Solving The Electrification Conundrum
The title of this post, is the same as an article in the July 2021 Edition of Modern Railways.
This is the introductory sub-heading.
Regional and rural railways poses a huge problem for the railway to decarbonise.
Lorna McDonald of Hitachi Rail and Jay Mehta of Hitachi ABB Power Grids tell Andy Roden why they believe they have the answer.
These are my thoughts on what is said.
Battery-Electric Trains
The article starts by giving a review of battery-electric trains and their use on routes of moderate but important length.
- Some short routes can be handled with just a charge on an electrified main line.
- Some will need a recharge at the termini.
- Other routes might need a recharge at some intermediate stations, with a possible increase in dwell times.
It was in February 2015, that I wrote Is The Battery Electric Multiple Unit (BEMU) A Big Innovation In Train Design?, after a ride in public service on Bombardier’s test battery-electric train based on a Class 379 train.
I also wrote this in the related post.
Returning from Harwich, I travelled with the train’s on-board test engineer, who was monitoring the train performance in battery mode on a laptop. He told me that acceleration in this mode was the same as a standard train, that the range was up to sixty miles and that only minimal instruction was needed to convert a driver familiar to the Class 379 to this battery variant.
It was an impressive demonstration, of how a full-size train could be run in normal service without connection to a power supply. I also suspect that the partners in the project must be very confident about the train and its technology to allow paying passengers to travel on their only test train.
A couple of years later, I met a lady on another train, who’d used the test train virtually every day during the trial and she and her fellow travellers felt that it was as good if not better than the normal service from a Class 360 train or a Class 321 train.
So why if the engineering, customer acceptance and reliability were proven six years ago, do we not have several battery electric trains in service?
- There is a proven need for battery-electric trains on the Marshlink Line and the Uckfield Branch in Sussex.
- The current Class 171 trains are needed elsewhere, so why are no plans in place for replacement trains?
- The government is pushing electric cars and buses, but why is there such little political support for battery-electric trains?
It’s almost as if, an important civil servant in the decision process has the naive belief that battery-electric trains won’t work and if they do, they will be phenomenally expensive. So the answer is an inevitable no!
Only in the South Wales Metro, are battery-electric trains considered to be part of the solution to create a more efficient and affordable electric railway.
But as I have constantly pointed out since February 2015 in this blog, battery-electric trains should be one of the innovations we use to build a better railway.
Hydrogen Powered Trains
The article says this about hydrogen powered trains.
Hybrid hydrogen fuel cells can potentially solve the range problem, but at the cost of the fuel eating up internal capacity that would ideally be used for passengers. (and as Industry and Technology Editor Roger Ford points out, at present hydrogen is a rather dirty fuel). By contrast, there is no loss of seating or capacity in a Hitachi battery train.
I suspect the article is referring to the Alstom train, which is based on the technology of the Alstom Coradia iLint.
I have ridden this train.
- It works reliably.
- It runs on a 100 km route.
- The route is partially electrified, but the train doesn’t have a pantograph.
- It has a very noisy mechanical transmission.
Having spoken to passengers at length, no-one seemed bothered by the Hindenburg possibilities.
It is certainly doing some things right, as nearly fifty trains have been ordered for train operating companies in Germany.
Alstom’s train for the UK is the Class 600 train, which will be converted from a four-car Class 321 train.
Note.
- Half of both driver cars is taken up by a hydrogen tank.
- Trains will be three-cars.
- Trains will be able to carry as many passengers as a two-car Class 156 train.
It is an inefficient design that can be improved upon.
Porterbrook and Birmingham University appear to have done that with their Class 799 train.
- It can use 25 KVAC overhead or 750 VDC third-rail electrification.
- The hydrogen tanks, fuel cell and other hydrogen gubbins are under the floor.
This picture from Network Rail shows how the train will appear at COP26 in Glasgow in November.
Now that’s what I call a train! Let alone a hydrogen train!
Without doubt, Porterbrook and their academic friends in Birmingham will be laying down a strong marker for hydrogen at COP26!
I know my hydrogen, as my first job on leaving Liverpool University with my Control Engineering degree in 1968 was for ICI at Runcorn, where I worked in a plant that electrolysed brine into hydrogen, sodium hydroxide and chlorine.
My life went full circle last week, when I rode this hydrogen powered bus in London.
The hydrogen is currently supplied from the same chemical works in Runcorn, where I worked. But plans have been made at Runcorn, to produce the hydrogen from renewable energy, which would make the hydrogen as green hydrogen of the highest standard. So sorry Roger, but totally carbon-free hydrogen is available.
The bus is a Wightbus Hydroliner FCEV and this page on the Wrightbus web site gives the specification. The specification also gives a series of cutaway drawings, which show how they fit 86 passengers, all the hydrogen gubbins and a driver into a standard size double-deck bus.
I believe that Alstom’s current proposal is not a viable design, but I wouldn’t say that about the Porterbrook/Birmingham University design.
Any Alternative To Full Electrification Must Meet Operator And Customer Expectations
This is a paragraph from the article.
It’s essential that an alternative traction solution offers the same levels of performance and frequency, while providing an increase in capacity and being economically viable.
In performance, I would include reliability. As the on-board engineer indicated on the Bombardier test train on the Harwich branch, overhead electrification is not totally reliable, when there are winds and/or criminals about.
Easy Wins
Hitachi’s five-car Class 800 trains and Class 802 trains each have three diesel engines and run the following short routes.
- Kings Cross and Middlesbrough- 21 miles not electrified – Changeover in Northallerton station
- Kings Cross and Lincoln – 16.6 miles not electrified – Changeover in Newark Northgate station
- Paddington and Bedwyn – 13.3 miles not electrified – Changeover in Newbury station
- Paddington and Oxford – 10.3 miles not electrified – Changeover in Didcot Parkway station
Some of these routes could surely be run with a train, where one diesel engine was replaced by a battery-pack.
As I’m someone, who was designing, building and testing plug-compatible transistorised electronics in the 1960s to replace older valve-based equipment in a heavy engineering factory, I suspect that creating a plug-compatible battery-pack that does what a diesel engine does in terms of power and performance is not impossible.
What would be the reaction to passengers, once they had been told, they had run all the way to or from London without using any diesel?
Hopefully, they’d come again and tell their friends, which is what a train operator wants and needs.
Solving The Electrification Conundrum
This section is from the article.
Where electrification isn’t likely to be a viable proposition, this presents a real conundrum to train operators and rolling stock leasing companies.
This is why Hitachi Rail and Hitachi ABB Power Grids are joining together to present a combined battery train and charging solution to solve this conundrum. In 2020, Hitachi and ABB’s Power Grids business, came together in a joint venture, and an early outcome of this is confidence that bringing together their expertise in rail, power and grid management, they can work together to make electrification simpler cheaper and quicker.
I agree strongly with the second paragraph, as several times, I’ve been the mathematician and simulation expert in a large multi-disciplinary engineering project, that went on to be very successful.
The Heart Of The Proposition
This is a paragraph from the article.
The proposition is conceptually simple. Rather than have extended dwell times at stations for battery-powered trains, why not have a short stretch of 25 KVAC overhead catenary (the exact length will depend on the types of train and the route) which can charge trains at linespeed on the move via a conventional pantograph?
The article also mentions ABB’s related expertise.
- Charging buses all over Europe.
- Creating the power grid for the Great Western Electrification to Cardiff.
I like the concept, but then it’s very similar to what I wrote in The Concept Of Electrification Islands in April 2020.
But as they are electrical power engineers and I’m not, they’d know how to create the system.
Collaboration With Hyperdrive Innovation
The article has nothing negative to say about the the collaboration with Hyperdrive Innovation to produce the battery-packs.
Route Modelling
Hitachi appear to have developed a sophisticated route modelling system, so that routes and charging positions can be planned.
I would be very surprised if they hadn’t developed such a system.
Modular And Scalable
This is a paragraph from the article.
In the heart of the system is a containerised modular solution containing everything needed to power a stretch of overhead catenary to charge trains. A three-car battery train might need one of these, but the great advantage is that it is scalable to capacity and speed requirements.
This all sounds very sensible and can surely cope with a variety of lines and traffic levels.
It also has the great advantage , that if a line is eventually electrified, the equipment can be moved on to another line.
Financing Trains And Chargers
The article talks about the flexibility of the system from an operator’s point of view with respect to finance.
I’ve had some good mentors in the area of finance and I know innovative finance contributed to the success of Metier Management Systems, the project management company I started with three others in 1977.
After selling Metier, I formed an innovative finance company, which would certainly have liked the proposition put forward in the article.
No Compromise, Little Risk
I would agree with this heading of the penultimate section of the article.
In February 2015, when I rode that Class 379 train between Manningtree and Harwich, no compromise had been made by Bombardier and it charged in the electrified bay platform at Manningtree.
But why was that train not put through an extensive route-proving exercise in the UK after the successful trial at Manningtree?
- Was it the financial state of Bombardier?
- Was it a lack of belief on the part of politicians, who were too preoccupied with Brexit?
- Was it that an unnamed civil servant didn’t like the concept and stopped the project?
Whatever the reason, we have wasted several years in getting electric trains accepted on UK railways.
If no compromise needs to be made to create a battery-electric train, that is equivalent to the best-in-class diesel or electric multiple units, then what about the risk?
The beauty of Hitachi’s battery-electric train project is that it can be done in phases designed to minimise risk.
Phase 1 – Initial Battery Testing
Obviously, there will be a lot of bench testing in a laboratory.
But I also believe that if the Class 803 trains are fitted with a similar battery from Hyperdrive Innovation, then this small fleet of five trains can be used to test a lot of the functionality of the batteries initially in a test environment and later in a real service environment.
The picture shows a Class 803 train under test through Oakleigh Park station.
This phase would be very low risk, especially where passengers are concerned.
Phase 2 – Battery Traction Testing And Route Proving
I am a devious bastard, when it comes to software development. The next set of features would always be available for me to test earlier, than anybody else knew.
I doubt that the engineers at Hyperdrive Innovation will be any different.
So I wouldn’t be surprised to find out that the batteries in the Class 803 trains can also be used for traction, if you have the right authority.
We might even see Class 803 trains turning up in some unusual places to test the traction abilities of the batteries.
As East Coast Trains, Great Western Railway and Hull Trains are all First Group companies, I can’t see any problems.
I’m also sure that Hitachi could convert some Class 800 or Class 802 trains and add these to the test fleet, if East Coast Trains need their Class 803 trains to start service.
This phase would be very low risk, especially where passengers are concerned.
Possibly, the worse thing, that could happen would be a battery failure, which would need the train to be rescued.
Phase 3 – Service Testing On Short Routes
As I indicated earlier, there are some easy routes between London and places like Bedwyn, Lincoln, Middlesbrough and Oxford, that should be possible with a Class 800 or Class 802 train fitted with the appropriate number of batteries.
Once the trains have shown, the required level of performance and reliability, I can see converted Class 800, 801 and Class 802 trains entering services on these and other routes.
Another low risk phase, although passengers are involved, but they are probably subject to the same risks, as on an unmodified train.
Various combinations of diesel generators and batteries could be used to find out, what is the optimum combination for the typical diagrams that train operators use.
Hitachi didn’t commit to any dates, but I can see battery-electric trains running on the Great Western Railway earlier than anybody thinks.
Phase 4 – Service Testing On Medium Routes With A Terminal Charger System
It is my view that the ideal test route for battery-electric trains with a terminal charger system would be the Hull Trains service between London Kings Cross and Hull and Beverley.
The route is effectively in three sections.
- London Kings Cross and Temple Hirst junction – 169.2 miles – Full Electrification
- Temple Hirst junction and Hull station – 36.1 miles – No Electrification
- Hull station and Beverley station – 8.3 miles – No Electrification
Two things would be needed to run zero-carbon electric trains on this route.
- Sufficient battery capacity in Hull Trains’s Class 802 trains to reliably handle the 36.1 miles between Temple Hirst junction and Hull station.
- A charging system in Hull station.
As Hull station also handles other Class 800 and Class 802 trains, there will probably be a need to put a charging system in more than one platform.
Note.
- Hull station has plenty of space.
- No other infrastructure work would be needed.
- There is a large bus interchange next door, so I suspect the power supply to Hull station is good.
Hull would be a very good first destination for a battery-electric InterCity train.
Others would include Bristol, Cheltenham, Chester, Scarborough, Sunderland and Swansea.
The risk would be very low, if the trains still had some diesel generator capacity.
Phase 5 – Service Testing On Long Routes With Multiple Charger Systems
Once the performance and reliability of the charger systems have been proven in single installations like perhaps Hull and Swansea stations, longer routes can be prepared for electric trains.
This press release from Hitachi is entitled Hitachi And Eversholt Rail To Develop GWR Intercity Battery Hybrid Train – Offering Fuel Savings Of More Than 20%.
The press release talks about Penzance and London, so would that be a suitable route for discontinuous electrification using multiple chargers?
These are the distances between major points on the route between Penzance and London Paddington.
- Penzance and Truro – 35.8 miles
- Truro and Bodmin Parkway – 26.8 miles
- Bodmin Parkway and Plymouth – 26.9 miles
- Plymouth and Newton Abbot – 31,9 miles
- Newton Abbot and Exeter – 20.2 miles
- Exeter and Taunton – 30.8 miles
- Taunton and Westbury – 47.2 miles
- Westbury and Newbury – 42.5 miles
- Newbury and Paddington – 53 miles
Note.
- Only Newbury and Paddington is electrified.
- Trains generally stop at Plymouth, Newton Abbott, Exeter and Taunton.
- Services between Paddington and Exeter, Okehampton, Paignton, Penzance, Plymouth and Torquay wouldn’t use diesel.
- Okehampton would be served by a reverse at Exeter.
- As Paignton is just 8.1 miles from Newton Abbot, it probably wouldn’t need a charger.
- Bodmin is another possible destination, as Great Western Railway have helped to finance a new platform at Bodmin General station.
It would certainly be good marketing to run zero-carbon electric trains to Devon and Cornwall.
I would class this route as medium risk, but with a high reward for the operator.
In this brief analysis, it does look that Hitachi’s proposed system is of a lower risk.
A Few Questions
I do have a few questions.
Are The Class 803 Trains Fitted With Hyperdrive Innovation Batteries?
East Coast Trains‘s new Class 803 trains are undergoing testing between London Kings Cross and Edinburgh and they can be picked up on Real Time Trains.
Wikipedia says this about the traction system for the trains.
While sharing a bodyshell with the previous UK A-train variants, the Class 803 differs in that it has no diesel engines fitted. They will however be fitted with batteries to enable the train’s on-board services to be maintained, in case the primary electrical supplies have failed.
Will these emergency batteries be made by Hyperdrive Innovation?
My experience of similar systems in other industries, points me to the conclusion, that all Class 80x trains can be fitted with similar, if not identical batteries.
This would give the big advantage of allowing battery testing to be performed on Class 803 trains under test, up and down the East Coast Main Line.
Nothing finds faults in the design and manufacture of something used in transport, than to run it up and down in real conditions.
Failure of the catenary can be simulated to check out emergency modes.
Can A Class 801 Train Be Converted Into A Class 803 Train?
If I’d designed the trains, this conversion would be possible.
Currently, the electric Class 801 trains have a single diesel generator. This is said in the Wikipedia entry for the Class 800 train about the Class 801 train.
These provide emergency power for limited traction and auxiliaries if the power supply from the overhead line fails.
So it looks like the difference between the powertrain of a Class 801 train and a Class 803 train, is that the Class 801 train has a diesel generator and the Class 803 train has batteries. But the diesel generator and batteries, would appear to serve the same purpose.
Surely removing diesel from a Class 801 train would ease the maintenance of the train!
Will The System Work With Third-Rail Electrification?
There are three routes that if they were electrified would probably be electrified with 750 DC third-rail electrification, as they have this electrification at one or both ends.
- Basingstoke and Exeter
- Marshlink Line
- Uckfield branch
Note.
- Basingstoke and Exeter would need a couple of charging systems.
- The Marshlink line would need a charging system at Rye station.
- The Uckfield branch would need a charging system at Uckfield station.
I am fairly certain as an Electrical Engineer, that the third-rails would only need to be switched on, when a train is connected and needs a charge.
I also feel that on some scenic and other routes, 750 VDC third-rail electrification may be more acceptable , than 25 KVAC overhead electrification. For example, would the heritage lobby accept overhead wires through a World Heritage Site or on top of a Grade I Listed viaduct?
I do feel that the ability to use third-rail 750 VDC third-rail electrification strategically could be a useful tool in the system.
Will The System Work With Lightweight Catenary?
I like the design of this 25 KVAC overhead electrification, that uses lightweight gantries, which use laminated wood for the overhead structure.
There is also a video.
Electrification doesn’t have to be ugly and out-of-character with the surroundings.
Isuspect that both systems could work together.
Would Less Bridges Need To Be Rebuilt For Electrification?
This is always a contentious issue with electrification, as rebuilding bridges causes disruption to both rail and road.
I do wonder though by the use of careful design, that it might be possible to arrange that the sections of electrification and the contentious bridges were kept apart, with the bridges arranged to be in sections, where the trains ran on batteries.
I suspect that over the years as surveyors and engineers get more experienced, better techniques will evolve to satisfy all parties.
Get this right and it could reduce the cost of electrification on some lines, that will be difficult to electrify.
How Secure Are The Containerised Systems?
Consider.
- I was delayed in East Anglia two years ago, because someone stole the overhead wires at two in the morning.
- Apparently, overhead wire stealing is getting increasingly common in France and other parts of Europe.
I suspect the containerised systems will need to be more secure than those used for buses, which are not in isolated locations.
Will The Containerised Charging Systems Use Energy Storage?
Consider.
- I’ve lived in rural locations and the power grids are not as good as in urban areas.
- Increasingly, batteries of one sort or another are being installed in rural locations to beef up local power supplies.
- A new generation of small-footprint eco-friendly energy storage systems are being developed.
In some locations, it might be prudent for a containerised charging system to share a battery with the local area.
Will The Containerised Charging Systems Accept Electricity From Local Sources Like Solar Farms?
I ask the question, as I know at least one place on the UK network, where a line without electrification runs through a succession of solar farms.
I also know of an area, where a locally-owned co-operative is planning a solar farm, which they propose would be used to power the local main line.
Will The System Work With Class 385 Trains?
Hitachi’s Class 385 trains are closely related to the Class 80x trains, as they are all members of Hitachi’s A-Train family.
Will the Charging Systems Charge Other Manufacturers Trains?
CAF and Stadler are both proposing to introduce battery-electric trains in the UK.
I also suspect that the new breed of electric parcel trains will include a battery electric variant.
As these trains will be able to use 25 KVAC overhead electrification, I would expect, that they would be able to charge their batteries on the Hitachi ABB charging systems.
Will The System Work With Freight Trains?
I believe that freight services will split into two.
Heavy freight will probably use powerful hydrogen-electric locomotives.
In Freightliner Secures Government Funding For Dual-Fuel Project, which is based on a Freightliner press release, I detail Freightliner’s decarbonisation strategy, which indicates that in the future they will use hydrogen-powered locomotives.
But not all freight is long and extremely heavy and I believe that a battery-electric freight locomotive will emerge for lighter duties.
There is no reason it could not be designed to be compatible with Hitachi’s charging system.
In Is This The Shape Of Freight To Come?, I talked about the plans for 100 mph parcel services based on redundant electric multiple units. Eversholt Rail Group have said they want a Last-Mile capability for their version of these trains.
Perhaps they need a battery-electric capability, so they can deliver parcels and shop supplies to the remoter parts of these islands?
Where Could Hitachi’s System Be Deployed?
This is the final paragraph from the article.
Hitachi is not committing to any routes yet, but a glance at the railway map shows clear potential for the battery/OLE-technology to be deployed on relatively lightly used rural and regional routes where it will be hard to make a case for electrification. The Cambrian Coast and Central Wales Lines would appear to be worthy candidates, and in Scotland, the West Highland Line and Far North routes are also logical areas for the system to be deployed.
In England, while shorter branch lines could simply be operated by battery trains, longer routes need an alternative. Network Rail’s Traction Decarbonisation Network Strategy interim business case recommends hydrogen trains for branch lines in Norfolk, as well as Par to Newquay and Exeter to Barnstaple. However, it is also entirely feasible to use the system on routes likely to be electrified much later in the programme, such as the Great Western main line West of Exeter, Swansea to Fishguard and parts of the Cumbrian Coast Line.
Everyone is entitled to their own opinion and mine would be driven by high collateral benefits and practicality.
These are my thoughts.
Long Rural Lines
The Cambrian, Central Wales (Heart Of Wales), Far North and West Highland Lines may not be connected to each other, but they form a group of rail routes with a lot of shared characteristics.
- All are rural routes of between 100 and 200 miles.
- All are mainly single track.
- They carry occasional freight trains.
- They carry quite a few tourists, who are there to sample, view or explore the countryside.
- All trains are diesel.
- Scotrail have been experimenting with attaching Class 153 trains to the trains on the West Highland Line to act as lounge cars and cycle storage.
Perhaps we need a long-distance rural train with the following characteristics.
- Four or possibly five cars
- Battery-electric power
- Space for a dozen cycles
- A lounge car
- Space for a snack trolley
- Space to provide a parcels service to remote locations.
I should also say, that I’ve used trains on routes in countries like Germany, Poland and Slovenia, where a similar train requirement exists.
Norfolk Branch Lines
Consider.
- North of the Cambridge and Ipswich, the passenger services on the branch lines and the important commuter routes between Cambridge and Norwich and Ipswich are run by Stadler Class 755 trains, which are designed to be converted to battery-electric trains.
- Using Hitachi chargers at Beccles, Bury St. Edmunds, Lowestoft, Thetford and Yarmouth and the existing electrification, battery-electric Class 755 trains could provide a zero-carbon train service for Norfolk and Suffolk.
- With chargers at Dereham and March, two important new branch lines could be added and the Ipswich and Peterborough service could go hourly and zero carbon.
- Greater Anglia have plans to use the Class 755 trains to run a London and Lowestoft service.
- Could they be planning a London and Norwich service via Cambridge?
- Would battery-electric trains running services over Norfolk bring in more visitors by train?
Hitachi may sell a few chargers to Greater Anglia, but I feel they have enough battery-electric trains.
Par And Newquay
The Par and Newquay Line or the Atlantic Coast Line, has been put forward as a Beeching Reversal project, which I wrote about in Beeching Reversal – Transforming The Newquay Line.
In that related post, I said the line needed the following.
- An improved track layout.
- An hourly service.
- An improved Par station.
- A rebuilt Newquay station with a second platform, so that more through trains can be run.
I do wonder, if after the line were to be improved, that a new three-car battery-electric train shuttling between Par and Newquay stations could be the icing on the cake.
Exeter And Barnstaple
The Tarka Line between Exeter and Barnstaple is one of several local and main lines radiating from Exeter St. David’s station.
- The Avocet Line to Exmouth
- The Great Western Main Line to Taunton, Bristol and London
- The Great Western Main Line to Newton Abbott, Plymouth and Penzance
- The Riviera Line to Paignton
- The West of England Line to Salisbury, Basingstoke and London.
Note.
- The Dartmoor Line to Okehampton is under development.
- Several new stations are planned on the routes.
- I have already stated that Exeter could host a charging station between London and Penzance, but it could also be an electrified hub for battery-electric trains running hither and thither.
Exeter could be a city with a battery-electric metro.
Exeter And Penzance
Earlier, I said that I’d trial multiple chargers between Paddington and Penzance to prove the concept worked.
I said this.
I would class this route as medium risk, but with a high reward for the operator.
But it is also an enabling route, as it would enable the following battery-electric services.
- London and Bodmin
- London and Okehampton
- London and Paignton and Torquay
It would also enable the Exeter battery-electric metro.
For these reasons, this route should be electrified using Hitachi’s discontinuous electrification.
Swansea And Fishguard
I mentioned Swansea earlier, as a station, that could be fitted with a charging system, as this would allow battery-electric trains between Paddington and Swansea via Cardiff.
Just as with Exeter, there must be scope at Swansea to add a small number of charging systems to develop a battery-electric metro based on Swansea.
Cumbrian Coast Line
This is a line that needs improvement, mainly for the tourists and employment it could and probably will bring.
These are a few distances.
- West Coast Main Line (Carnforth) and Barrow-in-Furness – 28.1 miles
- Barrow-in-Furness and Sellafield – 25 miles
- Sellafield and Workington – 18 miles
- Workington and West Coast Main Line (Carlisle) – 33 miles
Note.
- The West Coast Main Line is fully-electrified.
- I suspect that Barrow-in-Furness, Sellafield and Workington have good enough electricity supplies to support charging systems for the Cumbrian Coast Line.
- The more scenic parts of the line would be left without wires.
It certainly is a line, where a good case for running battery-electric trains can be made.
Crewe And Holyhead
In High-Speed Low-Carbon Transport Between Great Britain And Ireland, I looked at zero-carbon travel between the Great Britain and Ireland.
One of the fastest routes would be a Class 805 train between Euston and Holyhead and then a fast catamaran to either Dublin or a suitable rail-connected port in the North.
- The Class 805 trains could be made battery-electric.
- The trains could run between Euston and Crewe at speeds of up to 140 mph under digital signalling.
- Charging systems would probably be needed at Chester, Llandudno Junction and Holyhead.
- The North Wales Coast Line looks to my untrained eyes, that it could support at least some 100 mph running.
I believe that a time of under three hours could be regularly achieved between London Euston and Holyhead.
Battery-electric trains on this route, would deliver the following benefits.
- A fast low-carbon route from Birmingham, London and Manchester to the island of Ireland. if coupled with the latest fast catamarans at Holyhead.
- Substantial reductions in journey times to and from Anglesey and the North-West corner of Wales.
- Chester could become a hub for battery-electric trains to and from Birmingham, Crewe, Liverpool, Manchester and Shrewsbury.
- Battery-electric trains could be used on the Conwy Valley Line.
- It might even be possible to connect the various railways, heritage railways and tourist attractions in the area with zero-carbon shuttle buses.
- Opening up of the disused railway across Anglesey.
The economics of this corner of Wales could be transformed.
My Priority Routes
To finish this section, I will list my preferred routes for this method of discontinuous electrification.
- Exeter and Penzance
- Swansea and Fishguard
- Crewe and Holyhead
Note.
- Some of the trains needed for these routes have been delivered or are on order.
- Local battery-electric services could be developed at Chester, Exeter and Swansea by building on the initial systems.
- The collateral benefits could be high for Anglesey, West Wales and Devon and Cornwall.
I suspect too, that very little construction work not concerned with the installation of the charging systems will be needed.
Conclusion
Hitachi have come up with a feasible way to electrify Great Britain’s railways.
I would love to see detailed costings for the following.
- Adding a battery pack to a Class 800 train.
- Installing five miles of electrification supported by a containerised charging system.
They could be on the right side for the Treasury.
But whatever the costs, it does appear that the Japanese have gone native, with their version of the Great British Compromise.
Perhaps in one of your future appraisals you would address the reluctance of the Treasury to complete the third rail network south of the Thames, The operators should be relieved of the necessity of having to operate more than conventional electric stock. Battery-electric is just another distraction obliging the retention of 2 types of motive power or worse . Also it would be interesting to know your estimates of the dwell time required to re-charge traction batteries using proven technology and not one of the many experiments now in hand.
Comment by Thomas Carr | July 9, 2021 |
Third-rail has two main disadvantages; the electrocution danger and it is less efficient that AC. To illustrate the latter, Class 321 trains were built with DC traction motors by BREL, but are now being converted to AC motors.
DC also requires more sub-stations to feed the electricity to the third-rail. With the Great Western Main Line electrification to Cardiff, there are only three sub-stations at West Ealing, Swindon and Cardiff, as the catenary itself distributes the electricity.
Battery-electric trains are a gap-jumper par excellence.
I will use the Uckfield branch as an example. The Southernmost 24.7 miles of this line are not electrified, but that distance is well within the capabilities of a well-designed battery-electric train.
With Hitachi’s charger system perhaps a hundred metres of 25 KVAC overhead electrification could be installed in Uckfield station.
A battery-electric dual-voltage train would be able to work the route by using 750 VDC third-rail electrification between London Bridge and Heald Green junction to both power the train and charge the batteries. Battery power would be used South of Heald Green junction and the pantograph could be raised at Uckfield to charge the batteries for return.
Having designed safety systems as a fifteen-year-old for massive dangerous guillotines, I believe that a short length of 750 VDC third-rail electrification could also be used to charge the train. But it would be unpowered unless a train was connected and needing power. This arrangement would be much less dangerous, than the third-rail electrification in the average South London station.
Comment by AnonW | July 9, 2021 |
A very interesting summation.
Regarding the section
Would Less Bridges Need To Be Rebuilt For Electrification?
there is some useful information regarding tests and trials to reduce bridge and tunnel air gap requirements for 25kV OLE expressed ln the linked RailNatter 22 podcast. The relevant section of the podcast circa 28 mins in.
Possibly such structures may prove less of a constraint in planning either full or discontinuous electrification schemes.
Comment by Fenline Scouser | July 9, 2021 |
I’ll watch the video later.
I suspect that one of the beauties of the Hitachi system, is you could pin a large scale Ordnance Survey map of the route to be electrified on the wall and stick red pins in every bridge or structure that won’t take 25 KVAC overhead wires.
If say your minimum length of 25 KVAC to ensure adequate charge was say five miles at line speed, you would then cut a piece of string to this length and see where it would fit in between the red pins.
Sounds good to me!
Comment by AnonW | July 9, 2021 |
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Not much has changed since you wrote this. The ORR has just released its latest infrastructure report https://dataportal.orr.gov.uk/statistics/infrastructure-and-emissions/rail-infrastructure-and-assets/ which shows a grand total of 2.2 track km of electrified track during the last period – wow! They have now added a section on rolling-stock traction type, inc data per operator, which is quite interesting.
I don’t myself much mind how rail decarbonises – the important thing for me is having a coherent plan. You can always change it later, but if you have a plan you can establish supply chains and people can be hired/trained to do the necessary work. However, in the current economic climate, I fear that all rail infrastructure plans are going to be delayed if not cancelled outright.
Comment by Peter Robins | October 21, 2022 |
and Railfuture reports that NR have now abandonned their Traction Decarbonisation Network Strategy https://railfuture.org.uk/article1895-Decarbonisation-sunk Problem is the gov doesn’t seem to have a strategy for implementing alternative power sources either.
Comment by Peter Robins | October 23, 2022 |