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London Underground D78 Stock

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D78 Stock
Stock typeSubsurface
In service1980 - Present
(due to be replaced by Summer 2016)
ManufacturerMetro-Cammell
(now Alstom)[1]
Built atBirmingham, England[1]
ReplacedR Stock
O and P Stock
Constructed1978 - 1981[1]
RefurbishedBombardier Transportation UK (at Derby)[1]
2004 - 2008
Number built450 cars[1]
Formation6 cars per trainset
Capacity821 per trainset[1]
Lines servedDistrict
Specifications
Car lengthDM 18.37 m (60 ft 3 in)
UNDM/T 18.12 m (59 ft 5 in)
Width2.85 m (9 ft 4 in)
Height3.62 m (11 ft 11 in)
WeightDM 27.46 tonnes (27.03 long tons; 30.27 short tons)
UNDM 26.11 tonnes (25.70 long tons; 28.78 short tons)
T 18.40 tonnes (18.11 long tons; 20.28 short tons)
Traction systemPneumatic driven camshaft
(GEC Traction)[1]
Traction motorsLT118 DC motor
(Brush Traction)[1]
Seating280 per trainset[1]
Notes/references
London Transport portal

The London Underground D78 Stock electric multiple units operate on London Underground's District line, except the Wimbledon to Edgware Road service. Following the withdrawal of the C Stock in June 2014, these are now the oldest subsurface trains in service on the London Underground. The first units were withdrawn in January 2015 with all due to be replaced by S Stock by summer 2016.

History

D78 stock in as delivered condition
Interior pre overhaul

The D stock was ordered in 1976 to replace the pre-war CO/CP Stock and post-war R Stock on the District line. Seventy-five six-car trains were built by Metro-Cammell, Birmingham, the first entering service on 28 January 1980 with final delivered in 1983.

Details

The stock consists of six-car trains, as opposed to the seven-car trains of CO/CP and R Stock, whose cars were shorter: under normal operation, each train consists of two 3-car units, and 20 of the units are double-ended to allow 3-car operations under exceptional circumstances.[2] The traction motors are the same LT118 type as on 1973 Tube Stock, but the bogies are different. With single-leaf doors and transverse and longitude seating, the style is very similar to 1983 stock on the Jubilee line.

The stock brought many innovations. The rubber coil suspension meant a smoother ride for passengers. The driver's cab is more ergonomic, the seat swiveling to move forwards, backwards, up or down. The dead man's handle is replaced by a joystick that needs to be twisted for the dead man feature, and moved fore and aft for motoring and braking. There is a Train Management System replacing the original Train Equipment Panel that highlights faults to the driver.

The most noticeable difference between the stock and earlier trains is that the doors are single leaf. Originally, passengers pressed door-control buttons to open them. Posters explaining how to operate the doors were put up around Tube stations in English, French and German when the stock was introduced. The stock had a "POGO" switch (Passenger open/Guard's open) that could switch control of the doors from passengers to the guard (when the stock was introduced, the guard controlled the doors from the rear cab). While this function proved useful at above-ground stations and termini (especially in winter), station dwell time was significantly increased, and passengers had trouble getting used to the new system, not knowing how to open the door. By the late 1990s, the control of the doors went to the driver, but the buttons remained until they were removed on refurbishment between 2004 and 2008.

At over 18 metres (59 ft), the cars are the longest on the Underground. The windows had to be modified because of overheating when new, with pull-down opening windows installed in each car.

Usage

The stock is used on the District line, except the High Street Kensington-Edgware Road section, because the platforms are not long enough there for D stock.

Between April 1985 and May 1987, the stock operated the East London line service in three-car formations, there being enough stock spare because of reduced services on the District line. This allowed A60/62 Stock to be sent for One Person Operation (OPO) conversion. The A60/62 stock took over the service again in 1987.

The stock is due to be replaced by S Stock in 2016.[3] It is being replaced about 15 years short of its intended lifespan, as a consistent new fleet will allow for frequencies to be increased and will reduce maintenance costs.

In July 2011, Harrogate Chamber of Commerce proposed to use the stock on the Harrogate Line from York to Leeds via Harrogate to increase capacity.[4] Stations in the Harrogate and Leeds urban areas are close together; the superior acceleration of the stock over the Class 150 diesel multiple units currently used is intended to cut journey times. It was proposed, the line would be electrified with third rail similar to the Docklands Light Railway, as opposed to the London Underground or the Southern region network.

On 24 July 2012, unit 7007 was designated as the Olympic 2012 Train with the then Chief Operating Officer Howard Collins carrying the Olympic Torch from Wimbledon to Wimbledon Park.[5] This is the only London Underground train to be an Olympic Torch train.

Roster

Formation
Upminster (D) →
Notes
7xxx
(DM)
17xxx
(T)
8xxx
(UNDM)
8xxx
(UNDM)
17xxx
(T)
7xxx
(DM)
Facilities Wheelchair bays Wheelchair bays Wheelchair bays Wheelchair bays Wheelchair bays Wheelchair bays
Numbers 7000

7128
17000

17128
8000

8128
8001

8129
17001

17129
7001

7129
  • 17035 and 17077 exchanged numbers in 1994.
Formation
← (A)
(D) →
75xx
(DM)
175xx
(T)
75xx
(DM)
Facilities Wheelchair space Wheelchair space Wheelchair space
Numbers 7500

7538
17500

17538
7501

7539


  • Wheelchair space - Wheelchair space
  • DM - Driving Motor car
  • T - Trailer (non-powered) car
  • UNDM - Uncoupling Non-Driving Motor car

De-icing equipment was fitted to trailers 17000 to 17048 (evens).

Withdrawal

Withdrawals commenced on 19 January 2015 when the first full 6-car train, 7510+7058, was withdrawn from service at Ealing Common Depot and loaded onto trucks for Long Marston for the driving motors to be converted and the other cars to be either scrapped or stored for future use. All are scheduled to be replaced by S7 Stock by summer 2016.[6]

Refurbishment

Prototype interior refurbishment
Interior after refurbishment
The exterior of a newly refurbished train at Ealing Common Depot

The mid-life refurbishment was the first to be carried out under the PPP, by Metronet, and was delayed until contract negotiations were completed. A prototype unit of three cars was prepared by London Underground's Train Modification Unit (TMU) at Acton Depot in 2001.[7] This had some detail differences from the eventual refurbishment, and was later brought up to the standard of the rest of the stock. The refurbishment programme began in summer 2005 with the work undertaken by Bombardier Transportation's Derby facility.[8] The programme was completed in 2008.

The refurbishment consisted of:

  • applying London Underground livery with anti-vandal paint and window film
  • restyling the interiors in green and white
  • replacing maple flooring with rubber
  • adding end-of-car windows
  • replacing hanging straps (bobbles on springs) with grab bars
  • covering the door buttons
  • adding dot matrix indicators showing the station and destination on the inside and exterior front and sides
  • adding an audio passenger information system guided by GPS and odometer, voiced by Emma Clarke: announcements for each station name include connecting lines, and provide warnings to "mind the gap between the train and the platform"
  • adding a flip seat/disabled multi purpose area
  • fitting air conditioning to driver's cab
  • fitting CCTV

It is the first Underground stock to have electronic side-of-carriage information displays: some pre-war trains had slot-in or reversible destination or non-stopping plates.

Heavy-rail diesel-electric conversion

In 2014, Vivarail purchased 150 Driving Motor cars and about 300 trailing vehicles of ex-District Line D78 stock for conversion to diesel-electric multiple units. It is proposed to run 75 units of two or three cars per unit.[9][10] They will become known as class 230 under TOPS.[11] A prototype was produced for testing and accreditation in August 2015, with introduction to service in 2016.[12] They are to be tested in mainline service on the First Great Western network.[13]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Rolling Stock Data Sheet, London Underground (First Edition)" (PDF). WhatDoTheyKnow. Retrieved 17 April 2016.
  2. ^ Connor 2015, p. 142
  3. ^ "Transforming the Tube" (PDF). Transport for London. July 2008. Retrieved 28 May 2009.
  4. ^ "HARROGATE LINE NEWS 1 1st Meeting supports bid" (PDF). Harrogate Chamber of Commerce. August 12, 2011. Retrieved 26 August 2011.
  5. ^ "Olympic torch: Flame rides on London Underground train". BBC News Online. 24 July 2012. Retrieved 24 August 2012.
  6. ^ "First D78 at Long Marston for DEMU conversion" Rail issue 767 4 February 2015
  7. ^ D78 modernised Railway Gazette International 1 October 2002
  8. ^ D78 stock gets a fresh new look Railway Gazette International 1 August 2005
  9. ^ D78 Stock Conversion is Go Modern Railways December 2014 pages 37-38
  10. ^ "Vivarail Homepage". http://www.vivarail.co.uk/. Vivarail. Retrieved 20 January 2015. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help)
  11. ^ Sam McCaffrey (2015-05-01). "'They don't make trains like this anymore'". Rail Technology Magazine. Retrieved 2015-05-17.
  12. ^ The Engineer http://www.theengineer.co.uk/blog/d-railed-old-tube-trains-gain-a-new-lease-of-life/1020946.article
  13. ^ First Great Western Direct Award

Sources

  • Connor, Piers (March 2015). D Stock to D-Train. London Underground Railway Society. pp. 142–144. ISSN 0306-8617. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help); Invalid |ref=harv (help)