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FS Class E.626

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
FS class E.625/E.626
An E.626 in the National Museum of Transportation atLa Spezia
Type and origin
Power typeElectric
BuilderOM,TIBB,CEMSA,General Electric,Brown Boveri,SNO Savigliano,Metropolitan-Vickers,Westinghouse
Build date1927-1939
Specifications
Configuration:
UICBo′BoBo′
Gauge1,435 mm(4 ft8+12in)standard gauge
Wheel diameter1.250 m (49.21 in)
Length14.950 m (49 ft58in)
Loco weight84.5t(83.2long tons;93.1short tons) / 97 t (95 long tons; 107 short tons)
Electric system/s3,000VDCCatenary
Current pickup(s)Pantograph
Traction motorsDC series
Transmission21/76 (E.625)and 24/73 (E.626) gear ratios
Performance figures
Maximum speed50 km/h (31 mph) (E.625)
95 km/h (59 mph) (E.626)
Power output1,850 kW (2,480 hp)
Tractive effort105 kN (24,000 lbf)
Career
OperatorsFS Trenitalia,Jugoslovenske železnice,Československe statny drahy
Number in class448 in three series[note 1]
First run1928
DispositionDecommissioned

TheFS E.625andE.626are two classes of Italianelectric locomotivesproduced for theFerrovie dello Stato.They were introduced in the course of the 1920s and remained in service until the 1990s. The E.626 was the first locomotive fed by 3,000 V DCoverhead linein Italy.

History

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The E.626 class is the result of a requirement issued in 1926 by theFerrovie dello Stato(FS, Italian Railways) for a new locomotive to be used under the new 3,000 V DC line being built betweenFoggiaandBenevento.[note 2]The design was carried out by the team ofGiuseppe Bianchi,the "founder" of modern Italian railways, at the FS Traction and Material Service inFlorence.The requirement specified the locomotive should have six traction axles, to improve adhesion on steep lines. The E.626 series totalled 448 units in three series, each with only slight electro-mechanical differences. It was old-fashioned, but reliable, and it became the mainstay of the new FS lines at 3,000 V DC, which gradually spread to the whole peninsula.

Trials

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The firsts tests occurred on the Foggia-Benevento line in the September 1927, using three prototypes built bySavigliano,with the electrical equipment provided byMetropolitan-VickersofManchester.The first 14 prototypes (eight E.625 with lower gear ratio, for freight services, and six E.626) proved powerful and reliable, and entered service the following year. The only teething problem encountered was with the six 32R motors mounted on the axles, hanging laterally over transverse beams, a system devised to avoid the complicated side rods of the contemporary steam and three-phase locomotives. After a series of breakdowns, it was decided to limit the speed to 95 km/h (59 mph). Traction control was provided by three different motor combinations (series, series-parallel, parallel) through banks of resistor-basedrheostats.The transmission was rather noisy, but at the time, the crew's comfort was not a high priority. The carbody was in a single steel piece, mounted on an articulated chassis. The large bonnets at the ends limited the visibility of the rails, and they were reduced in size from the third series.

Mass production

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JŽ series E361

In 1930 the mass production was started, with a first series of 85 units. In the meantime the E.625 were re-converted to E.626. In 1934-1938 a record number of 308 units was built, while in 1939 the last series, with low gear ratio, was shipped (they were later standardized). The newE636of the 1940s initially shared the motors and some of the electro-mechanical devices with the E.626.

After the destruction ofWorld War II,in 1946 an updating and repair programme was launched. Some other units remained in the countries previously occupied by Italy. Seventeen locomotives were ceded to theYugoslavian Railways(Class E626, from 1957 Class E61 and from 1962 finally classified as Class 361) and, in 1958, four were given to Czechoslovakia (Class E 666.0). Now inadequate for the passenger role, the E.626s were transferred to freight service, apart from working commuter trains in some areas of Italy.

In the 1970s, the E.626s fell out of favour, partly because of complaints from trade unions about poor working conditions for the crew. Fourteen units were sold to private railways and the remaining units were gradually replaced by more modern classes, and scrapped. The last unit to be decommissioned was E.626.194, which was used for rescue trains, in 1999.

Preservation

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Seven units survive today in museums, while 11 refurbished locomotives are used for historical trains.

Notes

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  1. ^Plus a prototype series
  2. ^The previous electrified lines of Italy used15 kV, 16.7 Hz AC.The 3,000 V is currently the standard system in service, apart someHigh Speedlines fed at 25 kV AC.

References

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Further reading

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  • Giuseppe Bianchi, Sebastiano Elena, I locomotori a corrente continua a 3000 volt gruppi E.625 ed E.626, in Rivista tecnica delle ferrovie italiane, (1930), n. 5, pp. 189–250, (1930), n. 5, pp. 13–55 e tavv.
  • Felice Corini, Trazione elettrica, Torino, UTET, 1931, v. 4, pp. 432–433
  • Giuseppe Bianchi, La unificazione delle locomotive a corrente continua a 3000 volt. Locomotive gruppo E.424 - E.326 - E.626 - E.428 e Automotrici gruppo E.24, in Rivista tecnica delle ferrovie italiane, a. 23, 45 (1934), n. 4, pp. 187–203 e tavv. IX-XII; n. 5, pp. 256–329 e tavv. XIII f. t.; n. 6, pp. 410–417.
  • Giuseppe Bianchi, Sebastiano Elena, Le locomotive elettriche a corrente continua a 3000 volt gruppo E.626, in Rivista tecnica delle ferrovie italiane, a., 48 (1935), n. 6, pp., a., 49 (1936), n. 1, pp. e tavv.
  • Felice Corini, Trazione elettrica, Torino, UTET, 1950, v. 2, pp. 193–260, 335-407, 532-533 e tavv.
  • Erminio Mascherpa, Le locomotive elettriche F.S. del gr. E.626. Primi passi delle continua a 3000 volt in Italia, in Italmodel ferrovie, (1969), n. 147, pp. 4778–4785, n. 148, pp. 4829–4837, (1970) n. 149, pp. 4883–4886
  • Claudio Pedrazzini, E.625-E.626, Parma, Ermanno Albertelli, 1981
  • Giovanni Cornolò, Locomotive elettriche FS, Parma, Ermanno Albertelli Editore, 1983, pp. 151–163.
  • Tiziano Croce, E 626, le locomotive "tuttofare", fascicolo fuori testo Locomotive elettriche in Tutto treno, 5 (1992), n. 40, pp. 1–8
  • Giovanni Cornolò, Dall'E.626 all'Eurostar. 1928-2008: ottant'anni di locomotive elettriche FS, Parma, Ermanno Albertelli, 2008,ISBN88-87372-63-2pp. 101–142