This article needs additional citations for verification .(November 2021) |
British Railways coach designations were a series of letter-codes used to identify different types of coaches, both passenger carrying and non-passenger carrying stock (NPCS). The code was generally painted on the end of the coach but non-gangwayed stock had the code painted on the side. [1] They have been superseded by TOPS design codes. [2]
The London, Midland and Scottish Railway and the London and North Eastern Railway developed systems of identifying railway carriages with alphabetic codes. When British Railways was formed in 1948 it adapted the LNER system.
The codes are made up from a combination of letters, some of which can indicate more than one word; their meaning can only be determined according to their position in the code or the presence of other letters. The letters are:
Code | Meaning |
---|---|
B | Brake van (prefix) |
Buffet (suffix) | |
Battery (prefix for multiple unit vehicles) | |
C | Composite (more than one class of accommodation) |
D | Driving vehicle (prefix) |
Disabled accommodation (suffix) | |
E | Either class of accommodation |
End vehicle (suffix) | |
F | First Class |
G | Gangwayed (e.g. BG - Brake Gangwayed) |
H | Handbrake |
HM | Half-motor (prefix on multiple units) Used for vehicles with one traction motor or engine where the Motor type vehicle of that class usually had two |
K | corridor |
L | Lavatory (usually shown only in non-gangwayed or diesel multiple unit codes) |
Lounge (prefix) (but see SL) | |
M | Motor (powered) vehicle |
O | Open (i.e. no compartments, or no kitchen in Restaurant cars); O not used for diesel multiple units as most are Open |
o | Semi-open (i.e. mix of compartments and open) Some books have used so in place of o, to avoid confusion with O |
P | Pantograph (prefix for electric multiple units) |
Pantry (suffix) | |
Pullman (prefix) | |
Parlour (suffix for Pullman cars) | |
R | Restaurant |
RG | Restaurant Griddle |
RK | Restaurant Kitchen |
RM | Miniature/Modular Restaurant |
S | Second Class (Standard Class from May 1985 [3] ) |
SL | Sleeper |
T | Third Class |
Trailer (prefix for multiple unit vehicles) | |
Trolley buffet (suffix) | |
Tourist (prefix for hauled carriages, indicates 2+2 seating) | |
U | Unclassified accommodation |
W | Wheelchair Area |
Y | Four-wheeled vehicle [lower-alpha 1] |
Z | Six-wheeled vehicle [lower-alpha 1] |
These letters (except Y and Z) did not usually apply to passenger-rated but goods carrying vans (e.g. parcels vans, horse boxes, milk and fish vans). Their codes were an acronym of their traditional railway description, e.g. GUV for General Utility Vans.
The following list lists those codes that were used on BR cross-referred to the comparable code used by the LMS, with the exception that the letter S ("Second", later "Standard") is used where until 1956 the letter T ("Third") was used. Suffix codes Y or Z are not shown, as these could apply to variants of any or all vehicle types.
In the LNER system, S stood for "Second", a class between First and Third (which became Second on 3 June 1956). The original Second was more or less abolished in the 1870s as a result of the Railway Regulation Act 1844, remaining only in limited use for special services, such as those meeting ships (which retained the three-class system from which railway classifications had originated). In May 1988 BR reclassified Second to Standard but this did not alter the code. [3]
Multiple unit coaches originally distinguished between open and corridor types by adding the letter O or K at the end (for example, TSO or TSK), and also distinguished coaches with lavatories by adding the letter L at the end (for example DMBSOL) but these fell out of use when corridor stock became less common which enabled the codes to be restricted to no more than four letters. [4]
BR Code | Description | LMS Code |
---|---|---|
B [5] | Brake (non-gangwayed) | |
BC | Brake Composite | |
BCK [2] [6] | Brake Composite Corridor | CBB |
BCL | Brake Composite Lavatory | |
BCV | BRUTE Carrying Van | |
BDBS [4] | Battery Driving Trailer Brake Second | |
BDMS [4] | Battery Driving Motor Second | |
BDTC [4] | Battery Driving Trailer Composite | |
BDTC [4] | Battery Driving Trailer Composite | |
BDTS [4] | Battery Driving Trailer Second | |
BFB [2] | Bullion Container Flat | |
BFK [2] [6] | Brake First Corridor | E |
BFO [6] | Brake First Open | |
BG [2] [6] [5] | Gangwayed Full Brake | CBR |
BGP | Brake gangwayed pigeon van | |
BGZ [5] | Brake gangwayed (six-wheels) | CR |
BPOT [2] [6] | Brake Post Office tender | |
BS [2] | Brake Second | H |
BSK [2] [6] | Brake Second Corridor | CH |
BSL | Brake Second Lavatory | LH |
BSO [6] | Brake Second Open | VH |
BSO(T) [2] [6] | Brake Second Open Trolley(Micro Buffet) | |
BTK [2] | Brake Third Corridor | |
BUO | Brake Unclassified Open | |
BY | Brake (non-gangwayed, four-wheeled) | |
BZ [5] | Brake (non-gangwayed, six-wheeled) | R |
C [2] | Composite | BC |
CCT [2] [5] | Covered Carriage Truck | |
CK [2] [6] | Corridor Composite | CBC |
CL [2] | Lavatory Composite | LC |
CO [6] | Composite Open | VC |
CTO [5] | Open Carriage Truck | |
DBSO [6] | Driving Brake Second Open | |
DM | Driving Motor | |
DMB [4] | Driving Motor Brake | |
DMBC [4] | Driving Motor Brake Composite | |
DMBF [4] | Driving Motor Brake First | |
DMBS [4] | Driving Motor Brake Second | |
DMBSO | Driving Motor Brake Second Open | |
DMC [4] | Driving Motor Composite | |
DMLV [4] | Driving Motor Luggage Van | |
DMS [4] | Driving Motor Second | |
DTBS [4] | Driving Trailer Brake Second | |
DTC [4] | Driving Trailer Composite | |
DTS [4] | Driving Trailer Second | |
DTV [7] | Driving Trailer Van | |
DVT [6] | Driving van trailer | |
FK [2] [6] | Corridor First | CL |
FO [2] [6] | Open First | QL |
FOT | First Open Trolley | |
GUV [2] [6] [5] | General utility van | |
HB [2] [5] | Horse box | |
IFV | Insulated fish van | |
KB [2] | Kitchen Buffet(no seats, later RKB) | |
LFK [2] | Lounge First | |
M [4] | Motor | |
MBS [4] | Motor Brake Second | |
MFLRK | Motor First Lavatory Kitchen [8] | |
MLV [4] | Motor Luggage Van | |
MPSL [8] | Motor Parlour Second Lavatory | |
MS [4] | Motor Second | |
MSLRK [8] | Motor Second Lavatory Kitchen | |
NPV [2] | Newspaper Van | |
PCP | Pullman Composite Parlour | |
PCV | Propelling control vehicle [9] or Parcels Van [2] | |
PFB [6] | Pullman First Brake | |
PFK [6] | Pullman First Kitchen | |
PFP [6] | Pullman First Parlour | |
PMV | Parcels & Miscellaneous Van (NPCS) [5] or Pantograph Motor Van (EMU coach) [7] | |
POS [2] [6] [5] | Post Office sorting van | POR |
POT [2] [6] [5] | Post Office stowage van | PPR |
PSB | Pullman Second Brake | |
PSP | Pullman Second Parlour | |
PTSO | Pantograph Trailer Second Open | |
PVG [6] | Packing Van Gangway (newspaper) | |
RB [2] | Restaurant Buffet | |
BRK [2] | Restaurant Buffet (larger kitchen) | |
RBR [2] [6] | Restaurant Buffet Refurbished | |
RBS [2] | Restaurant Unclassed (proper buffet) | |
RC | Restaurant Composite | Compo RKC |
RCO | Restaurant Composite Open | VC Dining |
RE | Griddle [2] | |
RF [2] | Restaurant First | First RKC |
RFB | Restaurant First Buffet | |
RFM [6] | Restaurant First Modular | |
RFO [2] [6] | Restaurant First Open | QL Dining |
RK [2] [6] | Kitchen Car | KC |
RKB [2] | Kitchen Buffet (no seats) | BRC |
RLB [6] | Restaurant Lounge First Buffet | |
RMB [2] [6] | Restaurant Miniature Buffet | |
RMBT [6] | Micro Buffet | |
RS | Restaurant Second | Third RKC |
RSO [2] | Restaurant Second Open (without kitchen) | QF Dining |
RU [2] | Unclassified Restaurant< | Common RKC |
RUB [2] | Restaurant Unclassified (makeshift buffet) | |
RUK | Restaurant Unclassified Kitchen | |
RUO [2] | Restaurant Unclassified Open (with kitchen) | |
S [2] | Second | F |
SCV [5] | Special Cattle Van | |
SD [2] | Saloon Discothèque | |
SK [2] | Corridor Second | CF |
SLB [2] | Bullion Van | |
SLC [2] | Sleeper Composite | CSC |
SLCP [2] | Sleeper Composite with Pantry | |
SLE [6] | Sleeper Either Class | |
SLEP [2] [6] | Sleeper Either Class with Pantry | |
SLF [2] | Sleeper First | SC |
SLO [2] | Open Second with Lavatory (Non-gangwayed) | |
SLSC [6] | Sleeper Support Coach | |
SLSTP [2] | Sleeper Second Twin-Berth with Pantry | SCT |
SLO | Second Lavatory Open (within carriage) | |
SO [2] [6] | Open Second | QF |
SO(NG) [2] | Second Open (non-gangwayed) | |
SPV | Special Parcels Van | |
TAV [7] | Trailer Auxiliary Van | |
TBC [4] | Trailer Brake Composite | |
TBF [4] | Trailer Brake First | |
TBS [4] | Trailer Brake Second | |
TC [4] | Trailer Composite | |
TCC [10] | Trailer Composite Conductor | |
TCV [2] | Tiered Car Carrier | |
TF [4] [10] | Trailer First | |
TFLRK [8] | Trailer First Lavatory Kitchen | |
TG [4] | Trailer Griddle | |
TGS [11] | Trailer Guard Second | |
TOV [2] | Third Open Vestibuled (Later reclassified TSO) | |
TPFL [8] | Trailer Parlour First Lavatory | |
TRB [4] | Trailer Restaurant Buffet Unclassified | |
TRFB [10] | Trailer Restaurant First Buffet | |
TRFM | Trailer Restaurant First Modular | |
TRSB [4] [10] | Trailer Restaurant Second Buffet | |
TRUB [4] [10] | Trailer Restaurant Unclassified Buffet | |
TRUK [4] | Trailer Restaurant Unclassified Kitchen | |
TS [4] [10] | Trailer Second | |
TSCD [10] | Trailer Second Conductor Disabled | |
TSO [2] [6] | Tourist Second Open | |
TSOD [6] | Tourist Standard Open Disabled | |
TSOE [6] | Tourist Standard Open End Coach | |
TSO(T) [6] | Tourist Second Open Trolley (Micro Buffet) | |
TU | Trailer unclassified | |
VFV | Ventilated fruit van |
A train reporting number in Great Britain identifies a particular train service. It consists of:
The Second Corridor type of railway carriage was one of the standard mid-20th century designs, and was coded SK by the LNER and BR, and CF by the LMS. The layout of the coach was a number of compartments, all of which were second class, linked by a side corridor.
A number of different numbering and classification schemes have been used for carriages and wagons on Britain's railways, and this page explains the principal systems. Carriages and wagons have frequently had similar arrangements for classification and numbering, so are considered together. There are also links to other pages that deal in greater depth with the particulars of individual types.
The InterCity 225 is an electric push-pull high speed train in the United Kingdom, comprising a Class 91 electric locomotive, nine Mark 4 coaches and a Driving Van Trailer (DVT). The Class 91 locomotives were built by British Rail Engineering Limited's Crewe Works as a spin-off from the Advanced Passenger Train project, which was abandoned during the 1980s, whilst the coaches and DVT were constructed by Metro-Cammell in Birmingham and Breda in Italy, again borrowing heavily from the Advanced Passenger Train. The trains were designed to operate at up to 140 mph (225 km/h) in regular service, but are limited to 125 mph (200 km/h) principally due to a lack of cab signalling and the limitations of the current overhead line equipment. They were introduced into service between 1989 and 1991 for intercity services on the East Coast Main Line (ECML) from London King's Cross to Leeds, York and Edinburgh.
British Rail Mark 1 is the family designation for the first standardised designs of railway carriages built by British Railways (BR) from 1951 until 1974, now used only for charter services on the main lines or on preserved railways.
The British Rail Mark 4 is a class of passenger carriages built for use in InterCity 225 sets on the East Coast Main Line between King's Cross, Leeds and Edinburgh. Withdrawals began in 2019, with some being sold for further use with Transport for Wales between Cardiff and Holyhead.
The Flying Scotsman is an express passenger train service that operates between Edinburgh and London, the capitals respectively of Scotland and England, via the East Coast Main Line. The service began in 1862 as the Special Scotch Express until it was officially adopted in 1924. It is currently operated by the London North Eastern Railway.
An electric multiple unit (EMU) is an electric self-powered train, capable of operating in multiple with other EMUs and without the need for a locomotive; these are typically passenger trains with accommodation in every vehicle and a driving position at each end. The term can also be used to describe a train that is a permanent formation with a non-driving power car, such as the Advanced Passenger Train. As of December 2010, two-thirds of the passenger carriages in Great Britain are formed in EMUs.
The British Rail Class 506 was a 3 carriage electric multiple unit (EMU) built for local services between Manchester, Glossop and Hadfield on the Woodhead Line, which was electrified in 1954 on the 1,500 V DC overhead system.
The LNER electric units were electric multiple units that ran on the Tyneside Electrics, a suburban system around the English city of Newcastle upon Tyne. In 1937 the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) received articulated twin passenger electric units to replace the NER electric units that had been built in 1904–15 by the North Eastern Railway. The order including some single-unit motor parcel vans and motor luggage vans. In the 1960s declining passenger numbers and the high cost of renewing life-expired electric substation equipment across the system led to the replacement of the electric multiple units with diesel multiple units and the units were all withdrawn in 1967.
The Tyneside Electrics were the suburban railways on Tyneside that the North Eastern Railway and the London and North Eastern Railway electrified using the third rail system. The North Tyneside Loop was electrified from 1904 onwards and formed one of the earliest suburban electric networks; the South Tyneside line to South Shields via Pelaw was electrified in March 1938. British Railways converted these lines to diesel operation in the 1960s: the line to South Shields in January 1963 and the North Tyneside lines in June 1967 when the electrical supply infrastructure and the rolling stock had become life expired. In addition, the system was losing passengers and suffering from costly vandalism. Since the late 1970s, much of the system has been converted to form the Tyne and Wear Metro.
British Rail Universal Trolley Equipment (BRUTEs) were trolleys used from 1964 until 1999 for sorting, handling and transport by rail of parcels, newspapers, etc.
The history of British Rail's corporate liveries is quite complex. Although from the mid-1960s to the 1980s the organisation was associated with "Rail Blue", a number of other schemes were also used, especially when it was split into operating units or "sectors" in the mid-1980s.
The London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) inherited several styles of coaching stock from its constituents. Sir Nigel Gresley continued the styles that he had established pre-grouping at the Great Northern Railway (GNR) and for the East Coast Joint Stock.
The Bluebell Railway is a heritage line West Sussex and East Sussex in England.
A gangway connection is a flexible connector fitted to the end of a railway coach, enabling passengers to move between coaches without danger of falling from the train.
The NER electric units were electric multiple units that ran on the Tyneside Electrics, a suburban system based on the English city of Newcastle upon Tyne. In 1904 the North Eastern Railway electrified suburban services on Tyneside with a third rail at 600 V DC and built saloon cars that ran in 3-car to 8-car formations. More cars were built between 1908 and 1915 to cope with increased traffic. In 1918, a fire at Walkergate car shed destroyed 34 cars and replacement cars were built in 1920.
The rolling stock of the Bodmin and Wenford Railway are the locomotives, carriages and wagons used on the Bodmin and Wenford Railway, a heritage railway in Cornwall, England.