| CARPATHIANS | Range of trains a chap redesigned |
| FREIGHT | Sort of train a fighter could take? (7) |
| COACHMAN | Train a chap to be a driver |
| ORIENT | - Express; known as "the king of trains and the train of kings" and depicted in a novel by Agatha Christie, a vehicle created by Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits in 1883 (6) |
| RATTLER | A pit viper, a rickety coach/train, a stunning blow/pound or a toy for a baby, each named for a shaky motion, jolting action or a castanet-like sound (7) |
| OWL | Strigiform whose name is echoed in a word for a candle-waster, dusk, a night train, a nocturnal reveller, a scholarly look, a solemn/wise person, a tawny-black giant moth's name and, onomatopoeically, |
| PILOTMAN | He's in charge of trains going through a section of line under single line working (8) |
| ASTRINGENT | Severe chap behind reorganisation of trains (10) |
| STATUTE | First of trains passing through Monument as a rule (7) |
| TRANSMISSION | Broadcasting of trains miss no chance of turning (12) |
| LOCAL | Opposite of express in term of trains |
| LOCOMOTIVE | Mad reason for a drawer of trains (10) |
| TRANSIT | Movement of trains, perhaps, to a junction (7) |
| CHURSTON | Agitator catching last of trains to area of Devon |
| KES | Ken Loach film about a boy who trains a bird of prey |
| ARTISAN | Trains a criminal to be a craftsman (7) |
| TSARINA | Lunatic trains a wife of Russian emperor (7) |
| STEAM | Sort of trains that Roy Cropper is fond of in Corrie (5) |
| CABOOSES | Tails of trains |
| TERMINUS | End of trains? |