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Terminal tractor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A terminal tractor
Terminal tractor at the Port of Dover.

A terminal tractor, known in the United States as a shag truck, shunt truck, spotter truck, spotting tractor, yard truck, yard shifter, yard dog, yard goat, yard horse, yard mule, yard jockey, yard spotter, hostler, or mule, is a kind of semi-tractor intended to move semi-trailers within a cargo yard, warehouse facility, or intermodal facility, much like a switcher locomotive is used to position railcars. In the United Kingdom they are known as terminal lorries or terminal trucks.

A terminal tractor moving trailers in the Port of Rotterdam, the Netherlands

Characteristics

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Distinctions between a terminal tractor and a regular tractor unit include:

Since off-road versions do not have to drive on roads at highway speeds, a typical top speed is 40 kilometres per hour (25 mph).

Electric terminal trucks

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The global EV push has given rise to a large number of all-electric terminal truck manufacturers around the world. These trucks – used in both on-road and off-road fleet – claim to be zero-emission trucks.[2] Some of the notable manufacturers include Royal Terberg Group, Renault, Volvo, MAN, Orange EV, Motiv, Autocar, Kalmar, Mol Cy and Tevva. Orange EV is one of the largest suppliers of zero-emission terminal trucks in the United States.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Purpose-built trucks engineered by the leading OEM dedicated to severe-duty trucks".
  2. ^ "EV pickup trucks are the potential next area of growth for EVs". Insider Intelligence.
  3. ^ Bookmark +, News/Media Release •. "Orange EV Ranked First by Calstart for Deployment of Zero-Emission Trucks". www.worktruckonline.com.
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Media related to Terminal tractors at Wikimedia Commons