British Rail Class 403
Southern Railway 5-BEL British Rail Class 403 | |
---|---|
In service | 1932–1972 |
Manufacturer | Metropolitan Cammell Carriage, Wagon and Finance Company |
Constructed | 1932 |
Number built | Three sets (15 cars) |
Number preserved | 14 cars |
Number scrapped | 1 car |
Formation | 5-car set: DMBPT-TPFK-TPFK-TPT-DMBPT |
Fleet numbers | Sets: 2051–2053 (later 3051–3053); Cars: 279–293 |
Capacity | 40 First, 132 Third (DMBPT: 48, TPT: 56, TPFK: 20) |
Operators | Southern Railway (1933–1941, 1946–1947); British Railways (1948–1972) |
Lines served | Brighton Main Line |
Specifications | |
Car body construction | All steel |
Maximum speed | 75 mph (121 km/h) |
Weight | Set: 249 long tons (253 t; 279 short tons) |
Traction motors | Eight EE163[1] traction motors |
Power output | 8 x 225 hp (168 kW) 1,800 hp (1,342 kW) (total) |
Electric system(s) | 660–750 V DC third rail |
Current collector(s) | contact shoe |
Braking system(s) | Automatic Air |
Coupling system | Screw-link |
Track gauge | 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge |
The Southern Railway (SR) gave the designation 5-BEL to the five-car all-Pullman electric multiple units which worked the prestigious Brighton Belle trains between London Victoria and Brighton. These units survived long enough in British Rail ownership to be allocated TOPS Class 403. Between 1933 and 1935 the units were designated 5-PUL (the 'PUL' code was then used for the 6-PUL units).
Construction
[edit]The SR electrified the London Victoria to Brighton line in the early 1930s, and full electric services commenced over the route from 1 January 1933. For the high-profile Southern Belle Pullman train three five-car units, consisting entirely of Pullman cars, were built. All 15 cars were built by Metropolitan Cammell. In June 1934 the Southern Railway renamed the Southern Belle as the Brighton Belle.[2]
As they were Pullman cars, owned by the independent Pullman Car Company (UK), the individual carriages were numbered in its series, taking numbers 279 to 293, and the first class cars were given women's names while the third (from June 1956, second) class cars carried less-inspiring Car No xx designations, derived from the second and third digits of the Pullman Car Company's number. However, the units together were allocated numbers in the SR series, originally taking 2051-2053, which was revised in January 1937 to 3051-3053.
Formations
[edit]Three different car types were built - Driving Motor Brake Parlour Third (DMBPT), Trailer Parlour First with Kitchen (TPFK), and Trailer Parlour Third (TPT). Initial formations of these units were as follows:
Unit Numbers | DMBPT | TPFK | TPFK | TPT | DMBPT |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2051 / 3051 | 288 Car No 88 | 279 Hazel | 282 Doris | 286 Car No 86 | 289 Car No 89 |
2052 / 3052 | 290 Car No 90 | 280 Audrey | 284 Vera | 287 Car No 87 | 291 Car No 91 |
2053 / 3053 | 292 Car No 92 | 281 Gwen | 283 Mona | 285 Car No 85 | 293 Car No 93 |
Withdrawal and preservation
[edit]The last Brighton Belle train ran on 30 April 1972, and the three 5BEL units were withdrawn. However all 15 cars were sold into private ownership, though no unit was kept together as a single entity. Instead they were split up and each vehicle was initially used as an individual Pullman car, the majority not in railway use. A number have been returned to service on the main line with the Belmond British Pullman (previously the Venice Simplon Orient Express or VSOE), as hauled cars forming part of the British Pullman charter train. A campaign[3] to return the Brighton Belle to mainline service was launched by the 5BEL Trust [1] in 2008. By 2009, the trust had assembled a four-car set,[4] having acquired cars from the North Norfolk Railway and VSOE. A fifth car, No.282 'Doris', was acquired from the Bluebell Railway in 2011 and a sixth, No.279 'Hazel' in 2012. After restoration, the Brighton Belle is expected to enter testing in Autumn/Winter 2018.
The table below sets out the current position:
Key: | Stored | In service | Scrapped/Destroyed | Preserved |
---|
Number | Name | Location | Note | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|
279 | Hazel | Ramparts, Barrow Hill | 5-BEL Trust, under restoration | |
280 | Audrey | VSOE, in service | ||
281 | Gwen | VSOE, in service | ||
282 | Doris | Ramparts, Barrow Hill | 5-BEL Trust, to be restored | |
283 | Mona | VSOE, stored | ||
284 | Vera | VSOE, in service | ||
285 | Car No 85 | 5BEL Trust, under restoration | ||
286 | Car No 86 | VSOE, stored | ||
287 | Car No 87 | Ramparts, Barrow Hill | 5-BEL Trust, under restoration | |
288 | Car No 88 | Ramparts, Barrow Hill | 5-BEL Trust, under restoration | |
289 | Car No 89 | Little Mill Inn, Rowarth, Derbyshire | Privately owned, | |
290 | Car No 90 | Destroyed by fire in 1991 | ||
291 | Car No 91 | Ramparts, Barrow Hill | 5-BEL Trust, under restoration | |
292 | Car No 92 | VSOE, stored | ||
293 | Car No 93 | Ramparts, Barrow Hill | VSOE, stored |
Model railways
[edit]Hornby Railways produced OO gauge models of the 5-BEL from 2012, in both BR blue and grey and Pullman umber and cream liveries.[5][6] N gauge models were introduced in 2013 at 1:143 scale, under Hornby's Arnold brand, in both umber and cream livery and BR blue and grey livery.[7]
References
[edit]- ^ "Bringing back THE BRIGHTON BELLE | Iconic 1930s all-electric Pullman Train".
- ^ By Pullman To Brighton By H. C. P. Smail
- ^ Dunstone, Denis (August 2008). "Bring Back the Brighton Belle" (PDF). Coupe News (Journal of Pullman Car Services). No. 66. pp. 24–25.
- ^ "Southern Electric Group: Preserved Pullmans". Archived from the original on 5 September 2014. Retrieved 5 June 2013.
- ^ Leigh, Chris (April 2012). "'Belle' of the Ball!". Model Rail. No. 167. Peterborough: Bauer. pp. 12–15. ISSN 1369-5118. OCLC 173324502.
- ^ Leigh, Chris (May 2012). "1934 'Belle' rings in". Model Rail. No. 169. Peterborough: Bauer. pp. 22–23. ISSN 1369-5118. OCLC 173324502.
- ^ "Brighton Belle EMU in N from Arnold". British Railway Modelling. Vol. 20, no. 12. Bourne: Warners Group Publications. March 2013. p. 94. ISSN 0968-0764. OCLC 1135061879.
- Marsden, Colin J. (1983). Southern Electric Multiple-Units 1898–1948. Shepperton, Surrey: Ian Allan Limited. pp. 33–37. ISBN 0-7110-1253-9.