RABDe 500

The RABDe 500 (often nicknamed ICN for Intercity-Neigezug, German for Intercity Tilting Train), is a Swiss high speed passenger train which was introduced in 2000, in time for Expo.02 held in western Switzerland in 2002. Its maximum speed is 200 km/h (120 mph), which can be reached on the Mattstetten–Rothrist new line; as of 2018 the RABDe 500 uses the branch to Solothurn only; the ICNs reach 200 km/h in the new Gotthard Base Tunnel. The train sets were a joint development by Bombardier, Swiss Federal Railways and Alstom, with an aerodynamic body designed by Pininfarina, bogies and tilting mechanism designed by the then SIG, Schweizerische Industrie Gesellschaft.

RABDe 500 041 William Barbey at Lugano.
An RABDe 500 at speed.
Two coupled RABDe 500

Forty-four RABDe 500 trains with a total of 308 coaches were delivered to SBB-CFF-FFS between 1999 and 2005. The RABDe 500 often run with two complete compositions, each with seven carriages, both including a dining car. The outer four of the seven carriages are second class. All compartments have electric power supply sockets and mobile phone reception enhancers.

Delivery of class RABDe 500 was delayed by a lack of supplies from ADtranz. Nevertheless, all trainsets were operational for the national exposition Expo.02. The RABDe 500 trains are operated by Swiss Federal Railways.

Services

RABDe 500 started commercial operation on 28 May 2000, with services from St. Gallen via Winterthur, Zürich and Biel/Bienne to Lausanne.

As of 2018 the RABDe 500 provide service on the following lines [1]

The trainsets are used on other lines as well, as IC (Intercity) or IR (Interregio) trains.

Technical Information

The RABDe 500 is an electrical multiple unit. The (body hung) motors as well as the transformers are located under the second class cars, which are the first two and the last two cars in each trainset. The first class cars and the restaurant car are non-motored, they carry pantograph and transformer. The centre car of each trainset has no traction equipment. Design of the driver's cab as well as the electrical equipment is based on the design of the SBB Re 460 locomotives, using more modern GTO circuits for the traction inverters. The design of the inverters was used for the large class of Italian locomotive FS Class E.464.

The RABDe 500 can operate at up to 200 km/h (120 mph) when under ETCS level 2 supervision, and 160 km/h (99 mph) if the line is equipped with conventional signalling, negotiating curves about 10% faster than non tilting trains. The train was not primarily designed for speed, but to reduce journey time on curvaceous lines such as Olten via Biel/Bienne to Lausanne/Geneva.

The 18 trainsets 500 000 – 500 017 were adapted for operation in the new Gotthard Base Tunnel in 2015/2016. Amongst other measures fire detection equipment was fitted. [2] New non tilting trains RABDe 501 will be used on the Gotthard line in the future, [3] the RABDe 500 are to be used on lines with more curves.

All 44 trainsets are being refurbished between 2012 and 2019, an overhaul taking 25 days per train.[4]

Table of similar trainsets worldwide

Mark Operator Seats Length [mm] Tare Weight [t] No of units Max conti power [MW] Tilting Body width [cm] Body material Max speed [km/h] Launched
RABDe 500 SBB 431 188,800 355 7 6.2 [5] electromechanical 283 cm light alloy 200 km/h 2001
Virgin Pendolino Avanti West Coast, UK 589 266,000 567 9 5.95 electromechanical 273 cm light alloy 225 2002
AVE S-102 Renfe 318 200,000 322 12(excl loco) 8.8 yes 294.2 cm light alloy (coach) 330 2002
ICE 1 DB 645 357,920 779.8 12 (excl loco) 9.6 no 302 cm light alloy (coach) 280 1991
ICE 3 DB 415 200,320 409 8 8.0 no 295 cm light alloy 300 2000
Thalys SNCF 377 200,000 385 10 (excl loco) 8.8 no --- --- 300 1997
500 Series JR 1,324 404,000 632 16 18.24 no 338 light alloy 300 1997

Expo.02

Train sets used for the Expo.02 national exposition in Switzerland carried a typewriter-font "permettre le futur" text on the outside of the train along with literary quotes from various prominent Swiss writers.

Naming

All forty-four RABDe 500 trains are named after famous Swiss scholars, artists, writers, politicians, engineers, and architects.[6] Each RABDe 500 bears the portrait of its namesake, painted by Bernese painter Martin Fivian, in the first class coach No 3; in addition, plaques with short biographical information can be found at every entrance.

List of names:

gollark: No, that's not necessarily helpful.
gollark: At most we might want to generalise R4 a bit. But the rest are fine.
gollark: Thusly, we do not need ridiculously strict rules extending this.
gollark: We have not had advertising issues not covered under existing rules.
gollark: Adding stricter rules of any kind won't magically fix things.

See also

Notes

  1. "SBB webpages about train use". SBB. SBB. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  2. Ertüchtigung nationale Bestandsflotte SBB
  3. "SBB page on Giruno EMU". SBB page on train use. SBB. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  4. "Complete overhaul of the Intercity tilting trains". Stories SBB. SBB. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  5. http://documents.epfl.ch/users/a/al/allenbac/www/documents/Fich0319.pdf
  6. "ICN portraits (in German, French and Italian)" (PDF). SBB. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
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