Veltlinbahn

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Veltlinbahn
Route of the Veltlinbahn
Tirano-Lecco railway line
Route number (RFI) : 26th
Course book series (IT) : 180
Route length: 105 km
Gauge : 1435 mm ( standard gauge )
Power system : 1902–1930 3,000 V / 15.6 Hz three-phase current
1930–1952 3,600 V / 16 ⅔ Hz three-phase current
from 1952 3,000 V direct current  =
Lecco-Colico route
   
from Bergamo and Como
Station, station
0.000 Lecco 214 m
tunnel
Crostone / Valle Rialba (1,109 m)
Station, station
6,988 Abbadia Lariana 214 m
Station, station
9.441 Mandello del Lario 214 m
Stop, stop
12.294 Olcio 221 m
Station, station
15.121 Lierna 224 m
Stop, stop
19.644 Fiumelatte 231 m
Station, station
21,589 Varenna - Esino - Perledo 218 m
tunnel
Morcate (1,263 m)
   
23,518 Regoledo until 2014 214 m
Station, station
24,847 Bellano -Tartavalle Terme 206 m
tunnel
Dervio (1,305 m)
Station, station
29,491 Dervio 211 m
Stop, stop
32,600 Dorio former train station 210 m
tunnel
Garavina (1,157 m)
tunnel
Piona (1,343 m)
Station, station
36,538 Piona 213 m
Station, station
38.979 Colico 211 m
   
to Sondrio and Chiavenna
Colico-Sondrio route
Route - straight ahead
from Lecco
Station, station
0.033 Colico 211 m
   
to Chiavenna
Stop, stop
6,979 Delebio former train station 211 m
   
Rogolo until 2014 208 m
Stop, stop
12.007 Cosio - Traona former train station 215 m
Station, station
15,428 Morbegno 247 m
Stop, stop
18,046 Talamona 237 m
   
Adda
tunnel
Colmo di Dazio (1,395 m)
Stop, stop
22.975 Ardenno - Masino former train station 265 m
Stop, stop
30.001 San Pietro Berbenno former train station 271 m
Stop, stop
35.525 Castione Andevenno former train station 278 m
Station, station
40.498 Sondrio 297 m
Route - straight ahead
to Tirano
Colico-Chiavenna route
Route - straight ahead
from Lecco
Station, station
0.033 Colico 211 m
   
to Sondrio
Stop, stop
6.367 Dubino former station 203 m
Stop, stop
10,418 Verceia 205 m
Station, station
12.628 Novate Mezzola 207 m
Stop, stop
16,660 Samolaco former train station 207 m
Stop, stop
20.359 San Cassiano Valchiavenna former train station 227 m
tunnel
Monica (1,213 m)
Stop, stop
24,860 Prata Camportaccio since 1991
End station - end of the line
26,315 Chiavenna 330 m

The Valtelina , occasional Valtellinabahn, Italian Ferrovia della Valtellina is a railway line through the Valtellina in Lombardy . The Valtellina Railway includes the sections from Colico to Lecco along the eastern shore of Lake Como , to Sondrio and to Chiavenna .

The routes were built according to the Baccarini law and initially operated by the Rete Adriatica (RA).

Track openings

route completion
Colico - Sondrio June 16, 1885
Colico - Chiavenna September 9, 1886
Lecco - Bellano July 1, 1892
Bellano-Colico August 1, 1894

Networking

When the first two lines opened, the Valtellina Railway was an isolated network and itself only accessible by ship via Lake Como . With the construction of the Lecco – Colico line in 1894, it was connected to the Como – Lecco line, built in 1888, and thus with the remaining network of the Rete Adriatica and Italy. Today, regional trains Calolziocorte - Lecco - Colico - Sondrio and regional express trains Milan - Tirano operate on the route .

electrification

In 1902 the lines of the Veltlinbahn were electrified as the first main line in the world as well as the longest line at the time with high-voltage three-phase alternating current . The entire electrical equipment from the power station to the electric locomotives was provided by the Hungarian company Ganz . As electric locomotives, Ganz supplied both railcars ( RA 30 and 32 ) and locomotives ( RA 341–342 and RA 361–363 ).

In 1914 the electrification of the Valtellina Railway was continued as far as Monza , as was the case in 1932 on the 26 km long Sondrio - Tirano line operated by Ferrovia Alta Valtellina (FAV) . Otherwise, the electrical three-phase operation on the Veltlin-Bahn and the FAV remained an island network, although from 1914 to 1932 much more extensive networks in northern Italy were equipped with the same 3000-volt three-phase system and the corresponding motor vehicle fleet.

vehicles

The locomotive fleet of the Veltlinbahn was divided into ten railcars and nine electric locomotives of three different types.

The four-axle railcars had four directly coupled three-phase motors, two of which were designed as primary motors for 3000 volts and two as low-voltage motors. The latter are only used when all motors are connected in series . The power of a railcar was 386 kW (500 hp) and the weight of the electrical equipment was 21.5 tons.

The locomotives of the first delivery each had four directly coupled three-phase motors of 165 kW (225 hp) each, a total of 660 kW, which enabled a speed of 32 km / h . The weight of all electrical equipment was 26 tons each.

The locomotives were mainly used for freight traffic, passenger traffic was handled with the nine railcars.

The pantographs of the locomotives were a combination of roller systems and brackets . The roller system consisted of two copper cylinders, each 65 cm long and 8 cm in diameter, which rotated in insulated ball bearings on a wooden roller. The wooden roll is in turn carried by two support tubes on each side, with which it forms a bracket construction. This is raised or lowered against the power line with compressed air. The current from the line is fed from ring-shaped carbon contacts to the tubes carrying the roll.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Rete Ferroviaria Italiana, Circolare territorial MI 49/2014 .
  2. ^ Rete Ferroviaria Italiana, Circolare territorial MI 49/2014 .
  3. Note flash. In: I Treni Oggi No. 114 (April 1991), p. 8.
  4. a b Freiherr von Röll: Valtellinabahn. In: Encyclopedia of Railways. Volume 10, Berlin / Vienna 1923, p. 79. (online at: zeno.org, accessed on November 5, 2011)
  5. Ferrovia della Valtellina (Italian) ( Memento from January 16, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  6. Law of July 29, 1879, No. 5002 , Article 10 / II and Table B, number 6;
  7. Prospetto cronologico dei tratti di ferrovia aperti all'esercizio dal 1839 al 31 dicembre 1926
  8. ^ History of the Italian three-phase railway network "Trifasestoria"
  9. Map of the Italian railways with three-phase current system
  10. a b c Freiherr von Röll: Electric railways. In: Encyclopedia of Railways. Volume 4, Berlin / Vienna 1913, pp. 207–288. (online at: zeno.org, accessed on March 2, 2012) in Section C: Use of three-phase alternating current, a) Veltlinbahn]

See also

Web links

Commons : Valtellina railway  - Collection of images, videos and audio files