London Underground 1972 Stock

1972 Stock

A Bakerloo line 1972 Stock train departing Willesden Junction
In service 1972 – present
Manufacturer Metro-Cammell
Replaced 1938 Stock
1959 Stock
Line(s) served Bakerloo
Specifications
Train length 113.552 m (372 ft 6.6 in)
Car length DM 16.091 m (52 ft 9.5 in)
T/UNDM 15.977 m (52 ft 5.0 in)
Width 2.641 m (8 ft 8.0 in)
Height 2.875 m (9 ft 5.2 in)
Seating DM/UNDM 40
T 36
Stock type Deep-level tube
Notes
London Transport portal

The London Underground 1972 Stock is a fleet of trains used on the London Underground. The 1972 Stock was ordered to make up the shortfall in trains on the Northern line's 1959 Tube Stock fleet. It is, however, currently used on the Bakerloo line.

Following the withdrawal of the C Stock on the Circle, District and Hammersmith & City lines in June 2014, these trains are now the oldest trains on the London Underground and also on any rapid transit system in the United Kingdom.

Construction

A total of 252 cars were ordered from Metro-Cammell and later refurbished by Tickford and Rosyth Dockyard.

In the early 1970s the 1938 Tube stock on the Bakerloo and Northern lines was life-expired and due for replacement. Tentative designs for a new Northern line fleet were abandoned when the go-ahead was given for the Piccadilly line to be extended to Heathrow Airport. That required a totally new fleet of trains to replace the 1959 stock then in use. The plan was made to transfer the 1959 trains to the Northern, to allow the worst of the 1938 stock there to be scrapped, but there were only 76 1959 Tube stock trains, and the Northern line needed more than that to operate. Originally it was planned to refurbish some 30 1938 trains, but this was scrapped in favour of 30 new trains - 1972 Mk1 Tube stock.

1972 Mark 1 stock cab

The 1972 Tube stock was ordered in a hurry, so there was no time to create a new design; the trains were based on the 1967 Tube stock on the Victoria line. Although almost identical looking, the 1972 trains had a guard and door controls in the rear car, and were not compatible with 1967 Tube stock (though in later years some 1972 cars were adapted to run with the 1967 trains on the Victoria line).

A further 33 trains of 1972 Tube stock were ordered to provide service on the Jubilee line. The 1972 Mk2 stock had slightly different interiors, such as dark blue seating moquette (unlike the red and grey on the earlier 1972/1967 trains). Externally the biggest difference was that the doors were painted red, with an LT roundel on the side of the carriages, rather than the Johnston lettering. The train number plates on the 1972 Mk2 trains operated on the Northern and Bakerloo lines prior to the opening of the Jubilee line in 1979.

With the introduction of the 1983 Tube stock on the Jubilee in 1984, the 1972 Mark 2 trains were transferred to the Northern line, then subsequently to the Bakerloo line, where they remain in service. The earlier (Mark 1) 1972 stock on the Northern line was replaced by 1995 Tube Stock in 1999. The 1972 Mark 2 stock was extensively refurbished in the 1990s. After being withdrawn from the Northern line, a few cars of 1972 Mark 1 stock were converted to run with 1967 stock in service on the Victoria line. A further two trains were converted to be compatible with the MkII type, and these now run on the Bakerloo line. One ex-Northern line Trainset is also permanently based at the now-closed Aldwych tube station, for use in films.

The 1972 trains are formed of seven-car sets, and have a total of 268 passenger seats.

Roster

 
Formation 32xx
(DM)
42xx
(T)
43xx
(T)
33xx
(DM)
34xx
(UNDM)
45xx
(T)
35xx
(DM)
Numbers Mark I 3264
:
3267
4264
:
4267
4364
:
4365
3364
:
3365
3464
:
3367
4564
:
4567
3564
:
3567
4367 3367
Mark II 3231
:
:
:
3248
4231
:
:
:
4248
4331
:
:
:
4348
3331
:
:
:
3348
3431
:
3438
4531
:
4538
3531
:
3538
3440
:
3463
4540
:
4563
3540
:
3563
3250
:
3256
4250
:
4256
4350
:
4356
3350
:
3356
3258
:
3263
4258
:
4263
4358
:
4363
3358
:
3363
3266 4266
3299 4299 4399 3399

Future replacement

Main article: New Tube for London

The Deep tube programme (DTP) originally covered the replacement of the trains and signalling on the Bakerloo and Piccadilly lines, and had been expanded to cover rolling stock requirements arising from the planned extension of the Northern line to Battersea, the eventual replacement of Central line trains and proposed increased service frequency on the Northern and Jubilee lines. The EVO tube concept design, a lighter articulated train with walk-through cars, was introduced early in 2011.[1] In early 2014 the Bakerloo, Piccadilly, Central and Waterloo & City line rolling-stock replacement project was renamed New Tube for London (NTfL) and moved to the design and specification stage.[2][3] The proposal introduces fully automated trains and signalling to increase capacity first on the Piccadilly line in 2025, followed by the Central, Waterloo & City, and Bakerloo lines by 2033. The fully automated trains may not have drivers;[4] however, the ASLEF and RMT trade unions representing drivers strongly oppose this, saying it would be unsafe.[5]

Post-withdrawal use

1972 Tube Stock cab converted into a tourist exhibit
1972 stock Mk1 3313 incorporated into the Asset Inspection Train (AIT)
SubseriesCar number(s)Notes
Mark I 3213-4213
3313-4313
Converted into Asset Inspection Train: see below.
Mark I 3214 Cab converted into a static tourist exhibit at the Hamleys toy store[6]
Mark I 3229-4229
4329-3329
Retained for filming and training purposes[7]
Mark I 3530 Static exhibit at the London Transport Museum[8]

Asset Inspection Train

Asset Inspection

Middle two car are 67DM vehicles - 3079, 3179. Front 2 and rear two are 72 MK1 stock

Unit 3079 & 3179 have recently been overhauled in Eastleigh. With no cab windows and new cables leading into each other. The AIT (Asset Inspection Train) will replace the Track Recording Train (1960 Stock DMs and 73 Stock T) which is currently in use.

References

  1. Connor, Piers (January 2013). "Deep tube transformation". Modern Railways. pp. 44–47.
  2. "New Tube for London Programme" (PDF). Board Minutes. Transport for London. 5 February 2014. Retrieved 3 April 2014.
  3. "New Tube for London Programme". Railway Gazette (London). 28 February 2014. Retrieved 3 April 2014.
  4. "TfL prepares for driverless tube". Railnews (Stevenage). 28 February 2014. Retrieved 3 April 2014.
  5. "Driverless Tube trains: Unions vow 'war' over plan". BBC News. 28 February 2014. Retrieved 3 April 2014.
  6. "New tube station for Regent Street". IanVisits. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
  7. "1972 MkI tube stock". SQUAREWHEELS.org.uk. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
  8. "London Underground 1972-tube stock driving motor car, number 3530, 1972". London Transport Museum. Retrieved 11 March 2014.

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