two unpowered trailer cars to choose from!
Not quite. Two cars will have diesel engines under them, one will have the motors and traction equipment, leaving one 'quiet' car, which will be the vehicle with the toilet in it.
two unpowered trailer cars to choose from!
And you'll get faster low-down acceleration from electric transmission, as you're not wasting power as heat and noise in the hydraulic transmission fitted to regular Sprinters.
The electric transmission will help somewhat versus a Sprinter, but only a bit more than 25% of the weight will be on powered axles rather than 50% for Sprinters and many modern EMUs. This may make them slow to accelerate at low speeds and (like the 319) prone to slip in poor adhesion. At higher speeds the power available will limit performance, which might be similar to a 150 but worse than a 319 on electric. As a 150 only goes up to 75mph the 769 may struggle to get much above that in diesel mode.They will probably work, but will be slow at gaining any sort of speed quickly
319s are not the best known for their acceleration, adding on the weight of those engines (plus fuel and other bits) will only make acceleration worse.
It doesn't work like that.I believe the power generation will be AC via the two 500HP motors per train. As D365 says the power will then be converted to DC to power the motors. You have thought having to go the expense of the engine addition, conversion entirely to AC would have been cheaper and you would no longer need to haul round a heavy AC to DC regulator.
I probably had the name wrong but I am sure there is some heavy component on the 319s that does the work of shuttling down 25 thousand AC votes to 750 DC volts.
But if you just want a straight DMU, then a 455 would be better. Reduce it to three cars with engines under the driving cars and you would have better performance than a 150. Ideal as Pacer replacements for the Valleys I would suggest.Yeah, you could convert 455s, the downside being the lack of AC capability. If there are enough 319s, they're probably the best bet as a bi-mode rather than DMU is created for no more money.
But if you just want a straight DMU, then a 455 would be better. Reduce it to three cars with engines under the driving cars and you would have better performance than a 150. Ideal as Pacer replacements for the Valleys I would suggest.
Correct. Add a toilet in to one of the driving cars and you have a very useful train. The Exmouth/Exeter/Barnstaple/Paignton “Devon Metro” is another obvious candidate.I suppose the other advantage of 455s is that some will become available (from SWR) which have both brand new traction packages and near brand-new interiors, the layout of which are probably ideal for the Valley Lines.
Correct. Add a toilet in to one of the driving cars and you have a very useful train. The Exmouth/Exeter/Barnstaple/Paignton “Devon Metro” is another obvious candidate.
And you'll get faster low-down acceleration from electric transmission, as you're not wasting power as heat and noise in the hydraulic transmission fitted to regular Sprinters.
Door controls, PA and cab-to-cab equipment is already fitted in one panel on each side of each coach in the passenger saloon, apart from the 508 trailer of 455/7s.Added bonus I suppose: already set up for guarded operation so no need to convert from DOO. Though I guess a few extra panels might be useful.
Agreed, but unfortunately though, Welsh Govt are not using a common sense approach to procure the next Valley lines operator or the rolling stock to be used.I suppose the other advantage of 455s is that some will become available (from SWR) which have both brand new traction packages and near brand-new interiors, the layout of which are probably ideal for the Valley Lines.
Not forgetting of course 5 x 769s have been ordered for Wales to allow Sprinters to be sent away for PRM mods. If the 769s don't arrive in Wales by mid-summer, having even half of Wales' current Sprinter fleet 2020 compliant will be impossible.
The electric transmission will help somewhat versus a Sprinter, but only a bit more than 25% of the weight will be on powered axles rather than 50% for Sprinters and many modern EMUs. This may make them slow to accelerate at low speeds and (like the 319) prone to slip in poor adhesion. At higher speeds the power available will limit performance, which might be similar to a 150 but worse than a 319 on electric. As a 150 only goes up to 75mph the 769 may struggle to get much above that in diesel mode.
Yeah, you could convert 455s, the downside being the lack of AC capability. If there are enough 319s, they're probably the best bet as a bi-mode rather than DMU is created for no more money.
5 x 2 coach 144s go off lease on 15th September, 8 more on 5th January 2019 and the 10 x 3 coach 144s on 31st March 2019. Them and Porterbrooks 5 GWR 143s would enable large numbers of 150s to go for upgrade.
Sounds like it would be ideal for Buxton to Manchester Piccadilly because compared to 150s any timing difference between Buxton and Hazel Grove would be made up on electric traction between Hazel Grove and Piccadilly. Whether the timetabling could be made to work for May 2018 is a different matter.
Excluding Northerns 8 undergoing conversion there are 45 x 319s off lease and 5 are allocated to W&B for conversion. Brush would struggle to convert another 40 by the end of 2019 and I doubt there is the market for that many. 11 is probably the right amount for Northern in the long term. If the valleys lines are wired to Pontypridd and Bargoed then maybe W&B could use 16-20 but that is unlikely. I am struggling to think of another ToC that might want to order any in the next couple of years. Once 2020 arrives and pacer withdrawal and PRM TSI are no longer an issue new builds will probably make more financial sense.
Not with 319s. Any Sprinter (or even Pacer) can out-perform a 319 at speeds up to 35/40 mph. Adding extra weight to the 319s when converting them to 759s will only make that worse.
(See 319 versus 156 acceleration curves below)
I don't think they will be opening any doors, the key advantage was potentially getting them in service before the 2020 deadline which any further new builds will now struggle to do, but as that advantage starts to recede I expect new build CAF/Stadler etc. Units may become a better bet for TOC's.
I've seen another comment from a good source that says that the biggest proponent of these trains in Porterbrook no longer works for the company!
Interesting, do you have a source for that graph or for the data?
The Buxton line has some severe gradients and I think also suffers from adhesion problems, so I would hope Northern give them a trial run in autumn if they are thinking about using 769s.Sounds like it would be ideal for Buxton to Manchester Piccadilly because compared to 150s any timing difference between Buxton and Hazel Grove would be made up on electric traction between Hazel Grove and Piccadilly. Whether the timetabling could be made to work for May 2018 is a different matter.
I still think there's a future for this type of conversion beyond the 769 Flex, whether it be from electric to bi-mode or electric to diesel. I don't expect it'll suddenly take off and we'll end up with hundreds of "Flex" type units, but it is an alternative which could tide parts of the network over until sufficient new stock has been procured from now until the mid 2020s or so. Beyond that, I think something like a three-coach "455 DMU" could be useful to help re-open branch lines.
Apologies if I've missed this but IIRC Porterbrook modelled performance on the Buxton line and said it would be (in theory) capable of using existing paths.
455s are old, but once again people are forgetting a train is more like a house.
455s are old, but once again people are forgetting a train is more like a house. There's no shortage of enthusiasm for HSTs, is there? They're ten years older than 455s.
The SWR 455s are more like a Victorian house that has just received a full refurbishment including a rewire and new boiler. Nobody would complain about living in one of those, would they?
Yes but your replacing like with like where as new trains are likely to offer an improved travelling environment compared to a 150, how many comments do we get on here as it is that 150's are not a great step forward over a Rail Bus. At least with the Northern current train plan there will be a significant step forward in quality on some services and particularly the longer distance services, where as a Northern Replacement using only D trains, or 769's or converted 455's etc, wouldn't have been a great step forward, and the evidence so far is that the TOC are not exactly bashing down the door to get these trains, and once the potential advantage of getting these trains before the 2020 deadline disappears then I think these solutions will head for oblivion.Yes, but these are not intended for lines where you would get a "comfortable Intercity train". They are basically a way of getting more Class 150s for lines that would use Class 150s anyway.
The 455s have new traction packages and new interiors roughly equivalent to a 450.