SR Class 4Sub

Last updated

Southern Railway 4-SUB
British Rail Class 405
SR 4-sub 4101.jpg
4101 (prototype) in 1941
In service1941-1983
Manufacturer Eastleigh Works
Constructed1941-1951
Number built185 units
Number preserved1 unit
FormationDMBSO-TS-TSO-DMBSO
Capacity368 - 386 Seats
Operators
Depots Wimbledon Traincare Depot (London)
Specifications
Car length
  • DMBSO: 62 ft 6 in (19.05 m)
  • TS & TSO: 62 ft (18.90 m)
Width9 ft (2.74 m)
Maximum speed75 mph (121 km/h)
Weight134 long tons (136 t; 150 short tons)
Traction motors Four
Power output
  • Early units: 4 x 275 hp (205 kW)
    total 1,100 hp (820 kW)
  • Later units: 4 x 250 hp (190 kW)
    total 1,000 hp (750 kW)
Current collector(s) Contact shoe
Braking system(s) Air (Westinghouse)

The Southern Railway (SR) and the British Railways (Southern Region) (BR(S)) used the designation Sub to cover a wide variety of electric multiple-unit passenger trains that were used on inner-suburban workings in the South London area. The designation 'Sub' was first officially used in 1941 to refer to newly built 4-car units. However, during the 1940s large numbers of earlier '3-Car Suburban Sets' were increased to four cars by the addition of an 'Augmentation' trailer, and became part of the 4-Sub category. The SR and BR (S) continued to build or else rebuild 4-car units to slightly different designs which became part of the 4-Sub Class. Many of these later examples survived in passenger use until late 1983, by which time British Rail had allocated to them TOPS Class 405.

Contents

History

3-Car Suburban Sets

In 1923, the Southern Railway inherited 84 3-car suburban electric multiple units from the London and South Western Railway (LSWR), dating from 1914. [1] These could be enhanced by 24 2-car trailer sets coupled between two units, creating 8-car formations. Over the next 18 years the SR acquired a further 516 3-car sets. [2] These were either new; rebuilt from steam stock inherited from the LSWR, the London Brighton and South Coast Railway (LBSCR) and the South Eastern and Chatham Railway; or rebuilt from LBSCR AC multiple units. Some rebuilt units had ‘torpedo style’ front ends, others had the newer, flatter, front ends used on the main-line stock introduced during the early 1930s. They were designated ‘3-Car Suburban Sets’ to differentiate them from main-line units, and were numbered between 1201 and 1800. They are sometimes referred to as ‘3-Sub units’, but this designation does not appear to have been used whilst they were in use.

The 3-car units ultimately proved to be inadequate for most trains and inconvenient as the trailer sets had no driving cabs and so had to be marshaled between two 3-car units. Therefore, many were augmented by the addition of a new trailer car and rebuilt as 4-Sub units between 1942 and 1948. The remainder of the 3-car units were withdrawn. The last 2-car trailer set was withdrawn in September 1948, and the last 3-car formation ran in 1949. [3]

4-Sub Units

Preserved 4-Sub unit 4732 with vertical 'slab' front end R Class 405 4-SUB EMU no. 4732, London Waterloo, 22 November 1986.jpg
Preserved 4-Sub unit 4732 with vertical ‘slab’ front end

In 1939, following the appointment of Oliver Bulleid as Chief Mechanical Engineer, the SR announced a new welded steel 4-car suburban unit with curved sides, seating six passengers across rather than the normal five. [1] The prototype unit, 4101, was not completed until 1941 due to the advent of the Second World War. As built, this had composite (both First Class and Third Class) seating accommodation in one trailer car and domed cab roofs, but because first-class accommodation in the London suburban area was withdrawn in October 1941, the six first-class compartments were declassified to third-class before the unit was placed in service. [4] A further nine units were built in 1944-5 with Third Class accommodation only. Twenty units were introduced from 1946 with a vertical, ‘slab’ front end, and Third Class accommodation only. The underframes were built at Lancing Carriage Works and the bodies at Eastleigh Works.

Rebuilt 4Sub Motor Car with 'torpedo' style front. 4Sub.jpg
Rebuilt 4Sub Motor Car with ‘torpedo’ style front.

As mentioned above, between 1942 and 1948 many 3-Car Suburban Sets were rebuilt and enhanced by the addition of a new 'Augmentation' trailer car to create 4-Sub units. This was done by inserting new steel trailers rather than one of the existing trailer cars. The rebuilt units were renumbered between 4131 and 4249.

BR(S) continued to introduce 4-Sub units, both new and converted from existing units, until 1951.

Formations

The usual formation for the newly built units was to have a Driving Motor Brake Third (DMBT) car at each ends, with accommodation for 108 passengers in nine compartments, together with two Trailer Third (TT) cars between with ten or eleven compartments giving a total passenger accommodation for 456 in all four coaches. After the renaming of 'Third Class' to 'Second Class' in 1956 these became DMBS and TS respectively.) However some of the rebuilds had Trailer Composite (TC) cars. The earlier coaches provided compartments, whereas the post war newly built carriages tended to provide saloon or semi-saloon style accommodation to allow for more standing room. These new 'open' carriages were designated DMBTO or TTO.

The 3-car suburban units had included a proportion of first-class accommodation, usually seven first-class compartments providing 56 seats together with 18 third-class compartments seating 180. Normally, all of the first-class compartments would be in the central car, this being a trailer composite, although some units had two or three of the seven first-class compartments in one of the end cars, this being a motor composite brake. The new 4 SUB units were also designed to include first-class accommodation, the first ten units (nos. 4101–10) being built with two nine-compartment motor third brakes, one eleven-compartment trailer third, and one ten-compartment trailer composite having six first-class compartments in the middle, flanked by two third-class at each end. First-class compartments seated ten each, third-class compartments twelve, for a capacity of 60 first- and 396 third-class. Before unit 4101 could enter service, first-class was suspended for the duration of the war (never being reinstated); the first-class compartments of no. 4101 were redesignated third-class, and the unit now provided 468 third-class seats. The remaining nine units of the first batch, nos. 4102–10, which were not built until 1944–45 were entirely third-class from the outset, with seating capacity similar to no. 4101. Units built subsequently had one fewer compartment in each car, giving a total capacity of 420 third-class seats in units 4111–20. [5]

Operation

Throughout their careers the 4-Sub units were used on the London suburban services of all three divisions of BR (S).

179 out of the 184 new units constructed between 1946 and 1951 were still surviving at the introduction of the TOPS computer system in the early 1970s but were expected to have limited working lives. Under TOPS all surviving units were allocated to Class 405, but divided into two sub-classes. Sub-class 405/1 included the former Southern Railway sets numbered between 4112 and 4387, and sub-class 405/2 included the former British Railways sets built after 1949 and numbered between 4601 and 4754. All had been withdrawn by 1983.

As withdrawals reduced the number of units, services were concentrated in certain areas so that by 1981 units working on the Central section were allocated to Selhurst Depot and were concentrated on London Bridge to East Croydon services, and on peak-time commuter services to/from Holborn Viaduct and Blackfriars. Units on the South Western section were allocated to Wimbledon Depot and were concentrated on services between Waterloo and Effingham Junction, Shepperton or Chessington, although all of the scheduled services were on weekdays. [6] [7]

Withdrawal

The rebuilt units began to be withdrawn in the late 1950s and all had been withdrawn by the end of the 1960s. Apart from a few accident damaged units, the newly built units began to be withdrawn in 1972, and had all been withdrawn by 1983. [8] Those units surviving in the early 1970s were designated as Class 405 under the TOPS computer system.

Departmental use

In 1972 a unit was converted for use transporting stores between Eastleigh Works and various Southern Region depots. Renumbered 024 the unit was based at Slade Green and followed a set route on a weekly schedule serving Stewarts Lane, Ashford, Hither Green, Slade Green and Selhurst. [9] [10] [11]

In 1974 unit 4367 was retired from revenue-earning service and converted for use as a mobile instruction train and was allocated to Ashford Depot. As part of the conversion the unit was renumbered 055. [12] [11]

After withdrawal, some individual steel-bodied trailer vehicles were adapted for use in de-icing the third rail and were fitted with spraying and scraping equipment. These vehicles were renumbered ADS70050/1 and ADS70086/7 and were used in conjunction with stock having Electro-Pneumatic controls. [13] In 1977 some additional conversions for de-icing were made when 6 new 2-car units were created from 4-SUB Motor Brake vehicles. These were renumbered 004 - 009. [14]

Preservation

A handful of Sub stock carriages have survived in preservation, thus:

Unit number
(current in bold)
DMBTOTTTTODMBTOBuiltLiveryLocation
129343088143---1925 EastleighSR Maunsell Green National Railway Museum
-4732127951235410239127961951 EastleighSouthern Green One:One Collection, Margate
---10400--1951 EastleighNetwork South East Finmere

History of individual units

Unit NumbersTypeIntroducedFormationNotes
989-1200-1920–1937VariousTwo-car Sub Trailer sets. Converted from LSWR, SECR and LBSCR steam stock and LBSCR AC electric stock. Disbanded between 1941 and 1948, some cars used to augment 3-car Suburban to 4Sub.
1201–12843-car Suburban1914–1917DMBT+TC+DMBCBuilt by London and South Western Railway, their numbers E1-E84, ex-steam stock. Most augmented to 4131-4171 and 4195-4234 series in 1942–1948.
1285–13101925DMBT+TC+DMBTWestern Section (London to Guildford & Dorking) units, new-build, short frames. Augmented to 4300-4325 series in 1945–1946.
1401–14951925–1926Eastern Section units, ex-SECR steam stock. Most augmented to 4431-4594 series in 1946–1949.
1496–15241925Eastern Section units, new-build, standard frames. Augmented to 4326-4354 series in 1945–1946.
1525–15341926Eastern Section units, ex-SECR steam stock. Most augmented to 4431-4594 series in 1946–1949.
1579–15991932–1937Ex-LSWR steam stock. Most augmented to 4401-4594 series.
1601–16301927–1928Central Section units, ex-SECR steam stock. Most augmented to 4431-4516 series.
1631–16571928–1929Central Section units, ex-LBSCR steam stock. Most augmented to 4517-4614 series.
1658–17011927–1928DMBT+TC+DMBCCentral Section units, ex-LSWR steam stock. Most augmented to 4172-4194 and 4235-4250 series.
1702–17161928Central Section units, ex-LBSCR steam stock. Most augmented to 4517-4614 series.
1717–17721929–1930Central Section units, ex-LBSCR AC electric stock. Most augmented to 4517-4579 series.
1773–17851930–1931Ex-LSWR steam stock. Most augmented to 4517-4614 series.
1786–17961931–1932DMBT+TC+DMBTEx-LSWR steam stock. Most augmented to 4517-4614 series.
1797–18011932Ex-LBSCR steam stock. 1801 later renumbered 1600. Some augmented to 4580-4614 series.
41014-Sub1941DMBT+TT+TC+DMBTPrototype new-build, steel bodied 4-Sub unit with domed cab roof.
4102-41101944–1945DMBT+TT+TT+DMBTNew-build, steel bodied 4-Sub units with domed cab roof.
4111-41201946New-build, steel bodied 4-Sub units with vertical cab roof.
4121-41301946DMBTo+TTo+TT+DMBTo
4131-41711942–1948DMBT+TT+TT+DMBTEx-3-car Suburban units, with additional ex-3-car Suburban trailer car.
4131-41321969Second use of unit numbers. Formed from spare steel-bodied Sub cars, including those used in the 7TC unit.
4172-41941947–1948Ex-3-car Suburban units, with steel-bodied Augmentation trailer.
4195-42341942–1948Ex-3-car Suburban units, with additional ex-3-car Suburban trailer car.
4235-42491947–1949Ex-3-car Suburban units, with steel-bodied Augmentation trailer.
4250-42571942–1948Formed from a variety of spare Sub cars.
4277-42991948–1949DMBTO+TTO+TT+DMBTONew build, steel-bodied 4-Sub units.
4300-43541945–1946DMBT+TT+TT+DMBTEx-3-car Suburban units, with steel-bodied Augmentation trailer.
4355-43761947–1948DMBT-TT-TT-DMBTNew build, steel-bodied 4-Sub units.
43771947DMBT-TTO-TT-DMBTNew build, steel-bodied 4-Sub unit, including prototype full saloon trailer car.
4378-43871948DMBTO+TTO+TT+DMBTONew build, steel-bodied 4-Sub units.
4401-45941946–1947DMBT+TT+TT+DMBTEx-3-car Suburban units, with steel-bodied Augmentation trailer.
4601-4608, 4610/13/141947DMBT+TT+TT+DMBTFirst use of unit numbers. Ex-3-car Suburban units, with steel-bodied Augmentation trailer.
4601-46071950DMBTO+TT+TT+DMBTOSecond use of unit numbers. New Driving Motor cars formed with trailers built between 1946 and 1948.
4617-46201972–1976Formed from spare Sub cars built between 1946 and 1950.
4621-47541949–1951DMBTO+TT+TT+DMBTOMost cars had new bodies on old frames, though some were entirely new build. 4667-4754 included an Augmentation trailer from withdrawn units.

Related Research Articles

The Southern Railway created classification and numbering systems for its large fleet of electric multiple units, perpetuated by the Southern Region of British Rail until the early 1980s, when the impact of TOPS was felt. Some stock is still allocated Southern-style classifications in a semi-official manner.

The Southern Railway (SR) gave the designations 6 PUL, 6 CITY and 6 PAN to electric multiple units built to work the routes between London and Brighton, West Worthing and Eastbourne. None of these units survived long enough in British Rail ownership to be allocated a TOPS class number. The 6 PUL units were designated 6 COR until 1935.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">British Rail Class 401</span> British electric train classification

The Southern Railway (SR) gave the designation 2-BIL to the DC third rail electric multiple units built during the 1930s to work long-distance semi-fast services on the newly electrified lines from London to Eastbourne, Portsmouth and Reading. This type of unit survived long enough in British Rail ownership to be allocated TOPS Class 401.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">British Rail Class 402</span> Class of British electric rail cars

The Southern Railway (SR) gave the designation 2-HAL to the electric multiple-unit passenger trains built during the late 1930s to work long-distance semi-fast services on the newly electrified lines from London Victoria to Maidstone and Gillingham (Kent). This type of unit survived long enough in British Rail ownership to be allocated TOPS Class 402.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">SR Class 4DD</span> Experimental British electric railcar

The SR Class 4DD was an experimental double-decker electric multiple unit built in 1949 and operated by the Southern Railway until 1971. Conceived by Oliver Bulleid for the Southern Railway's commuter line from London Charing Cross to Dartford, the two trains were the only double-decker trains to be used on the mainline railway network in Britain. Whilst commonly used in continental Europe and North America, the restrictive railway loading gauge in the United Kingdom prohibits normal double-decker trains with two fully separated decks.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">SR Class 4Lav</span>

The Southern Railway (SR) gave the designation 4-LAV to the electric multiple units built to work the semi-fast services on the route between London and Brighton. None of these units survived long enough in British Rail ownership to be allocated a TOPS class.

2-WIM was the designation given, by Southern Railway (SR), to a 4-strong fleet of electric multiple units, dedicated for use on the ex-LBSCR West Croydon to Wimbledon Line, using the headcode 2. None of these units survived long enough in British Rail ownership to be allocated a TOPS class.

The Southern Railway (SR) gave the designation 2-SL to the small fleet of electric multiple units dedicated for use on the South London lines. None of these units survived long enough in British Rail ownership to be allocated a TOPS class. In Southern Railway/Region days, they mainly spent their lives as 2-car units on the ex-LBSCR Wimbledon-West Croydon Line with head code 2. They were distinctive, because they retained their flat roofs over the driving cabs, where the pantographs were originally situated.

The Southern Railway (SR) gave the designation 2-NOL to the electric multiple units built during the 1930s from old London and South Western Railway carriage bodies on new underframes. None of these units survived long enough in British Rail ownership to be allocated a TOPS class.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">LNWR electric units</span>

The LNWR electric units were ordered by the London and North Western Railway for its suburban services in London. The first cars, made with Siemens equipment, arrived in 1914, and these were followed by two larger batches of units with Oerlikon equipment. The trains were formed into 3-car units, with first and third class accommodation in open saloons. Following the 1923 grouping and absorption of the line into the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS), similar LMS electric units, but with accommodation in compartments, were purchased to run with the Oerlikon units in 1926 and 1932. The trains were all withdrawn by 1960.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">British Rail Class 416</span>

British Rail Class 416 (2-EPB) was a class of third-rail electric multiple units in service between 1953 and 1995. They were intended for inner suburban passenger services on London's Southern Electric network. There were two subclasses of Class 416: Class 416/1 to an SR design on salvaged 2-NOL underframes, built between 1953 and 1956, and Class 416/2 based on a British Railways Mark 1 coach design.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">British electric multiple units</span> British self-powered electric trains

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">British Rail Class 501</span>

The British Rail Class 501 electric multiple units were built in 1955/56 for use on the former LNWR/LMS suburban electric network of the London Midland Region. A total of 57 three-car units were built.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">British Rail Class 302</span> 1958 British Rail electric multiple unit

The British Rail Class 302 was a class of electric multiple unit (EMU) introduced between 1958 and 1960 for outer suburban passenger services on the London, Tilbury and Southend line. This class of multiple unit was constructed using the Mark 1 bodyshell with slam-doors.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">British Rail Class 414</span> 1956 British electric trains

The British RailClass 414 were two-car electric multiple units that were built between 1956 and 1963. They were withdrawn in 1995.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">British Rail Class 415</span> British Rail coaching stock

The British Rail Class 415 was a suburban 750 V DC third rail electric multiple unit commissioned by the Southern Region of British Railways. Built between 1951 and 1957, it became the most numerous class on the region after the withdrawal of the 4SUBs. The final trains were withdrawn in the 1990s, replaced by Class 455, 456, 465 and 466.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">British Rail Class 505</span>

British Railways Class 505 were 1,500 V DC electric multiple units (EMUs) introduced in 1931 by the Manchester, South Junction and Altrincham Railway (MSJAR). Although assigned to TOPS Class 505 by British Railways, these units were withdrawn before the TOPS numbering system came into common use for multiple units, and the Class 505 designation is very rarely used.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">British Rail Class 506</span>

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">LNER Tyneside electric units</span> Trains once used by an English railway

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">SR class 3Sub</span> Class of British electric multiple units

The class 3SUB were DC suburban electric multiple units, introduced by the London and South Western Railway in 1915. They were constructed by the Southern Railway in the period up to 1939, and though the class designation 3SUB was not used by the Southern Railway, some authors refer to these units as 3SUB. When rebuilt to four cars in the 1940s, they became class 4SUB.

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 Moody 1968 , p. 88
  2. The ABC of Southern Electrics. 1943. p. 12.
  3. Moody 1968 , p. 137
  4. Rayner & Brown 1983, p. 14.
  5. Brown 2009, pp. 120, 134, 149, 158, 160.
  6. Rayner & Hogie 1981, pp. 13–16.
  7. British Rail Locoshed book 1982. London: Ian Allan. 1982. p. 70. ISBN   0-7110-1198-2.
  8. "4-Sub (Class 405)". Southern Railway E-mail Group.
  9. Motive Power Combined Volume. London: Ian Allan. 1981. p. 158. ISBN   0-7110-1127-3.
  10. Rayner & Hogie 1981, p. 27.
  11. 1 2 British Rail 1979 Locoshed book. London: Ian Allan. 1979. p. 76. ISBN   0-7110-0931-7.
  12. Williams & Percival 1977, p. 170.
  13. Williams & Percival 1977, p. 172.
  14. Motive Power Combined Volume. London: Ian Allan. 1981. pp. 157–158. ISBN   0-7110-1127-3.
  15. Bailes, Kathy (7 June 2018). "Locomotive Storage Ltd in Margate welcomes the only surviving 4732 4-SUB unit". Isle of Thanet News. Retrieved 8 June 2018.
  16. "4-SUB EMU gets permanent home". Railways Illustrated . No. January 2021. p. 25.

Sources