Shuttle train

[5] A car shuttle train is used to transport accompanied automobiles, and usually also other types of road vehicles, for a relatively short distance.

Car shuttle trains usually operate on lines passing through a rail tunnel and connecting two places not easily accessible to each other by road.

Battery powered EMUs have been ordered and will replace the ADL/ADC class DMU shuttle in 2019.

The Yellow Line on the Chicago "L" originally ran as a nonstop shuttle from Dempster Street in Skokie to Howard Street in Chicago, offering connections to the Red and Purple Lines.

In 2012, an infill station opened on Oakton Street, no longer making the Yellow Line a true shuttle.

Unit trains that are dedicated to move on a regular basis between origin and destination are known as shuttle trains by the Union Pacific Railroad[7] and the BNSF Railway[8] The National Intermodal Network Austria, operated by Rail Cargo Austria, uses a hub-and-spoke system of shuttle trains to provide overnight links between the highest volume intermodal freight terminals in Austria.

Another shuttle train runs between the Tseung Kwan O and LOHAS Park stations, on a spur serving a new residential development.