CIE 121 Class

The Córas Iompair Éireann 121 Class was a railway locomotive which was manufactured by General Motors Electro-Motive Division. These locomotives were in regular service on the Irish railway network until 2002, with the last two remaining in service until 2008.

Córas Iompair Éireann 121 Class
Preserved 121 Class locomotive (134)
Type and origin
Power typeDiesel-electric
BuilderGeneral Motors Electro-Motive Division, La Grange, Illinois, USA
Order number702667–702681
Serial number26271–26285
ModelEMD GL8
Build dateDecember 1960 – January 1961
Total produced15 (for CIÉ — 149 worldwide)
Specifications
Configuration:
  AARB-B
  UICBo′Bo′
Gauge1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in)
Wheel diameter40 in (1,016 mm)
Length39 ft 10 in (12.14 m)
Loco weight64 tonnes (63.0 long tons; 70.5 short tons)
Prime moverEMD 8-567CR
126-129 Re-engined with EMD 8-645E
Engine typeTwo-stroke diesel
AspirationRoots-type supercharger
Traction motorsEMD D47, axle-hung, nose-suspended, 4 off
Cylinders8
TransmissionD25 DC generator
DC traction motors
Train brakesAir and Vacuum
Performance figures
Maximum speed77 mph (124 km/h)
Power outputEMD 8-567CR: 960 hp (720 kW)
EMD 8-645E: 1,100 hp (820 kW)
Tractive effort197 kN (44,000 lbf) starting
Career
OperatorsCóras Iompair Éireann
Iarnród Éireann
Number in class15
NumbersB121–B135 (later 121–135)
Withdrawn1986–2008
Disposition2 preserved, remainder scrapped

History

The 121 Class locomotives were manufactured from December 1960 to January 1961 and numbered B121 to B135 inclusive. From the early 1970s onwards several locomotives of this class dropped the "B" prefix from their fleet number when re-liveried. The last two locomotives that survived in traffic (124 and B134) were both withdrawn from service on 3 May 2008. Prior to 1961, almost all Irish diesel locomotives were built in Great Britain, but from the 1960s onwards, GM became the sole supplier of locomotives to CIÉ, which eventually also extended to Northern Ireland Railways locomotives at a later stage. These were EMD's first ever fully American-built locomotives delivered to Europe. The Class 121 locomotives were a typical American-style single cab ‘road switcher'. The layout of the cab was quite different from the other conventional CIÉ diesel models of the time, with the controls to the side of the driver, rather than the front. Due to apparent driver complaints of reduced visibility when operating with cab trailing, it was ultimately decided that these locomotives should only operate in a cab-leading formation. Later conversion for multiple-unit working allowed two 121 class locomotives to be coupled hood-end to hood-end, removing the need to turn them around for their return journey.

Although originally fitted with an EMD 8-567CR engine of 960 horsepower (720 kW), all were later fitted with 645 type "power packs" (piston & liner assemblies) for parts standardisation, while at the same time keeping their original power output for reliability reasons. They weighed 64 tonnes (63.0 long tons; 70.5 short tons) and had a maximum speed of 123 km/h (76 mph). Numbers B126-B129 were later rebuilt with an EMD 8-645E engine of 1,100 horsepower (820 kW); as used in the 181 Class locomotives. The engine blocks were originally recycled from withdrawn rebuilt class B201s, but in their later years much swapping of engines occurred between classes 121, 141 and 181.

All but three (B121, B125, and B135) were fitted with Train Door Control equipment for operation with the Inchicore-built, BR Mark 3 based, Push-Pull train units. The push-pull equipment of locomotive B132 was subsequently decommissioned. Entering service in 1989, these trains, consisting of a single 121 Class and up to six carriages, were mainly used on the Dublin northern suburban passenger railway service. These were to be the last regular passenger duties for the 121s within Greater Dublin. The Limerick shuttle continued to be worked by 121s for several years after this date. In 1994, a railcar "revolution" had begun, and the push pull carriages were later re-deployed to inter-city duties with the 201 Class locomotives.

Withdrawal

B126 on trial at Nesbitt Junction, near Enfield, County Meath on 24 February 1961

The first member of the class to be withdrawn was 125 in 1986 following an electrical fire, though it had been extensively damaged in an accident twelve years previously. However it was not scrapped until 2002.

By 1995, the class 201 had replaced the class 121 on most passenger routes. Throughout the late 1990s the fleet dwindled, and by 2005 only numbers 124 and B134 remained in service, with number 123 in storage for five years until eventually being scrapped in 2008.[1] The rest of the fleet was also scrapped, due to the decline in freight traffic that they were also used for.

Their last official scheduled mainline passenger working was on 9 July 2005 on the Sligo line. The last known passenger working of this class was the 13:15 Waterford-Heuston service on 18 January 2007. Previously, these locomotives had filled in on the Manulla-Ballina service or the occasional service from Limerick.

The very last use of them in public service was in the early months of 2008 on maintenance trains - by this stage 124 and B134 were the only survivors. Both were retired by degrees and officially withdrawn in July 2008, though at this stage neither had done much for many weeks.

Preservation

No. 134, preserved by the RPSI, At Dublin Connolly

The Irish Traction Group has preserved locomotive 124. It is located at Moyasta Junction on the preserved West Clare Railway.

The other surviving member of the class, locomotive B134, is owned by the Railway Preservation Society of Ireland (RPSI), and is undergoing restoration.[2] On 19 July 2016 it was hauled by 071 Class locomotive 071 from Inchicore to the RPSI's locomotive shed at Dublin Connolly. Later that year it was returned to Inchicore, and work is continuing to restore it for mainline railtour use.

The cab of locomotive 133 is preserved at the Cavan & Leitrim Railway in Dromod, County Leitrim.

Livery

On delivery, the locomotives were painted in a Yellow and Grey livery. This was replaced within a year by a black / tan (“golden brown”) colour scheme with a thick white band similar to the Cravens coaching stock, delivered in 1963. With time, the colour scheme changed to tan with a black band. Soon after CIÉ Rail services became known as Irish Rail, the colour scheme was enhanced when two white bands (approx. 25 mm / 1") separating the colours were added. At the same time, as a safety aspect, self-adhesive high-visibility panels were added to the front of the Locomotives.

Special passenger train at Gort station on the Western Railway Corridor in 1986.

Model

The 121 Class has been made as a 00 gauge Whitemetal kit by Model Irish Railways.

3D printed bodyshells are available through Shapeways. The 2mm and 3mm versions are by Valve Design, the 4mm one by Rail 3D Prints.

Murphy Models have announced plans to release an '00' gauge ready to run model of the 121 class.[3]

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gollark: I am deploying an additional testbot.
gollark: It has something like four "respond with a fixed string" commands.
gollark: Testbot, cat /etc/passwd.
gollark: It actually had this forever but nobody noticed it (I am checking the code while fixing it).

References

  1. "Irish Railway News - Locomotives". Journal of the Irish Railway Record Society (166). Retrieved 2009-01-15.
  2. The Irish Mail, Journal of The Irish Traction Group, May 2010.
  3. http://www.murphymodels.com/wishlist.html
  • Strickland, David C. (September 1983). Locomotive Directory: Every Single One There Has Ever Been. Camberley, Surrey: Diesel and Electric Group. p. 166. ISBN 978-0-9063-7510-5. OCLC 16601890.

See also

Diesel locomotives of Ireland

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