZ –
Alashankou, CN between and .
Moldova •
Ungheni between and . •
Ungheni-
Iași •
Cantemir-Falciu •
Giurgiulești-
Galați North Korea •
Tumangan, North Korea – between and (
Russian gauge) at the border to
Russia. The bogies of the direct sleeping car Moscow – Pyongyang, which runs twice monthly, are exchanged there.
Peru • Between and between the
Ferrocarril Central Andino and the
Ferrocarril Huancayo - Huancavelica, including
locomotives The latter is now . This
change was completed by October 2010.
Romania •
Vadul Siret between and at the border with
Ukraine. •
Halmeu between and at the border with
Ukraine. •
Ungheni between and at the border with
Moldova.
Russia •
Zabaikalsk (450 km from
Chita) with
China •
Grodekovo (116 km from
Ussuriisk and 224 km from Vladivostok) with
China •
Khasan -
North Korea (315 km from Vladivostok). •
Kholmsk,
Sakhalin Island. The bogie exchange is necessary to enable Russian mainland cars to run on the Sakhalin railways, which use the gauge. •
Kaliningrad Spain (at right) being
shunted for bogie exchange at
Irun railway station, Spain, 1993 • At
Irun, between and • At
Portbou, between and
Tunisia • Between and , including
locomotives
Ukraine •
Chop (respectively
Mukachevo since 2018) between (
Russian gauge) and at the border to
Hungary and
Slovakia. •
Jagodin between (
Russian gauge) and at the border to
Poland. •
Mostyska between (
Russian gauge) and at the border to
Poland.
United States train in 1898. Two standard-gauge cars riding on narrow-gauge trucks head the train. • The
Burlington and Northwestern Railway used an unknown hoist in the 1890s to run
standard gauge cars on
narrow gauge trucks. • The
Cairo and Fulton Railroad (5-foot gauge) used a Nutter hoist at
Texarkana in the 1870s to exchange with
standard gauge lines. • The
Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad also used an unknown hoist in the 1890s to run
standard gauge cars on
narrow gauge trucks. In the early 2020's, the heritage operation restoring the railroad announced their intent to acquire several period appropriate standard gauge cars to regauge to represent the practice in photo charters. • The
Erie Railway used a Nutter hoist at
Urbana, Ohio to interchange between and
standard gauge from 1871 until no later than 1878. • The
Illinois Central Railroad used a Nutter hoist at
Cairo, Illinois to interchange between its
standard gauge equipment with the of the
Mississippi Central from 1874 until the standardization of the latter. • The standard-gauge
International–Great Northern Railroad and the narrow-gauge
National Railroad of Mexico used an unknown hoist at
Laredo, Texas in the 1890s to exchange trucks to permit through traffic. • The
Sedalia, Warsaw and South Western Railway used an unknown hoist in the 1890s to run
standard gauge cars on
narrow gauge trucks as well. The accepted practice was to couple standard gauge cars immediately behind the engine, ahead of any narrow gauge cars in the train. • The Bradford, Bordell and Kinzua Railroad (later part of the
Pittsburgh and Western Railroad) used an unknown hoist in the 1890s to interchange between and
standard gauge. == Transfer time ==