| PLATFORM | Area along a railway track giving passengers access to trains (8) |
| AIRFOIL | I succeed in giving passengers a lift or I fail badly |
| ENTER | Gain access to train in Burton-onTrent-Erdington route (5) |
| INFILTRATE | Gradually gain access to train I felt needing an overhaul (10) |
| LITTORAL | (Relating to) area along a shore (8) |
| ROADSIDE | Area along a route for cars, next the to kerb (8) |
| STATIONS | They've put a stop to trains? (8) |
| RETROFIT | Process by which accessories are added to trains (8) |
| LIVERAIL | It provides electrical power to trains (4,4) |
| SLEEPERS | What beams are laid transversely under a railway track to support it? (8) |
| SEAFRONT | Area along the Mediterranean, e.g. |
| LAYBY | A type of hard shoulder, pull-off, rest stop or verge; a railway siding; or, a mooring area along a canal or other narrow waterway (3-2) |
| LINE | A railway track; a wrinkle; a very narrow stripe; or, a rope such as a guy for a tent or a sheet for a sail (4) |
| RHENISH | Like the area along a German river |
| TUBER | Underground growth due to trains, initially, plus taxis (5) |
| CODERED | Immediate stop order issued to trains on London Underground (4,3) |
| STAMDARDGAUGE | Of a railway track, having a distance of 4ft 8.5 in (1.435 m) between the lines (8,5) |
| SLEEPER | Beam supporting a railway track; an antique or a work of art that has been undervalued and consequently left unsold; or, a spy who is lying low and waiting to be activated (7) |
| STANDARDGAUGE | Of a railway track, having a distance of 4 ft 8 inches (1.435 m) between the lines (8,5) |
| GANTRY | A bridge-like framework used to support signals over a railway track (6) |