British Rail Class 379

British Rail Class 379 "Electrostar"
Unit 379012 at Bethnal Green.jpg
379012 Stansted Express service passing fast through Bethnal Green station.
In service 17 March 2011 -
Manufacturer Bombardier Transportation
Family name Electrostar
Constructed 2010 - 2011
Number built 30 trainsets
Formation 4 cars per trainset
Fleet numbers 379001 - 379030
Operator Greater Anglia
Line(s) served West Anglia Main Line
(Stansted Express)
Specifications
Maximum speed 100 mph (161 km/h)[1]
Electric system(s) 25 kV 50 Hz AC Overhead
Current collection method Pantograph
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge

The Class 379 Electrostar is a British electric multiple-unit train type ordered in April 2009 for Stansted Express services operated by National Express East Anglia (NXEA)[2][3] and later Greater Anglia.

The trains are also being used on services between London Liverpool Street, Cambridge and Kings Lynn.[4] The fleet was ordered as part of the NXEA Service Improvement Plan designed to expand capacity on the heavily crowded lines into London Liverpool Street.[5]

Description

The trains are part of Bombardier Transportation's Electrostar family and are owned by Lloyds TSB.[2] They were built at Bombardier's Derby plant, where the first unit was unveiled on 13 October 2010.[6]

After going to the Velim railway test circuit in the Czech Republic during November 2010, the first train returned to the UK in December for further testing along with other members of the class as they are built.

A phased introduction into passenger service began in March 2011.[7] They are maintained by Bombardier at Ilford.[2] They work alongside the Class 317.

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Features and fitted equipment

The Class 379 units feature 2+2 seating in standard class and 2+1 seating in first class. Large luggage racks are provided as befits an airport service.[1]

Wi-fi is supplied by Icomera of Sweden, not only for passenger internet use but also for linking the train's reservation, CCTV, passenger information and monitoring systems to the control room.[5]

The trains have regenerative braking[6] and use Bombardier's Orbita predictive fault monitoring system.[1] Some features are taken from the upcoming Aventra.[6] Interior lighting is supplied by Teknoware and includes state-of-the-art emergency lighting to fulfil GM/RT 2130 requirements. CCTV cameras on the roof monitor the pantograph arm.[5]

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Workings

The first two units, 379005 and 379006, entered service on 17 March 2011; 379005 was named Stansted Express at a ceremony at London Liverpool Street.[7] A further 18 units were to enter service in May 2011, on Stansted Express workings. They will work in a mixture of 12-car and 8-car lengths.

The remaining 10 began entering service in summer 2011 on Cambridge services. The Class 379 first ran on 3 March 2011 between Liverpool Street and Stansted Airport. All units had entered service by mid-August 2011, two months ahead of schedule and the airport services are now entirely worked by 8-car Class 379s.. The December 2011 timetable change included the introduction of 12-car trains on some peak workings to/from Cambridge.[8]

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Gallery

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Fleet details

Class Operator No. Built Year Built Cars per Set Unit nos.
Class 379 Greater Anglia 30 2010–2011 4 379001 - 379030
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References

  1. ^ a b c "Stansted Airport trains under construction". Railway Gazette International (London). 21 July 2010. Retrieved 2010-07-23. 
  2. ^ a b c "Bombardier signs Stansted airport train order". Railway Gazette International (London). 2 April 2009. Retrieved 2010-08-09. 
  3. ^ Today's Railways issue 91
  4. ^ Rail 673 (Peterborough). 29 June 2011. p. 37. 
  5. ^ a b c "Class 379 set to woo Stansted passengers". Modern Railways (London). December 2010. pp. 56–60. 
  6. ^ a b c "First new Stansted Express train rolls out". Railway Gazette International (London). 14 October 2010. 
  7. ^ a b "National Express launches Class 379s on Stansted Express service". Railway Herald (260) (Scunthorpe). 21 March 2011. p. 3. Retrieved 2011-05-08. 
  8. ^ "New timetable for the West Anglia network". National Express East Anglia. Retrieved 2011-11-11.
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External links

Media related to British Rail Class 379 at Wikimedia Commons

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Last modified on 20 March 2013, at 10:08