Yes, correct, but a different type of class 171 from the one which came 14 years later. The corresponding Kent Coast electric units would have been class 471.
Might have looked a little like this
https://www.flickr.com/photos/103688802@N02/26090441157
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Taken from https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:British_Rail_Class_471
Ah ok, thanks. Yes, I was aware of the 471, it was going to be the NSE replacement for the 42x stock, but not the 171. Would 171s have potentially run other similar routes, such as Marylebone-Birmingham or Paddington-Worcester?
Just think, in the parallel non-privatised universe and its 471s (and perhaps 472s with buffets, high-density 473s, and two-car 474s too), the entire electrified "Southern Region" area of NSE could, to this day, be running with a fleet of compatible EMU stock, just like in the old days. And, if that mockup was accurate, we could still have the good old headcodes!
NSE seemed to be going places, privatisation seemed to be one of those things (and by no means the only one) where the old adage "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" was broken by the UK government.
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