British Rail Class 50

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British Rail Class 50
50049 Defiance at Bath Spa Station on 3 June 2007.
Type and origin
Power typeDiesel-electric
BuilderEnglish Electric at Vulcan Foundry
Build date1967–1968
Total produced50
Specifications
Configuration:
 • WhyteCo-Co
 • UICCo'Co'
Gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Wheel diameter3 ft 7 in (1.092 m)
Wheelbase56 ft 2 in (17.12 m)
Length68 ft 6 in (20.88 m)
Width8 ft 10 in (2.69 m)
Height12 ft 9 in (3.89 m)
Prime moverEnglish Electric 16 CSVT
MU working Orange Square
Train heatingElectric Train Heat
Train brakesDual (Air and Vacuum)
Performance figures
Power outputEngine: 2,700 bhp (2,010 kW)
Tractive effortMaximum: 48,500 lbf (216 kN)
Continuous: 33,000 lbf (147,000 N)
Career
Axle load classRoute availability 6

The British Rail (BR) Class 50 is a diesel locomotive built from 1967-68 by English Electric at their Vulcan Foundry Works in Newton-le-Willows. Fifty of these locomotives were built to haul express passenger trains on the, then non-electrified, section of the West Coast Main Line between Crewe, Carlisle and Scotland. They were originally hired from English Electric Leasings, not being purchased outright by BR until around 1973. Under the pre-1968 classification system these locomotives were known as the English Electric Type 4. The class were affectionately nicknamed "Hoovers" by rail enthusiasts because of their distinctive engine sound, caused by the centrifugal air filters originally fitted. These proved unreliable, and were later removed, but the "Hoover" nickname stuck.

Description

Introduction

The Class 50 fleet was developed following trials with the prototype Deltic-bodied DP2 locomotive. In many ways, the locomotives were a more powerful and lighter version of the earlier Class 40, and also included a host of complex electronic control gear, which to some extent was their downfall.

Fifty locomotives were built, initially numbered D400-D449. All were delivered in the BR Blue livery with yellow cab fronts. From 1973 onwards, the locomotives were renumbered into the range 50001-50050, to conform with the TOPS system. With the exception of the first-built locomotive, which was renumbered to 50050, the rest of the fleet retained the last two digits of their number, such that D431 would become no. 50031.

Additional Technical details

  • Transmission : 6 English Electric type 538/5A axle-hung nose-suspended 400hp traction motors
  • Axle load limit : 19 tons 10 cwt

Service

The class were built for working passenger services on the West Coast Main Line (WCML) north of Crewe, to Preston, Lancaster, Carlisle and Glasgow Central. Services south of Crewe would generally be worked by an electric locomotive, with the Class 50s taking over for the journeys that continued north. Trains were often double-headed to deal with the steep gradients, such as Shap Summit and Beattock Summit.

In 1974 the northern WCML was electrified, and the Class 50 fleet was displaced by new Class 87 electrics. The fleet was transferred en-masse to the Western Region, working mainline passenger services from London Paddington along the Great Western Main Line to destinations such as Oxford, Cheltenham Spa, Bristol Temple Meads, Plymouth and Penzance. It was not unusual for locomotives to work services on other routes, such as the Birmingham New Street to Bristol Temple Meads corridor. The introduction of the Class 50s on these routes enabled the last remaining diesel hydraulic "Westerns" to be withdrawn. These locomotives were non-standard in the BR fleet, and the final "Western" was withdrawn in 1977.

In the late-1970s following the earlier withdrawal of the "Warships", BR decided to continue this naming policy, and as a result the Class 50 fleet were all named after Royal Navy warships. The first locomotive naming occurred in January 1978, when no. 50035 was named Ark Royal in honour of the aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal. The rest of the fleet was named during the course of 1978, concluding in October with no. 50029, which was named Renown after the Resolution-class nuclear submarine HMS Renown. No. 50049 Defiance is named after a Royal Navy shore establishment rather than a sea-going vessel.

In 1977, British Rail introduced the Class 253 High Speed Trains onto the Great Western Main Line. The Class 50 fleet was therefore partially redeployed onto other routes, such as services to Birmingham New Street from London Paddington and Bristol Temple Meads. The class also found work on services along the West of England Main Line from London Waterloo to Salisbury, Exeter and Plymouth. However, due in part to the over-complexity of the design, the class was plagued with reliability problems. As a result, the decision was taken in the late 1970s to refurbish the entire fleet.

Refurbishment

Between 1979 and 1984, the Class 50 fleet was refurbished at Doncaster Works, which had taken responsibility for the fleet after purchase from English Electric. The work involved simplifying the complex electronics and removing redundant features such as slow speed control and rheostatic braking. In addition, modifications took place to the air intake fan arrangement which eliminated the characteristic "sucking" noise which had earned the "Hoover" nickname. The original air circulation arrangement was the cause of many failures in traffic as the filtration system often prevented fresh air entering the engine room and stale, oil mist-filled air could not escape leading to many main generator failures. Externally, the locomotives all received high-intensity headlights, which changed the appearance of the front end. Starting with 50006, the first six locomotives were outshopped in the standard BR Blue livery. However, in 1980, no. 50023 Howe became the first to be outshopped in a revised livery with wrap around yellow cabs, large bodyside numerals and BR logo, in a livery that became known as BR Blue Large Logo. The final loco to be refurbished was 50014 which was released to traffic in the latter half of 1983.

Following refurbishment, the fleet was concentrated at two depots; Laira in Plymouth, and Old Oak Common in west London. The class were again used for Western Region services on the GWML out of Paddington, and on the West of England Main Line from Waterloo to Salisbury and Exeter.

In 1984, no. 50007 Hercules was repainted into lined Brunswick green livery and renamed Sir Edward Elgar, to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Great Western Railway (GWR). Four Class 47 locomotives were similarly treated, and a Class 117 diesel multiple unit (DMU) was repainted in chocolate and cream livery. As a result, no. 50007 quickly became a favourite with rail enthusiasts. Another locomotive repainted in a special livery was no. 50019 Ramillies, which was repainted in a variation of BR Blue by staff at Plymouth Laira depot.

In 1986 the West of England Main Line came under the control of the Network SouthEast (NSE) sector, which saw the introduction of their bright blue, red and white livery. The first locomotive in this livery was again no. 50023 Howe. The NSE livery had two versions; the original had upswept red and white stripes and the ends, with a white cab surround; the revised livery introduced in 1988 had the red and white stripes continue to the body ends, with a blue cab surround.

Towards the end of the 1980s, the fleet could be found mostly on the West of England route, as well as fast services from Paddington to Oxford. Some locomotives were also transferred to the civil engineers department to work maintenance and engineering trains. Around this time, the first locomotives started to be withdrawn, starting with no. 50011 Centurion in early 1987. This locomotive's names were later transferred to no. 50040, which was previously named "Leviathan". A further two locomotives, nos. 50006 Neptune and 50014 Warspite were withdrawn in 1987, followed by a further five locomotives (nos. 50010/13/22/38/47) in 1988.

In 1987, consideration was given to using the class on freight trains. To this end, no. 50049 "Defiance" was renumbered to no. 50149, equipped with modified class 37, lower-geared bogies and outshopped in the new trainload grey livery with railfreight decals. It was based at Plymouth Laira depot, and tested on local china clay trains in Cornwall as well as heavy stone trains to London from Devon quarries. The project was, however, not an outstanding success, and by 1989, the locomotive had returned to its original identity. Ironically, the electronic anti-wheelslip equipment (with which, the entire class had originally been built) which would have been key to the success of this experiment had been removed during the refurbishment process.

At the start of the 1990s, the reliability of fleet became an issue again. By this time, the class was solely used on the West of England route, having been replaced on the Oxford route by Class 47/7 locomotives. Arguably, the Class 50s were not suitable for the stop-start service pattern of Waterloo-Exeter services, nor to the extended single-line sections of this route, where a single locomotive failure could cause chaos. Therefore the decision was taken to retire the fleet, temporarily replacing them with Class 47 locomotives, which were in turn replaced by new DMUs. From 1992, the Oxford route was worked by Class 165 and Class 166 units, whilst Class 159 units were introduced onto the West of England route in 1993.

By 1992, just eight locomotives remained in services, these being nos. 50007/008/015/029/030/033/046/050. Several of these locomotives were specially repainted to commemorate the run-down of the fleet. The first-built locomotive, no. 50050 Fearless was renumbered D400 and painted in its original BR Blue livery. Two other locomotives, nos. 50008 Thunderer and 50015 Valiant were also repainted, the former in a variation of BR Blue (the same as no. 50019 had previously carried), and the latter in "Dutch" civil-engineers grey/yellow livery. Of the final eight locomotives, three were retained until 1994 for use on special railtours, these being nos. 50007 Sir Edward Elgar, 50033 Glorious and 50050 Fearless. 50007 was returned to working order using parts from 50046, which surrendered its recently-overhauled power unit and bogies. By this time, no. 50050 had been repainted into Large Logo livery and 50007 also received a repaint into GWR green as the 1985 paint was wearing very thin. The final railtours operated in March 1994, during one of which no. 50033 was delivered for preservation at the National Railway Museum. The final railtour operated with nos. 50007 and 50050 from London Waterloo to Penzance and returning to London Paddington. Both locomotives were later preserved.

Portuguese Locomotives

The Portuguese public operator, CP, bought 10 locomotives similar to the BR Class 50, the 1800 series (1801-1810) that entered service in 1968. Like the UK design, they were equipped with an English Electric 16 CSVT engine and produced 2020 HP at the wheels. The specification of the Portuguese locomotives was more basic than the British Rail examples; for example the BR locomotives drive the radiator fan via electric power derived from the electric train heating (ETH) generator whereas on the CP1800s the fan is belt-driven from the diesel engine. The CP1800s are not fitted with ETH and the electrical control equipment is consequently simpler. They were the only diesel locomotives in Portugal authorised to run at 140 km/h. The CP1800s were all withdrawn in 2001 and most still survive, with their future unclear as of September 2006.

Preservation

Overview

Class 50 locomotives proved popular, with many saved for preservation. Several of the preserved locomotives have been registered for use on the mainline, including nos. 50031 Hood and 50049 Defiance.

An ambitious project involving preserved Class 50s was "Operation Collingwood", an engineering charity established in the early 1990s. The aim had been to train young engineering apprentices by getting them to rebuild railway locomotives and Class 50s were chosen both for the fact that they were a British design throughout and that all were named (so the apprentices would derive some pride from rededication ceremonies at the completion of their work). To this end, Operation Collingwood purchased and stored nos. 50001, 50023, 50029, 50030, 50040 and 50045. All except 50029 and 50030 were heavily-stripped examples sold to scrapyards for final cutting up. The intention was to restore them by using industrial sponsorship money to build an engineering centre and overhaul the components, making brand new ones where necessary to overcome lack of availability of some parts unique to the original design. These ambitions failed when sponsorship did not reach the required level and the project lost various key people. The charity was wound up in 2002; 50001/023/040 and 045 were sold back to scrapyards and their state as little more than bodyshells deterred most further preservation attempts. 50045 was scrapped to provide spares for preserved 50026 and 50001 met a similar fate, A private individual made an attempt to restore 50023 using some parts from 50001 but this was abandoned and the shell was cut up a few years after the initial purchase. 50040 could have been suitable for cosmetic restoration but it is now to be scrapped and provide parts to keep other members of the class in operation (correct as at June 2008). 50029 and 50030 were in far better mechanical condition, and were sold to a preservation group for full restoration.

50043 Eagle was purchased in almost working order (the main generator had failed, a very common Class 50 problem) but it was never intended for restoration. Instead the power unit was gutted to provide parts for preserved Class 40 no. 40118 as the two share a very similar design of diesel engine. Eagle was then subjected to a further bout of stripping when electrical and other parts were sold to various Class 50 preservationists. Although cosmetically very smart, the loco was by this stage unrestorable and although an ambitious private individual did try, this effort soon came to naught and it was scrapped to provide parts for 50026 Indomitable.

50031 became the first to operate on the main line hauling the Past Time Railtours Pilgrim Hoover train from Birmingham International to Plymouth on 1st November 1997. Since then serveal other members of the class have also temporarily been passed for mainline use (including 50044, 50049 and 50050).

One locomotive, no. 50017, was hired to Venice Simplon Orient Express (VSOE) to work the Northern Belle service from Bath to Manchester Victoria. As part of the contract it was painted in LMS-style maroon livery. However, it is now undergoing restoration having suffered a serious mechanical failure.

In 2005, 50031 and 50049 were on long term hire to Arriva Trains Wales, for use on special services in connection with events at the Millennium Stadium, and over the summer period saw regular use on the Monday to Saturday "Fishguard Flyer" from Cardiff to Fishguard and return, in connection with the ferry sailing to Ireland. One of the two locomotives was used for the service each day, along with 4 Mark 2 coaches, the short formation and high power leading to very good performance. This arrangement lasted for one year, and 50049 and 50031 are now seen regularly hauling special charter services around the UK rail network.

At a glance

19 locomotives have been preserved& they are listed below:

Numbers (current in bold) Name Livery Location Notes
D400 50050 - Fearless BR Blue Large Logo Yeovil Railway Centre First-built locomotive.
D402 50002 - Superb Network SouthEast (Original) South Devon Railway Being restored to Unrefurbished condition
D407 50007 - Sir Edward Elgar (formerly named Hercules) GWR Brunswick Green Midland Railway Butterley Specially repainted to commemorate Great Western Railway 150th anniversary in 1984.
D408 50008 - ex-Thunderer Maroon (undercoat only). Privately owned, LSWR, Crewe Re-entered preservation in 2006.
D415 50015 - Valiant BR Blue Large Logo East Lancashire Railway Only Class 50 to carry "Dutch" civil-engineers livery.
D417 50017 - ex-Royal Oak LMS Maroon Tyseley Locomotive Works Previously used to operate VSOE Northern Belle.
D419 50019 - Ramillies BR Blue Large Logo Mid-Norfolk Railway -
D421 50021 - Rodney BR Blue Large Logo Tyseley Locomotive Works -
D426 50026 - Indomitable BR Blue Large Logo Privately owned, Derby -
D427 50027 - Lion Network SouthEast (Revised) North Yorkshire Moors Railway -
D429 50029 - Renown BR Blue Large Logo Peak Rail -
D430 50030 - Repulse BR Blue Large Logo Peak Rail -
D431 50031 - Hood BR Blue Large Logo Severn Valley Railway Mainline registered.
D433 50033 - Glorious BR Blue Large Logo Swindon Steam Railway Museum Previously at National Railway Museum.
D435 50035 - Ark Royal BR Blue Large Logo Severn Valley Railway Currently at Old Oak Common depot, London, awaiting repairs to main generator earth fault.
D440 50040 - Leviathan BR Blue Large Logo Coventry Railway Centre Awaiting Scrapping.
D442 50042 - Triumph BR Blue Bodmin & Wenford Railway
D444 50044 - Exeter BR Two Tone Green Severn Valley Railway Cosmetically de-refurbished.
D449 50049 50149 Defiance BR Blue Largo Logo Severn Valley Railway Mainline registered.

Gallery

Class list

Number Name Date named Notes
Pre-TOPS TOPS
D400 50050 Fearless 23.08.78 Carried nameplate 04.08.78 - 07.08.78. Preserved by the D400 Fund [1]
D401 50001 Dreadnought 10.04.78
D402 50002 Superb 21.03.78 Preserved by the Devon Diesel Society [2]
D403 50003 Temeraire 09.05.78
D404 50004 St Vincent 09.05.78
D405 50005 Collingwood 05.04.78
D406 50006 Neptune 09.79
D407 50007 Hercules 06.04.78 Renamed Sir Edward Elgar 25.02.84. Preserved at the Midland Railway Centre [3]
D408 50008 Thunderer 01.09.78 Preserved
D409 50009 Conqueror 08.05.78
D410 50010 Monarch 16.03.78
D411 50011 Centurion 08.79
D412 50012 Benbow 03.04.78
D413 50013 Agincourt 19.04.78
D414 50014 Warspite 30.05.78
D415 50015 Valiant 21.04.78 Preserved
D416 50016 Barham 03.04.78
D417 50017 Royal Oak 24.04.78 Preserved
D418 50018 Resolution 06.04.78
D419 50019 Ramillies 18.04.78 Preserved at the Mid Norfolk Railway [4]
D420 50020 Revenge 07.07.78
D421 50021 Rodney 31.07.78 Preserved
D422 50022 Anson 20.04.78
D423 50023 Howe 17.05.78
D424 50024 Vanguard 15.05.78
D425 50025 Invincible 06.06.78
D426 50026 Indomitable 29.03.78 Privately Preserved [5]
D427 50027 Lion 17.04.78 Preserved at the North York moors Railway [6]
D428 50028 Tiger 10.05.78
D429 50029 Renown 26.10.78 Preserved by the Renown Repulse restoration Group [7]
D430 50030 Repulse 10.04.78 Preserved by the Renown Repulse restoration Group [8]
D431 50031 Hood 28.06.78 Preserved by the Class 50 Alliance [9]
D432 50032 Courageous 07.07.78
D433 50033 Glorious 26.06.78 Preserved
D434 50034 Furious 06.04.78
D435 50035 Ark Royal 17.01.78 Preserved by the Class 50 Alliance [10]
D436 50036 Victorious 16.05.78
D437 50037 Illustrious 08.06.78
D438 50038 Formidable 05.05.78
D439 50039 Implacable 20.06.78
D440 50040 Leviathan 15.09.78 Preserved at the Coventry Railway Centre [11] (but see below)Scrapped @ Sims metals,June/July 08.
D441 50041 Bulwark 08.05.78
D442 50042 Triumph 04.10.78 Preserved at the Bodmin and Wenford Railway [12]
D443 50043 Eagle 28.06.78
D444 50044 Exeter 26.04.78 Preserved by the Class 50 Alliance [13]
D445 50045 Achilles 12.04.78
D446 50046 Ajax 11.10.78
D447 50047 Swiftsure 26.05.78
D448 50048 Dauntless 16.03.78
D449 50049 Defiance 02.05.78 Preserved by the Class 50 Alliance [14]

References

  • Chalcraft, John (1979). Book of the Fifties. Gloucester: Peter Watts Publishing. ISBN 0 906025 10 9. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • Chalcraft, John (1985). Portrait of the Fifties. Bristol: Rail Photoprints. ISBN 0 906883 07 5.
  • Vaughan, John (1979). The Power of the 50s. Oxford: OPC. ISBN 086093 060 2.

External links

General information

Preserved locomotives

The shell of Class 50 no.50040 Leviathan is now languishing at Sims metals awaiting disposal.,30th June 2008. See 'End of the Line' web site for image. 50040 is no-more,reduced to scrap today 1st July 08. R.I.P.