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R12 (New York City Subway car)

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In service
  
1948-1981

Number built
  
100

Constructed
  
1948

Number preserved
  
2

R12 (New York City Subway car)

Manufacturer
  
American Car and Foundry Company

Built at
  
Berwick, Pennsylvania, USA

The R12 was a New York City Subway car built in 1948 by the American Car and Foundry Company. The R12 was the first post-war city-owned rolling stock for the IRT division. These cars were very similar to the R10s, except that the R12 was smaller due to A Division specifications.

Contents

Description

The R12s were numbered 5703-5802. The R12s were the first cars to feature electric door motors (as opposed to air-powered door motors).

There were two versions of the R12's: Westinghouse Electric-powered cars (5703-5752) and General Electric-powered cars (5753-5802).

The R12s bore several schemes during their service lives. The cars were delivered in two-tone gray scheme with orange stripes, then a solid bright red, and finally, repainted into the MTA's silver with blue stripe scheme.

History

Delivery of the cars began in June 1948. The first R12s began service on the 7 (IRT Flushing Line) on July 13, 1948. All 100 cars were delivered by October 1948.

The R12s ran on the Flushing Line until the arrival of the R33WFs and R36WFs in late 1963-early 1964. The R12s were then transferred to operate on other A-division routes. One particular assignment included all GE-powered cars being heavily modified (by deactivating the dynamic brakes and cutting out the third (parallel) notch on their controllers) and sent to the 8 (Third Avenue elevated line) in the Bronx during August 1969 and running there until that route's closing on April 29, 1973. In addition, four Westinghouse-powered R12 cars (5703-5706) were slightly modified for use on the Bowling Green – South Ferry Shuttle, and were so-equipped so that the center door of each car could be opened at South Ferry, while keeping the others closed. These cars were used until the shuttle was discontinued on February 12, 1977, when the cars were reassigned to the 3, since these four shuttle cars were inspected and maintained at Livonia Barn at the time, with the 3 line.

Retirement

Although officially replaced by the R62 delivery of 1983-85, most R12s were retired earlier due to service reductions in the 1970s that made the fleet redundant. Many R12s were also converted to work service post-1965 to replace older Lo-V work cars. The last R12 was pulled from passenger service in September 1981. All but 2 cars have since been taken off property to be scrapped, though several cars lasted as training vehicles or work cars for many years.

The two cars that remain today are 5760 and 5782. Car 5760 has been preserved by the New York Transit Museum since July 1976, and was repainted into its original paint scheme. Car 5782 (renumbered to 35782), formerly used for fire training, is also being held for the New York Transit Museum. The car retains its MTA blue/silver livery paint scheme and has been stored at the 207th Street Yard for many years. However, it is slated to receive only a cosmetic restoration; the car will not be restored to operational status.

References

R12 (New York City Subway car) Wikipedia