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Brake vans (CD, SCD, AVCY & AVCP) | |
---|---|
In service | 1965-current |
Constructed | 1965-1967 |
Number built | 14 |
Fleet numbers | CD1-11, SCD1-3, AVCY/AVCP 1-9, 378-379, 388-392, OWR392, "RICE" and "TRACKS" car |
Capacity | 25 long tons (25.40 t) [8] |
Specifications | |
Car length | 72 ft 3 in (22.02 m) |
Width | 9 ft 9 in (2.97 m) |
Height | 14 ft (4.27 m) |
Weight | 39 long tons (39.63 t) unloaded, 64 long tons (65.03 t) loaded. [8] |
Bogies | 53 ft (16.15 m) centres, with 8 ft (2.44 m) wheelbases each for a total wheelbase of 61 ft (18.59 m) |
From 1965, Islington Railway Workshops adapted the D class passenger car design to provide 14 large brake vans for non-metropolitan passenger trains. They were used initially between Adelaide and Port Pirie and on the Blue Lake train to Mount Gambier.
The vans are organised into a guard's compartment at one end, measuring 8 ft 9 in (2.67 m), followed by three baggage compartments of 23 ft 2.5 in (7.07 m), 20 ft 11.25 in (6.38 m) and 15 ft 2.5 in (4.64 m) and capacities of 10 long tons (10.16 t), 8 long tons (8.13 t) and 7 long tons (7.11 t) respectively. The centre compartment was designed with a partially removable floor to allow for fish to be stored under the car body and provide air-cooling while the train was in motion. The layout of the car allowed all goods compartments to be loaded at the same time. The initial quality of ride for the guard was less than in the later CO vans, which had a similar layout but with the guard's compartment between two of the three goods compartments. [9]
The guard had a 47-gallon water tank under the floor to provide for the toilet and wash basin, and concertinas were provided at both ends of each car to ensure that staff were protected if passing between cars.
The final three vans, planned to be CD12, 13 and 14, were instead stored at Islington Railway Workshops on transfer bogies after they were completed in May 1967. They were held until January 1970, when they entered service as standard gauge vans SCD 1, 2 and 3 for local traffic between Port Pirie and Broken Hill. Van SCD3 was taken from that service on occasion and used as a replacement for one of the two CO vans on the Overland when they required maintenance. [9]
All vans were included in the sale of the South Australian Railways fleet to Australian National Railways in 1975. In 1987, guards' vans were recoded to meet the new Railways of Australia identification standard, and the CD vans took on the new code AVCY for Australian National, Van, 3rd type, and high speed / fixed gauge. The program was followed up a few years later with a recoding to AVCP, marking the vans for passenger services, and vans 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 378, 379, 389 and 391 were recoded as such. Overlapping with this program was the application of Australian National numbers, with van CD4 becoming AVCY389, 10 to 391 and 11 to 392, and SCD1 renumbered to 378 and 3 to 379. Other vans were allocated 300-series numbers but were scrapped before the new numbers could be applied.
From 1982 to about 1988 four vans – CD1, 2, 3 and 7 – were leased to the Victorian Railways for use on country services in their state while awaiting conversion of AZ carriages to ACZ format. [10]
From the mid 1980s the vans were needed less as fewer and longer trains were being operated and the railways were gradually leaving the small parcels business. Vans 4, 6, 8, 9, 10 and 11 were removed from normal service, refurbished and repainted with blue roofs and ends, and yellow and red stripes on the sides, and converted into a fixed consist called the Jubilee Trade Train. The train toured South Australia celebrating local industries over the 150 years since European settlement. [11]
In 1991, van AVCY391 was pulled from the now stored Jubilee consist and converted to OWR392, for the RICE and TRACKS services: respectively, Remote and Isolated Children's Exercise, and Trans Australian Community Services. It was withdrawn after catching fire a few years later. [12]
The entire fleet had been withdrawn by 1990, and in 1993 all but AVCP2 had been scrapped; the final vehicle followed in early 1994.
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