2000 class railcar

Railcars of suburban Adelaide From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 2000 class and 2100 class were diesel multiple units that operated on the Adelaide rail network between 1980 and 2015. They were built by Comeng in Granville, New South Wales in 1979–1980. As of 2024, six railcars have been preserved while the rest have been scrapped.

ManufacturerComeng
Constructed1978–1980
Entered serviceFebruary 1980
Quick facts Manufacturer, Built at ...
2000 and 2100 class railcars
Adelaide Metro liveried 2011 & 2106 at Gawler station in June 2005
ManufacturerComeng
Built atGranville, New South Wales
Constructed1978–1980
Entered serviceFebruary 1980
RetiredAugust 2015
ScrappedJune 2016
Number built30
Number preserved6
Number scrapped24
Successor4000 class
Formation2–4 carriages
Fleet numbers2001–2012, 2101–2118
Capacity
  • 70 (2000)
  • 100 (2100)
Operators
DepotDry Creek
Specifications
Car length24.8 m (81 ft 4 in)
Width3.19 m (10 ft 6 in)
Height4.27 m (14 ft 0 in)
Maximum speed
  • 130 km/h (81 mph) (design)
  • 90 km/h (56 mph) (service)
Weight
  • 2000: 65 t (64 long tons; 72 short tons)
  • 2100: 42 t (41 long tons; 46 short tons)
Prime movers
  • As built: 2 × MAN D3650s
  • After repowering: 2 × Cummins KTA 19Rs
Power output
  • As built: 2 × 377 kW (506 hp)
  • After repowering: 2 × 390 kW (520 hp)
TransmissionVoith T420r Diesel Hydraulic
AuxiliariesRolls-Royce SF65CT
UIC classificationB′B′
Track gauge1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in)
Close

History

The 2000 and 2100 class were self-propelled diesel railcars operated by the State Transport Authority and its successors on the Adelaide rail network. The body shell design was based on the Budd SPV-2000, Metroliner and Amfleet cars, but the 2000 class railcars have a slightly different curve to the Amfleet cars.[1]

an orange 2000 class railcar
2000 class

Twelve 2000 powercars and eighteen 2100 class trailer cars were built.[2] The bodyshells were built by Comeng in Granville. Two (2001 and 2101) were completed at Granville while the remainder were railed to Adelaide via Lithgow and Broken Hill to comply with a contractual requirement to maximise local content, the fit out being conducted by Comeng's Aresco subsidiary at Dry Creek.[3][4] The first delivery took place in late October 1979 and entered service on 22 February 1980. Delivery of the trains continued until August 1981.[5][6]

They were nicknamed Jumbos owing to the raised driving cab, similar to the distinctive hump of the Boeing 747 jumbo jet. This raised cab was designed to meet Australian Federated Union of Locomotive Employees demands for a full-width driver's cab whilst allowing inter-carriage doors to be fitted.[7][8]

The powercars were originally powered by V12 turbocharged MAN D3650 engines that were replaced by two turbocharged 6 cylinder Cummins engines under the floor driving a Voith hydraulic transmission in the late 1980s.[9][10] They usually operated in 2-car (power-trailer) or 3-car (trailer-power-trailer) configurations. It was originally intended that they primarily operate express services on the Gawler and Noarlunga Centre lines with the existing Redhens operating the all stops services, but they quickly ended up operating services across the network.[1][6]

Six were stored for a number of years, being returned to traffic in 2007.[11][12] One was sent to Bombardier Transportation's Dandenong factory in 2006 to assess the feasibility of a life extension program, but it was deemed not worthwhile.[13] They did on occasions venture beyond the Adelaide metropolitan area, operating special services to Tanunda and Nuriootpa on the Barossa Valley line,[14][15] however these excursions ended in April 2003.

From 23 February 2014, these railcars were no longer permitted to operate on the Belair, Tonsley (now Flinders) and Seaford lines due to low clearances as a result of the electrification of these lines, being restricted to the Gawler Central, Grange and Outer Harbor lines. Withdrawals commenced in late 2014. By 2015 only 11 cars were still in service and only operated peak hour express services and special event extra services such as Adelaide Oval event trains on the Gawler Central line and occasionally on the Outer Harbor line. The remaining fleet members was retired in August 2015 after running services between Gawler Central and Adelaide and were stored at the Dry Creek Railcar depot for 10 months before removal.

Preservation

Four have been preserved, however as of 2025, none are operating:[13]

2009 and 2104 were donated to the South Australian Metropolitan Fire Service for use in training exercises.[17] The rest were sent by road and scrapped in June 2016 at Simsmetal.[13][18][19]

See also

References

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