The British Rail Class 84 was a 25 kV AC electric locomotive that operated on the West Coast Main Line (WCML) of the London Midland Region.
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The ten strong class was one of five prototype classes of electric locomotives built in the early stages of WCML electrification. Built between 1960 and 1961, the type was not a success, as they were beset by technical problems, and after several lengthy periods of storage, and unsuccessful attempts at resolving these problems, British Rail decided to withdraw the entire fleet between 1977 and 1980.
History
editAs part of the modernisation of the West Coast Main Line, which included electrification, 100 locomotives of five types were acquired from different manufacturers. Ten Class AL4 locomotives numbered E3036 - E3045 were built in 1960 by the North British Locomotive Company in Springburn, Glasgow, to a design by GEC.[4]
Locomotive E3040 worked the inaugural AC electric-hauled train from Manchester Piccadilly to Crewe on 12 September 1960.[2]
Power supply
editThe locomotives always worked on power provided by overhead catenary energised at 25,000 V AC. However, the main transformer, normally operated with the four windings in series, could be operated at 6250V AC with the transformer windings in parallel. This voltage was initially to be used where limited clearances gave concern over use of the higher voltage. Since the clearances were found to be adequate, the lower voltage connections were locked out of use.[5]
Service
editOnce in service a number of problems emerged with the class, including rough riding, flashovers in the transformer windings, short lifespans for the motor spring drives, and major problems with the mercury-arc rectifiers. In April 1963 the entire fleet was temporarily taken out of service, and was returned to GEC Dukinfield, the builder of the electrical equipment, in an attempt to find a solution, and remedial work was carried out.[6][7]
When the class returned to service, the problems persisted, and in 1967 they were placed into storage, using the former steam shed at Bury,[8] along with Class AL3.[9] During this time E3043 went to Rugby Testing Centre for trials.[10]
Reprieve and rebuilding
editThe persistent problems could have been the end of the ten locomotives of Class 84, but the extension of the West Coast Main Line electrification to Glasgow meant that more electric locomotives would be needed. It was therefore decided that the stored Class AL3 and AL4 locomotives would be repaired, and returned to service which was conducted at Doncaster.[10]
After spending five years in storage, all ten locomotives were rebuilt with silicon rectifiers and dual brakes in 1972.[1][11] and were reclassified under TOPS as Class 84, being renumbered 84001 - 84010.
Withdrawal
editThe second rebuild overcame some of the previous problems, however new problems emerged involving traction motor failures, caused in part by the long period they had spent in storage, and the class continued to give trouble in service. By the mid-1970s, having already spent a substantial amount of money on them, British Rail could not justify any further investment in the fleet, especially since the recently introduced Class 87s allowed them to be sidelined. The decision was taken to withdraw them from service, with 84005 and 84007 being the first to be withdrawn in April 1977, the last to be withdrawn were 84003 and 84010 in 1980.[6][7][12]
After withdrawal
editSeveral of the locomotives were saved from scrap: 84001 was donated to the National Railway Museum for preservation. 84002 and 84010 were returned to GEC for a proposed scheme to use them as new-technology test bed locomotives, however this project never materialised, and both were scrapped in December 1982.[12]
84009 saw further use in a new guise; it passed to the British Rail Research Division, and was rebuilt as an unpowered mobile load bank tester, to test the power supply to new and upgraded overhead line equipment, and was renumbered as ADB968021. In 1992 it was withdrawn from service and broken up.[6] 84003, was saved to be used as a source of spares for 84009 and for possible conversion to departmental use, but was scrapped in 1986.[12]
Preservation
editOne locomotive (84001) has been preserved by the National Railway Museum: This was initially meant to be temporary; the locomotive was to be exchanged at a later date for a more representative example of WCML electric traction such as a Class 86 or Class 87.[12] It was later on loan to the Scottish Railway Museum, Bo'ness.[13]
Fleet details
editKey: | Preserved | Scrapped |
---|
Numbers[1] | Date Introduced[1] | Withdrawn[14][15] | Disposal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pre-TOPS | TOPS | NBL Works No. | |||
E3036 | 84001 | 27793 | March 1960 | 22 January 1979[1] | Preserved by the National Railway Museum.[13] |
E3037 | 84002 | 27794 | May 1960 | September 1980 | Scrapped at Texas Metals |
E3038 | 84003 | 27795 | June 1960 | November 1980 | To Research Department Scrapped at Vic Berry, Leicester |
E3039 | 84004 | 27796 | July 1960 | 12 November 1977[1] | Scrapped at Birds, Long Marston |
E3040 | 84005 | 27797 | August 1960 | 20 April 1977[1] | Scrapped at Birds, Long Marston |
E3041 | 84006 | 27798 | October 1960 | January 1978 | Scrapped by J Cashmore at Crewe Yard |
E3042 | 84007 | 27799 | October 1960 | April 1977 | Scrapped by J Cashmore at Crewe Yard |
E3043 | 84008 | 27800 | December 1960 | October 1979 | Scrapped at Crewe Works |
E3044 | 84009 | 27801 | December 1960 | 3 August 1978[1] | To Research Department Scrapped at Gwent Demolition, Margam |
E3045 | 84010 | 27802 | March 1961 | November 1980 | Scrapped at Texas Metals |
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h i Webb & Duncan 1979, p. 59
- ^ a b c d e f g Webb & Duncan 1979, p. 58
- ^ a b c d Webb & Duncan 1979, p. 54
- ^ Marsden & Fenn 2001, p. 82
- ^ Allan 1968, p. 11.
- ^ a b c Marsden, Colin J. (2007). The AC Electrics. Ian Allan Publishing Ltd. pp. 38–41. ISBN 978-0-86093-614-5.
- ^ a b Morrison, Colin (2014). AC Electric Locomotives. Ian Allan Publishing Ltd. pp. 16–18. ISBN 978-0-7110-3505-8.
- ^ Railway World December 1967, p. 554.
- ^ Longhurst 1979, Class AL4–84
- ^ a b Marsden & Fenn 2001, p. 83
- ^ Webb & Duncan 1979, p. 55
- ^ a b c d "Class History - AL4 / 84". The AC Locomotive Group. Archived from the original on 29 January 2023. Retrieved 29 January 2023.
- ^ a b @RailwayMuseum (26 January 2023). "Class 84, 84001, made the short trip from Holgate Engineering Works to the NRM via platform 11" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ "The Class 84 Fleet". Rail Blue. Archived from the original on 3 July 2016. Retrieved 11 February 2016.
- ^ "Class 84". RAIL. No. 88. EMAP National Publications. January 1989. p. 42. ISSN 0953-4563. OCLC 49953699.
Sources
edit- Longhurst, Roly (1979). Electric Locomotives of the West Coast Main Line. Truro: D. Bradford Barton Ltd. ISBN 0851533558. OCLC 16491712.
- Marsden, Colin J.; Fenn, Graham B. (2001). British Rail Main Line Electric Locomotives (2nd ed.). Oxford Publishing Co. ISBN 9780860935599. OCLC 48532553.
- Webb, Brian; Duncan, John (1979). AC Electric Locomotives of British Rail. David & Charles. ISBN 9780715376638. OCLC 6916046.
- "British Railways Motive Power Survey". British Rail Locomotives and other motive power: Combined volume. London: Ian Allan. 1968. ISBN 0-7110-0008-5.
Further reading
edit- Derrick, Kevin (2014). Looking back at AC Electric Locomotives. Strathwood. ISBN 9781905276516. OCLC 931820979.
- McManus, Michael. Ultimate Allocations, British Railways Locomotives 1948 - 1968. Wirral. Michael McManus.