FS class E646 | |
---|---|
Unit E646.094 in XMPR livery | |
Power type | Electric |
Builder | TIBB |
Build date | 1958-1967 |
UIC classification | Bo-Bo-Bo |
Wheel diameter | 1.250 m |
Wheelbase | 13.550 m between bogies 2.580 m between axles in each bogie |
Length | 18.290 m |
Width | 3.013 m |
Height | 4.296 m |
Locomotive weight | 110 tons |
Electric system | 3,000 V DC |
Current collection method |
Pantograph |
Traction motors | DC |
Transmission | 25/64 gear ratio |
Top speed | 140 km/h |
Power output | hourly: 4,320 kW - continuous: 3,780 kW |
Tractive effort | 233 kN |
Locomotive brakes | Oerlikon FV4 |
Safety systems | RSC4; some units (about 40) have also been fitted with SCMT |
Career | FS Trenitalia |
Number in class | 198 |
First run | 1958 |
Disposition | Decommissioned in 2009 |
FS class E645 | |
---|---|
Unit E645.017 in its original livery | |
Power type | Electric |
Builder | TIBB |
Build date | 1957 – 1967 |
UIC classification | Bo-Bo-Bo |
Wheel diameter | 1.250 m |
Wheelbase | 13.550 m between bogies 2.580 m between axles in each bogie |
Length | 18.250 m |
Width | 3.013 m |
Height | 4.296 m |
Locomotive weight | 110-112 tons |
Electric system | 3,000 V DC |
Traction motors | DC series |
Transmission | 21/68 gear ratio |
Top speed | 120 km/h |
Power output | 3,780 kW |
Tractive effort | 286 kN |
Safety systems | RSC4 |
Career | FS Trenitalia |
Number in class | 97 |
First run | 1958 |
Disposition | Decommissioned in 2009 |
The FS E645 and E646 are two classes of similar electric locomotives used on Italian railways. They were introduced during the 1950s and they have been retired in 2009.
Contents |
The E646 and E645 locomotives project was started in 1953, with a new model engine that was to be installed on the modified chassis of the already-existing six-axle locomotive E636. A similar concept for a 4-axle locomotive led to the development of the E444 high-speed locomotive in the 1960s.
The first prototypes were delivered in October 1958. The first thirty-seven individual locomotives differed only in their livery: twenty built for passenger traffic were painted in grey-green, while seventeen built for goods were painted in auburn. Later, the freight locomotives were reclassed E645. The total number of locomotives built amounted to 295 units.
Several locomotives from each class are still in service with FS Trenitalia, on push-pull services, and many have been converted in E645 and assigned to goods services until 2009. They are substituted by E464 engines on regional services.
Class E646 does not follow the standard Italian class numbering rules where the last digit indicates the number of motors, as it mounts 12 two by two mechanically coupled 82-333FS type electric motors, each providing 360 kW, fed from the 3000 V catenary. These motors are more powerful than those mounted on the predecessor E636 class and able to improve performance up to 50% with only a 20% increase in weight; this also increases the mass available for adhesion, giving it better hauling ability.
Maximum speed is 140 km/h for the E646. The E645 has a different gear ratio — 21/68 instead of 25/64 — which reduces the maximum speed to 120 km/h (75 mph), while increasing tractive effort. The locomotives weights 110 (E645: 112) tonnes.
To reach higher speeds, the motors can be connected in four ways:[1]
Combination | Motors set-up | Field shunts levels allowed | Maximum current allowed |
---|---|---|---|
Series | All motors are connected in series | Five | 700 A |
Series-Parallel | Two branches of six motors each | Five | 1100 A |
Parallel | Three branches of four motors each | Three | 1650 A |
Super-Parallel | Four branches of three motors each | Three (none on some 645) | 1800 A |
Due to the ability of the DC motors to absorb very high currents at low speeds, a rheostat needs to be connected in series to the traction motors when starting the train, to avoid drawing excessive current. The rheostat is gradually excluded as speed builds up and is also reintroduced when a transition to another is made; like almost every Italian electric locomotive since E626, rheostatic exclusion is commanded through a controller (formed by a lever mounted on a curved notched support, commonly called respectively maniglione and roncola in Italian) subdivided into several notches, each representing a portion of the rheostat, plus four (one for each combination) special intermediate "end combination" notches.
The driver gradually excludes the rheostat by rotating the lever counterclockwise, paying attention to not exceed the maximum allowed current (in this occurrence, the "maximum current relay", and consequently the "Main Breaker" (IR, Interruttore Rapido) opens), until he reaches the end combination notches, meaning that the rheostat is fully excluded for that combination; at this point, he can pass to the following combination or insert the field weakening shunts to further increase current. There are 31, 11, 9 and 8 notches on the roncola, each representing a portion of rheostat in the respective combinations.
In the 1960s the E646 locomotives were updated with the standard 78-wire cable, fire extinguishing system and automatic rheostatic exclusion system (Avviatore Automatico) to permit remote commanding by driving coaches on commuter push-pull passenger services.
Air production is granted by two 1000 l compressors, that fill the main tanks used by the braking system and other components (horn, whistle, contactors etc.).
Main auxiliary services also comprehend the 3000 V motor cooling fans, which also are used as generators to produce current used to recharge the 24 V DC batteries, that feed the low tension devices (lights, relays, solenoid valves, etc.).
Some units have also been fitted with static converters to feed auxiliary services and recharge batteries.
Like all non-electronic Italian locomotives, E646 are technically simple; driving personnel can often easily fix problems and get the locomotive moving for enough time to end the service or at least free the tracks.
For testing purposes, units E645.016 and 017 were built with an even shorter gear ratio (20/69), that allowed a maximum speed of 110 km/h. These units were intended to be used for hauling heavy trains on steep lines. This modify was not applied on other E645s, however units 016 and 017 remained on regular service with their gear ratio for many years. Unit 016 was scrapped prematurely, as being involved in Murazze di Vado (see below) accident in 1978, while unit 017 reverted to the usual 21/68 ratio in the first half of 1990s; however it retained the shorter roncola with considerably less notches than the usual E645/6 ones.
On April 15, 1978, an accident involved units E645.016 and E636.282 in Murazze di Vado (Bologna). The train hauled by these two locomotives derailed due to damage to the line caused by a landslide, and ended poised over a slope. When the first rescue had already arrived, both locomotives were hit by an ALe601 EMU on the express service Freccia della Laguna; the coaches fell into the slope, while the locomotives piled up one on top of the other on their sides. The accident caused 32 deaths and 120 wounded. Verona's football club was travelling on this train. They escaped unhurt because at the time of the accident, they were having lunch in the restaurant wagon. After the accident, E645.016 was scrapped.
In Florence Firenze Castello station, on March 23, 1998, unit E646.009 was hit by EMU ETR 480-34, that was running between Rome and Bergamo, and that passed a signal at 'danger' without stopping (SPAD); the accident caused one dead and 39 wounded. The E646 was later decommissioned.
|