British Rail Class 43 (HST)

British Rail Class 43

Type and origin
Power type Diesel-electric
Builder BREL Crewe Works
Build date 1975–1982
Total produced 197
Specifications
Configuration Bo-Bo
UIC class Bo'Bo'
Gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Bogies BP10
Wheel diameter 3 ft 4 in (1.016 m)
Length 17.79 metres (58.4 ft)
Width 2.74 metres (9.0 ft)
Loco weight 70.25 tonnes (69.14 long tons; 77.44 short tons)
Fuel capacity 990 imp gal (4,500 l; 1,190 US gal)
Prime mover Paxman 12VP185 or MTU 16V4000 R41R
Originally Paxman Valenta 12RP200L
Alternator VP185: Brush Traction BA1001B
MTU: Brush Traction BA1001C
Traction motors GEC G417AZ (43124-43152)
Brush Traction TMH68-46
Both frame mounted, four off.
Transmission Engine driven alternator and rectifier supplying DC to traction motors
MU working Within class only
Train heating Electric Train Heat
Train brakes Air
Performance figures
Maximum speed in service: 125 mph (201 km/h)
Record: 148 mph (238 km/h)
Power output Engine: 2,250 hp (1,678 kW)
At rail: 1,320 kW (1,770 bhp)
Tractive effort Maximum: 17,980 lbf (80.0 kN)
Continuous: 10,340 lbf (46.0 kN) @64.5 mph (104 km/h)
Loco brakeforce 35 long tons-force (349 kN)
Career
Operators Current
East Midlands Trains
Grand Central
CrossCountry
Network Rail
Virgin Trains East Coast
Great Western Railway
Previous
British Rail
GNER
Midland Mainline
National Express East Coast
Virgin CrossCountry
East Coast
Virgin Trains
Cotswold Rail
Future
Abellio Scotrail
Numbers 43002–43198
Axle load class Route availability 5

The British Rail Class 43 (HST) is the TOPS classification used for the InterCity 125 High Speed Train (formerly classes 253 and 254) power cars, built by BREL from 1975 to 1982.

The class is the fastest diesel locomotive in the world, with an absolute maximum speed of 148 mph (238 km/h), and a regular service speed of 125 mph (201 km/h). There are claims that this diesel rail speed record has been broken twice unofficially: by the TEP80 Russian train in 1993 achieving 271 km/h (168 mph), and the Talgo XXI Spanish train reporting 158 mph (254 km/h) in 2002.[1]

History and background

In early British Rail InterCity livery, Class 43 No.43079 (254012) leaves York railway station.
Locomotive information panel carried on the inner end

In the early 1970s the British Railways Board (BRB) made the decision to replace its main-line express diesel traction. Financial limitations were tight, so mass electrification was not possible. As a result, a new generation of high-speed diesel trains had to be developed.

Experience with the high-speed Class 55 Deltic locomotives had shown that a low axle weight was essential to avoid damage to the track at sustained high speed, and that high-speed engines were the only way to provide a good enough power/weight ratio for diesels. To power the HST at up to 125 mph (201 km/h), each power car had a new diesel engine, the 12-cylinder Paxman Valenta, running at 1,500 rpm and developing 2,250 bhp (1,680 kW). The 70-tonne weight of the power car gave it a 17.5-tonne axle loading.

Development and design

The prototype set was developed at the Railway Technical Centre, Derby, the power cars having been constructed by BREL Crewe Works and the British Rail Mark 3 passenger cars by BREL at Derby Litchurch Lane Works. The engine used in the prototype power cars was the Paxman 'Valenta' 12RP200L, which developed 2,250 horsepower (1,680 kW). The electrical equipment was supplied by Brush. The power cars had a main driver's position at one aerodynamically shaped end with the other flat and gangwayed end having only an auxiliary driving position for shunting purposes.

The two prototype power cars emerged from the works in June and August 1972 and were initially numbered 41001 and 41002, but after a short period the entire set, including the passenger coaches, became reclassified as a diesel-electric multiple unit: British Rail Class 252. The power cars were given the coaching stock numbers 43000 and 43001. After proving trials on the Eastern Region the prototype High Speed Diesel Train (HSDT) was transferred to the Western Region, where it was deployed on Paddington Bristol/Weston-super-Mare services.

The design was successful and led to production orders being placed for similar trains for the Western, Eastern, Scottish and London Midland Regions. The production power cars featured a redesigned front end without conventional buffers, although a rigid drawbar can be used to connect an HST to an ordinary locomotive. Following the introduction of production HST sets, the prototype unit was withdrawn, the power cars passing to the Research Division at Derby. Of the ten prototype coaches, two were adapted for use in the Royal Train,[2] five were modified for use with the production HSTs,[3] and three were transferred to Departmental stock.[4]

The 197 power cars produced are numbered 43002-43198. 43001 was applied to the second of the two prototype power cars, while the first of the pair (now preserved and operational at the Great Central Railway (Nottingham)) became 43000, which is unusual because BR TOPS classification numbered its locomotives from 001 upwards (this was because it was not, at the time, classified as a locomotive).

Buffered units

43468 Departs London King's Cross

In 1987, as electrification of the East Coast Main Line was under way, British Rail realised that the new Mk4 carriages for the Class 89 and 91 locomotives were not going to be finished in time for the introduction of electric services on the East Coast Main Line so, in late 1987, a total of eight Eastern Region power cars (Numbers 43013/014/065/067/068/080/084/123) conversions (on 43014/123) were carried out at the Derby Engineering Development Unit, whilst the other six (43013/065/067/068/080/084) were converted by the diesel repair shop at Stratford to have the lower valancing removed and buffers fitted.

After being fitted with buffers, these power cars began work as surrogate DVTs to work with the Class 91s and 89. The locomotives, working with conventional Mk3 stock, worked on the line between 1987 and 1991, when the last Class 91 locomotives entered service. As well as buffers being fitted to these powercars, special remote control equipment was also added to the locomotives so they could be controlled by the locomotive at the front. Once these locomotives left DVT duties, the remote equipment was removed.

After privatisation, these power cars joined the Virgin Trains fleet working both Virgin Cross-Country and Virgin West Coast routes, where they displaced loco-hauled stock. All the units were repainted from their original Intercity colours to the Virgin Red livery. Later, Virgin Trains gave up the HSTs when new Virgin Voyager units were delivered, and nearly all of these power cars went into storage at Long Marston yard.

After years of storage, several of the powercars were bought by Midland Mainline to be part of 'Project Rio', special services running from St Pancras Station to Manchester while major engineering works were undertaken on the West Coast Main Line. These units were kept in the de-branded Virgin Trains livery throughout their time with Midland Mainline and put back in storage once Project Rio had finished in 2006.

43013 and 43014 joined Network Rail's New Measurement Train in 2003 and have continued to work with this service ever since. Both of these units have now had MTU engines fitted.

43080 was leased to GNER as a one-off powercar, working as a spare unit that could be easily called for if a HST failed. For most of its time with GNER, it was based at Craigentinny yard in Edinburgh and was painted into GNER colours. This locomotive's lease ended in 2006 and it was returned to storage at Long Marston.

In 2007, Grand Central Railway took an interest in the stored power cars and amalgamated them into its fleet of three HST sets. In total, 43065/067/068/080/084/123 were bought by the company and now run high-speed services between Sunderland and London Kings Cross. HSTs 43084 and 43123 were the final operational Paxman Valenta power cars, being re-engined in 2010 with the MTU treatment. While at the works being re-engined, Grand Central added the orange stripe that appears on its Class 180 units, re-painted the front ends (making them look more like the non-buffered HSTs), and re-numbered the power cars into the four-hundreds. These are the current numbers: 43465 (065)/467 (067)/468 (068)/480 (080)/484 (084)/423 (123).

Engines

The cab of First Great Western 43159 at Railfest 2012.

British Rail experimented with Mirrlees Blackstone MB190 engines in four Western region examples (43167–43170) between 1987 and 1996, but this experiment was unsuccessful and the standard Paxman Valenta engines re-installed. These four locomotives have since all been re-engined with the MTU 16V4000 engine. 43167 is now 43367 and operates with Virgin Trains East Coast, whilst 43168-43170 are still in service, in the former Western region area under Great Western Railway

Paxman began development of the Valenta's successor, the VP185, in 1987. The suggestion that British Rail participate in a trial of the new VP185 engine in the IC125 was first mooted in January 1991, and a formal agreement for the trial was signed in May 1993.[5]

A qualifying requirement for the trial was that the engine should undergo a British Rail Type Test which was carried out between December 1993 and February 1994.[5] The test involved completion of 3,000 cycles, each of 10 minutes duration, with four minutes at the maximum power of 2,611 kW (3,501 bhp) and six minutes at idle, simulating the typical 'on-off' nature of IC125 duty. The test was much more severe than operational duty, where the train operates at a maximum of 1,678 kW (2,250 bhp). The successful results of the test cleared the way for installation of a VP185 in Power Car 43170 at Plymouth Laira Depot for in-service trials in the summer of 1994. Power car 43170 entered service on 22 September 1994.[5] 43170 was given the nameplate "Edward Paxman".[6]

During the late 1990s twenty-five HST power cars were re-engined with Paxman 12VP185L engines in order to improve fuel consumption and reduce emissions, but these engines have proved less reliable in service than hoped. However, the 12VP185L was introduced fleet-wide within the Australian XPT series.

The very last VP185 engine to be manufactured at Paxman's Colchester Works was despatched from the factory on 15 September 2003 for duty with Midland Mainline. Midland Mainline saw a programme completed in 2004 to convert 14 power cars to VP185 engines to supplement the four already converted during 1994/95, and this led to 43043/045/048-050/052/055/060/061/072/073/076/082 joining 43047/059/074/075 with this engine type.[7]

Today there is not one production power car remaining that is still fitted with a Paxman Valenta engine, although the 125 Group's Project Miller have reinstalled a Paxman Valenta in the surviving prototype powercar, 41001 (formerly 43000).

Hybrid trial

In 2007 Brush Traction and Hitachi, Ltd equipped Paxman-Valenta-powered 43089 and a semi-permanently coupled Mark 3 coach with a diesel-battery hybrid power system for experimental trials. The power car was named "Hayabusa" (Hayabusa, はやぶさ, Japanese for Peregrine falcon, project name 'V-Train 2').[8][9][10] It has since been returned to normal service with East Midlands Trains.

Life extension

First Great Western HST with MTU engines, filmed at Stoke Canon Level Crossing

The HST, having been in operation since the late 1970s, is due for replacement by the Hitachi Super Express. The development cycle for the replacement series is such that the existing fleet may be required to operate through to 2019 or beyond.

Prototype

Main article: British Rail Class 41
Locomotive 41001, the prototype for the Class 43, was reregistered as Class 43/9 number 43000 to facilitate main line movements.

In May 2011 the National Railway Museum (NRM) announced that the remaining HST prototype power car 41001 would undergo full restoration work.[13] A long-term loan was agreed between the NRM and the 125 Group of volunteers for the locomotive and a Paxman Valenta RP200L engine. The replacement engine (no. S508) was required as the original Valenta engine (no. S183) had been sectioned for display purposes. The S508 engine was lifted into the locomotive at Neville Hill depot on 29 June 2012.[14]

In order to facilitate a main line move, Class 41 prototype HST power car 41001 was re-registered as a Class 43/9 locomotive, with the number 43000. It is the only locomotive in this sub-class.[15]

Operations

The rear of First Great Western 43159 at Railfest 2012.
Main article: InterCity 125

When Crewe Works built them, the InterCity 125 units were considered to be diesel multiple units, and were allocated Classes 253 and 254 for Western and Eastern Region services respectively. The locomotives were introduced in the Midland region later.

Until the HST's introduction, the maximum speed of British trains was limited to 100 mph (160 km/h). The increased speed and rapid acceleration and deceleration of the HST made it ideal for passenger use, and it slashed journey times around the country. The prototype InterCity 125 (power cars 43000 and 43001) set the world record for diesel traction at 143 mph (230 km/h) on 12 June 1973. An HST also holds the world speed record for a diesel train carrying passengers. On 27 September 1985, a special press run for the launch of a new Tees-Tyne Pullman service from Newcastle to London King's Cross, formed of a shortened 2+5 set, briefly touched 144 mph (232 km/h) north of York.

During 1987, eight HST power cars were converted for use as driving van trailers (DVTs) with Class 91 locomotives during trials on the East Coast Main Line. The power cars were fitted with buffers and Time Division Multiplex equipment that allowed them to directly control a Class 91, and were moved over to the ECML where they were used on workings with Class 89 and then Class 91 locomotives from London to Leeds. After the Mk 4 stock had been delivered, the HST power cars had the TDM equipment removed, and then reverted to their normal duties. The power cars used for this project can be easily identified as they are still fitted with buffers. They were then transferred to Virgin Cross Country, and put in storage when Virgin replaced its HST fleet with Bombardier's Voyager (though Arriva, upon later taking over the franchise, acquired 10 power cars, 4 of which were buffered). Grand Central bought six of these for services from Sunderland to London, the remaining two having been integrated into Network Rail's New Measurement Train.

After the privatisation of British Rail the HST sets continued to be used. 194 of the 197 locomotives built remain in service, the most at any one point in history.

Fleet status

Status/Operator Image Number Notes
CrossCountry 10[16] All Class 43/2 with MTU engines.
Virgin Trains East Coast 32[16] All Class 43/2 with MTU engines. To be replaced by Class 800/Class 801 by December 2018
East Midlands Trains 24 All Class 43/0 with Paxman VP185 engines.
Great Western Railway 119[16] All Class 43/0 with MTU engines and Automatic Train Protection. To be replaced by Class 800/Class 801/Class 802
Grand Central Railway 6 All buffered from previous use as surrogate DVTs. MTU engines.
Network Rail 3 New Measurement Train. Pool consists of 43013, 014, 062. All are in "Flying Banana" Network Rail livery, fitted with external video cameras and MTU engines. 013 and 014 buffered from previous use as surrogate DVTs.
Scrapped 3
  • 43173 - written off in the Southall crash of 19 September 1997, being disposed of after completion of the inquiry into the accident. Cut up by Serco at MOD Shoeburyness.
  • 43011 - written off in the Ladbroke Grove crash of 5 October 1999, being disposed of after completion of the inquiry into the accident. Cut up by Sims Metals at Crewe Works in June 2002.
  • 43019 - written off in the Ufton Nervet level crossing collision of 6 November 2004. Cut up by Sims Metals of Beeston in July 2005. (Power car 43139 is dedicated to the driver, Stanley Martin, 54, of Torquay, Devon who perished in the incident.)

Cascade to Scotland

Abellio ScotRail will also introduce 14 four-carriage and 13 five-carriage refurbished High Speed Trains by December 2018 on longer-distance services between Edinburgh, Glasgow, Aberdeen and Inverness.[17][18][19][20] This is contingent on the rolling stock being released by Great Western Railway, with suggestions in July 2015 that the electrification of the Great Western Main Line was running 12 months late.[21]

Accidents

There have been minor incidents involving Class 43s

There have also been three serious incidents involving Class 43s which all took place on the Great Western Main Line, these accidents resulted in three power cars being written off.

Replacement

Hitachi Class 800 Super Express undergoing testing at Old Dalby test track. These trains will partially replace the HST on the Great Western Main Line and the East Coast Main Line.

Built between 1975 and 1982, the fleet is now in its fourth decade, and a replacement for the High Speed Train is being sought. This project, the Intercity Express Programme (originally known as the HST2), is being spearheaded by the Department for Transport. A consortium headed by Hitachi will design and build the replacement Hitachi Super Express Train. Various formations are to be built, an electric version and a bi-mode diesel-electric in 5 or 9 carriage lengths. The initial batches will replace HSTs on the Great Western Main Line and East Coast Main Line Main Lines.

On the Greater Western franchise, the current fleet of HSTs is expected to remain in service until 2017, the scheduled date for introduction of the Intercity Express. Between 12 and 20 HST sets were to be retained and refurbished to carry on providing services between London and Devon and Cornwall, where no electrification is currently planned, and where the Class 800's engines would not be capable of negotiating the steep gradients along the South Devon Banks, through to the mid-2020s.[23] A 2011 report concluded that the Mark 3 coaches could remain in service as late as 2035 with some minor rewiring and enhancements required under disability legislation.[24] However, it was announced in March 2015 that, subject to approval and contract, the HSTs will now be replaced with the Class 802, a more powerful derivative of the bi-mode Class 800s.[25]

Initially, high-speed DMUs from the Bombardier Voyager family as well as Alstom's Class 180 (Adelante) replaced numerous HSTs, but all locomotives and sets have been bought back into service as a result of increasing demand. Some will be cascaded to Abellio ScotRail to replace the Class 170 units on InterCity services in the region.[26]

Grand Central railway announced that in 2017 they will have the 5 class 180 units cascaded from Great Western Railway to replace their HST trains and increase their overall fleet size.

See also

References

  1. "Intelligence August 2002". Railway Gazette International. para. 17. 1 August 2002. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  2. Fox, Peter (1989). Coaching Stock Pocket Book (12th ed.). Sheffield: Platform 5 Publications. p. 9. ISBN 0-906579-89-9.
  3. Fox 1989, p. 54
  4. Fox, Peter (1984). Departmental Coaching Stock (1st ed.). Sheffield: Platform 5 Publishing. pp. 20, 23, 26. ISBN 0-906579-37-6.
  5. 1 2 3 Paxman and Diesel Rail Traction (A New Engine for the InterCity 125) - Paxman History Pages - Paxman and Diesel Rail Traction. Retrieved 8 January 2011.
  6. brpaxman.jpg - Railfaneurope.net. Retrieved 22 July 2013.
  7. Privatisation 1993 - 2005 - 125 Group. Retrieved 17 July 2013.
  8. Grantham, Andrew (4 May 2007), Hybrid HST unveiled, Railway Gazette International
  9. "V-Train 2", www.hitachirail-eu.com, retrieved June 2012
  10. Hirofumi Ojima (February 2008), Towards Sustainable Technology in Transport Sector - Developing Trains with lower CO2 Emissiosn (PDF), Hitachi Europe, 4. Hybrid diesel train – Trial in UK
  11. "Fitting the MTU power unit into the HSTs". RailwayPeople.com. 15 August 2008. Retrieved 27 February 2010.
  12. "New engines and new look for Grand Central HSTs". Rail (654) (Peterborough). 6 October 2010. p. 11.
  13. "Prototype HST to run again". Railway Magazine. 15 May 2011.
  14. Project Miller 41001 Engine Lift (S508) June 2012. 29 June 2012. Retrieved 5 February 2013.
  15. Heelas, Gary (13 June 2012). "Power trip". RAIL (698): 44–47.
  16. 1 2 3 Marsden, Colin J (2013). Rail Guide. Ian Allan Publishing. ISBN 978 0 7110 3739 7.
  17. "Abellio awarded ScotRail franchise" Railway Gazette (London) 8 October 2014
  18. "Cheaper advance fares among Abellio ScotRail plans" The Scotsman (Edinburgh) 8 October 2014
  19. "Quality and more trains key to Abellio's SR franchise" Rail issue 760 29 October 2014 page 10
  20. "ScotRail HST fleet plans". RAIL magazine. 1 September 2015. Retrieved 12 November 2015.
  21. Factory on wheels delays rail electrification by a year BBC News 7 July 2015
  22. "Plymouth 'low impact' train crash leaves 18 injured". BBC News. 4 April 2016. Retrieved 4 April 2016.
  23. "First pledges co-operation as franchise end nears". Modern Railways (London). August 2011. p. 36.
  24. "HSTs are good to 2035". Railway Gazette. 8 April 2011. Retrieved 4 October 2012.
  25. Demanyk, G. (23 March 2015). "New train fleet to replace Devon, Cornwall and Somerset's ageing inter-cities". Western Morning News (Plymouth).
  26. "ScotRail HST fleet plans". Rail (Peterborough). 1 September 2015.

Further reading

External links

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