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British Rail Class 180

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In service
  
2002–present

Family name
  
Coradia

Manufacturer
  
Alstom

Constructed
  
2000–01

British Rail Class 180

Built at
  
Washwood Heath, Birmingham

Replaced
  
InterCity 125 Class 222 Class 166

The Class 180 is a British diesel multiple-unit train built by Alstom at Washwood Heath in Birmingham between 2000 and 2001 for then-new express services operated by First Great Western (FGW). They are part of the Coradia 1000 family, along with the Class 175. For commercial purposes the Class 180s were given the branding Adelante, a name devised by FirstGroup, which has continued to be used by Hull Trains. After recurring technical problems with the trains, FGW handed all the units back to Angel Trains (the leasing company) in March 2009. The units were subsequently assigned to other companies. However, in 2012, FGW announced that it would be refurbishing and relaunching five Class 180 units. From July 2012, these re-entered service on the Cotswold Line, running most services between London and Worcester in order to release Class 165 and Class 166 units for further use in the Thames Valley. They are due to be replaced as part of the re-equipment of the Great Western network with Class 800 and Class 801 InterCity Express Project trains and the subsequent cascade of existing diesel stock, at which time they will join the Grand Central fleet. The Hull Trains fleet of four sets is also due for redeployment following its replacement by Hitachi Class 802 AT300 bi-mode (electric and diesel) trains.

Contents

Background

In the late 1990s, FGW was keen to increase to half-hourly the frequency of its express service from London Paddington to South Wales. This required extra high-speed rolling stock, but there was little available. FGW therefore ordered fourteen 125 mph diesel multiple units from Alstom, similar to the 26 Class 175s then under construction for sister company First North Western. The order reportedly cost £74.5 million; financing was organised by Wiltshire Leasing, another subsidiary of FirstGroup.

The first unit, 180101, was unveiled on 18 April 2000. However, following a string of problems, full main line testing did not begin until December 2000, six months after it was intended to start. Despite this, Alstom claimed that the trains could enter service in time for the May 2001 timetable change. This date too was missed, and the trains did not go into squadron service until the next timetable change, in December 2001.

Description

There are 14 Class 180 sets, numbered 180101-180114. There are five cars per unit: two Standard Class Driving Motors, two Standard Class Intermediate Motors and a First Class Intermediate Motor. All coaches are equipped with a Cummins QSK19 diesel engine, which develops 560 kW (750 hp) at 2,100 rpm, identical to those on Bombardier Voyager DEMUs and Siemens Class 185 DMUs used by First TransPennine Express.

The trains feature a hydraulic transmission, supplied by Voith which is a three-speed type, with integral hydrodynamic braking (rated at 750 kW short term, 420 kW continuous). These trains are the only diesel-powered high-speed trains in the world with diesel-hydraulic transmission. One bogie per coach is powered, with both axles driven. Total vehicle weight is 278 tonnes.

The units feature Scharfenberg couplers. This allows them to be joined with Class 175 units in an emergency—the Class 175s were introduced by First North Western, a sister company to First Great Western.

Hull Trains

Hull Trains acquired two Class 180 units to replace a damaged Class 222 Pioneer, which operated with the remaining Class 222s between London King's Cross and Hull. In 2008, the Department for Transport decided that Hull Trains' Class 222s should be cascaded to East Midlands Trains and replaced with Class 180s by the end of 2008. The acquired units have undergone an internal refit including the installation of laptop sockets and new coffee machines. They first began operation in late January 2009. The refurbishment was completed in early 2011. To ensure reliability, Hull Trains' Class 180s are maintained alongside the Great Western Railway sub-fleet, at Old Oak Common depot, in West London.

Grand Central

Grand Central initially planned to operate a pair of Class 180s on its London to Sunderland route, having secured the rights to a fourth daily service in each direction. The two 180s joined the company's three high-speed trains (HSTs). The company had initially announced that the two units would run as a ten-car train but later said that they would run separately, for extra flexibility.

The Grand Central Class 180s were given the fleet name Zephyr by the company (Adelante being a FirstGroup brand name) and were painted into their black livery with a broad orange waistline stripe. Day-to-day maintenance is carried out at Heaton depot, in Newcastle.

Grand Central acquired three additional units for its new service to Bradford Interchange. Originally the service was to be operated under the brand name Grand Northern, as part of parent company Grand Union, but is operating as Grand Central so that units can be interchanged between the two routes.

The units have been modified by Railcare and fitted with wi-fi and at-seat plug sockets. The first unit to be refurbished was 180114. One of the initial two units, 180112, was named James Herriot at a ceremony at London King's Cross and is the first to carry Grand Central's new logo and orange stripe livery. They entered service in September 2009, with the Bradford service starting on 23 May 2010. A second unit, 180107, was named Hart of the North in October 2010 following a competition in the Hartlepool Mail. and a third, 180105, was named The Yorkshire Artist, by the artist Ashley Jackson, in October 2011, also carrying his name in smaller characters below the main name.

Between July 2016 and December 2017 Northern will operate a peak morning working between Halifax and Leeds, via Bradford, using a class 180 set hired from Grand Central Railway. This is to release other DMUs to cover the reduction in the number of units available to hire from TransPennine Express.

Upon completion of Great Western main line electrification Grand Central are due to receive the five 180s currently being operated by Great Western Railway, to allow for service expansion and to replace the former company's high-speed trains (HSTs).

Great Western Railway

The Class 180 fleet, given the brand name Adelante by FGW, was originally deployed on services linking London Paddington to Bristol Temple Meads via Bath Spa and to Cardiff Central via Bristol Parkway. The class suffered a number of technical problems, including problems with the doors closing and locking quickly. This resulted in their replacement on most of the above services with HSTs displaced from Midland Mainline by Class 222 high-speed DEMUs. The Class 180s then operated express commuter services from London Paddington to Oxford, Worcester, Hereford (via the Cotswold Line), Exeter St Davids and Gloucester.

The reliability problems experienced by FGW, combined with increased passenger numbers, eventually led the operator to lose patience with the class and it acquired extra refurbished HST sets towards the end of 2007 as replacements on the express commuter services. FGW returned most of the Class 180 fleet to the leasing company Angel Trains in early 2008.

Although FGW had planned to return the entire fleet for storage, it decided to retain three units until it had received a cascaded HST from National Express East Coast. A pair of the units operated in multiple on an early-morning Oxford-London commuter service, before being divided to work independently the rest of the day (after returning as empty stock to Oxford) on the Cotswold Line from Paddington to Worcester and Hereford. The final FGW 180 ran on 30 March 2009.

Five Class 180 units were planned for use by East Coast in 2009/10. After this proposal was abandoned, it was announced that the five units would be transferred back to FGW to increase capacity on Thames Valley services. It was subsequently announced that the Adelantes would be working on the Cotswold Line, allowing Class 165 and 166 Turbo DMUs to be released for Thames Valley services.

These units have Buffet Cars, but a trolley service is provided.

FGW confirmed via its Facebook page that all five sets will be in service by the end of July 2012.

The first refurbished Class 180 entered passenger service on 28 May 2012 as the 11.21 Paddington-Great Malvern (180103).

FGW Class 180s are maintained at Old Oak Common depot, in West London.

Northern Rail

Northern Rail added three Class 180 units to its fleet in October 2008 for crew training with the sets entering service in December 2008 to operate from Hazel Grove and Manchester Victoria to Preston and Blackpool North, until the end of 2012. These units were sub-leased by East Coast to Northern until it could obtain more long-term rolling stock. The three units sub-leased to Northern Rail were to have transferred to East Coast after the 18-month contract finished in November 2010. However, East Coast changed its plans and no longer required them, so they remained with Northern until December 2011 after Northern took delivery of ex-London Midland Class 150 DMUs. The final service by a Northern Rail Class 180 was 180106 on the 21:22 Manchester Victoria-Blackpool North on 2 December 2011.

East Coast

National Express East Coast requested additional services to a number of destinations in its application for access rights on the East Coast Main Line (ECML) in March 2008, stating that, in addition to its existing InterCity 125 and InterCity 225 sets, it would require as many as nine Class 180s. The routes proposed were London to Lincoln (with one train per day extended to Cleethorpes) and London to Harrogate via York. Although NXEC no longer exists, its successor East Coast pressed ahead with the plans, and managed to secure five units, three of which were temporarily sub-leased to Northern (see above). However, it recently announced that, due to government cuts, it would no longer be introducing a regular all-day service to and from Lincoln.

Platinum Trains

Platinum Trains had aimed to use 180s on an Aberdeen to London service, if its track access application was approved. However, the application was refused in January 2009.

Virgin Trains

Virgin Trains leased two units from Angel Trains in 2008, intending to use them as standby units on the West Coast Main Line following the loss of a Class 390 Pendolino unit in the Grayrigg derailment. The units, described as 'strategic standby' units by the company, were returned to Angel Trains without being used following a decision to use a Class 90 locomotive and Mark 3 coaching stock instead.

Future

Grand Central have announced that they will be taking the 5 units currently used on Great Western Railway to replace their HSTs and increase their fleet size in 2017.

References

British Rail Class 180 Wikipedia