Betekenis van:
running board

running board
Zelfstandig naamwoord
    • a narrow footboard serving as a step beneath the doors of some old cars

    Hyperoniemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. an Executive Committee which shall oversee the running of the EIT and take such decisions as are necessary between meetings of the Governing Board;
    2. He or she shall provide secretarial services for the Management Board, shall report to it on the performance of his or her duties and shall submit to it any suggestion for the smooth running of the School.
    3. ‘Unladen mass’ means the mass of the vehicle in running order without driver, passengers or load, but with the fuel tank 90 per cent full and the usual set of tools and spare wheel on board, where applicable;
    4. The delays in restructuring ABX are to a large extent the result of continued interference by SNCB in the daily running of ABX and the fact that members of ABX's board of directors are appointed for political reasons.
    5. ‘Unladen mass’ means the mass of the vehicle in running order without driver, passengers or load, but with the fuel tank 90 per cent full and the usual set of tools and spare wheel on board, where applicable;
    6. ‘participation in the capital with rights or representation on the board of directors, supervisory board or any other governing body of a system vendor’ means an investment to which are attached rights or representation on the board of directors, supervisory board or any other governing body of a system vendor, and conferring the possibility of exercising, alone or jointly with others, decisive influence on the running of the business of the system vendor;
    7. Structure, command and control system for all train equipment, current-collection devices traction and energy conversion units, braking, coupling and running gear (bogies, axles, etc.) and suspension, doors, man/machine interfaces (driver, on-board staff and passengers, including the needs of persons with reduced mobility), passive or active safety devices and requisites for the health of passengers and on-board staff.
    8. Regarding state interference. The delays in restructuring ABX are to a large extent the result of continued interference by SNCB in the daily running of ABX and the fact that members of ABX's board of directors are appointed for political reasons.
    9. Vehicles of category M1 whose maximum mass exceeds 2500 kg and N1 classes II and III, running permanently or part-time on either LPG or NG fuel shall be equipped with on-board diagnostic system from 1 January 2006 for new types and from 1 January 2007 for all types.
    10. It is allowed to use existing Class B equipment on-board as a fallback arrangement to Class A system: this does not allow an infrastructure manager to require Class B systems onboard the interoperable trains for running on such a line.
    11. Vehicles of category M1, other than vehicles whose maximum mass exceeds 2500 kg, and N1 class I, running permanently or part-time on either LPG or NG fuel shall be equipped with on-board diagnostic system from 1 October 2004 for new types and from 1 July 2005 for all types.
    12. Vehicles of category M1 whose maximum mass exceeds 2500 kg and N1 classes II and III, running permanently or part-time on either LPG or NG fuel shall be equipped with on-board diagnostic system from 1 January 2006 for new types and from 1 January 2007 for all types.
    13. It is allowed to use existing Class B equipment on-board as a fallback arrangement to Class A system: this does not allow an infrastructure manager to require Class B systems onboard the interoperable trains for running on such a line.
    14. Vehicles of category M1, other than vehicles whose maximum mass exceeds 2500 kg, and N1 class I, running permanently or part-time on either LPG or NG fuel shall be equipped with on-board diagnostic system from 1 October 2004 for new types and from 1 July 2005 for all types.
    15. On a line equipped with ETCS and/or GSM-R, additional Class B equipment is possible in order to allow the operation of rolling stock not compatible with Class A during the migration phase. It is allowed to use existing Class B equipment on-board as a fallback arrangement to Class A system: this does not allow an infrastructure manager to require Class B systems onboard the interoperable trains for running on such a line.