British Rail Class 313
The British Rail Class 313 is a class of dual-voltage electric multiple units suburban and regional passenger trains. Built by British Rail Engineering Limited at Holgate Road carriage works between February 1976 and April 1977, they were the first production units that were derived from British Rail's 1971 prototype suburban EMU design which, as the BREL 1972 family, eventually encompassed 755 vehicles over five production classes. They were the first second-generation EMUs to be constructed for British Rail and the first British Rail units with both a pantograph for overhead lines and contact shoe equipment for supply. They were, additionally, the first units in Britain to employ multi-function automatic Tightlock couplers, which include electrical and pneumatic connections allowing the coupling and uncoupling of units to be performed unassisted by the driver whilst in the cab.
The Class 313 units were the oldest EMUs operating on the National Rail network in Great Britain prior to their withdrawal in 2023, having entered service in 1976. However, the even older 1972 Stock and 1973 Stock are still in service on London Underground.
Background
Two new fleets were ordered as part of the electrification, authorised in 1971, of suburban services on British Rail's Great Northern route between and, via on the East Coast Main Line and via on the Hertford Loop Line. For outer-suburban servicesthose making limited stops over the length of the routea fleet of 49 units were procured as derivatives of the proven design. The Class 313 fleet was correspondingly ordered for the inner-suburban servicesthose making frequent stops between London and Welwyn or Hertford.An integral component of the electrification programme was BR's acquisition from London Underground of the Northern City Line, which had been built at a size sufficient for mainline trains and which provided the most direct route between, on the existing Great Northern route, and in the City of London. Following completion of the electrification to Welwyn and Hertford, the London terminal for all inner-suburban services would switch from King's Cross to Moorgate, reducing the number of train movements at the former station enough to permit the remodelling and subsequent electrification of the complicated approach tracks. The Northern City Line tunnels, however, were still not large enough to be fitted with the same overhead line electrification system used for the rest of programme, and were instead configured to use the system standard on BR's Southern Region. This in turn required that a new design of EMU be developed for the Class 313 order, as none capable of running on both systems existed at the time.
Given this requirement, the opportunity was taken to further develop the Class 445 and 446 prototypes that had been produced by British Rail Engineering Limited in 1971, and which were considered by BR to be "the basis of all future suburban stock". As these prototypes had been configured for use only on third-rail electrification, a new intermediate trailer carrying a pantograph and AC to DC transformer was built and inserted into the two-car Class 446 prototype, which was then tested on AC-electrified track for six months in 1975. This three-car arrangement, with driving-motor vehicles 'sandwiching' the trailer carrying the AC collection equipment, was subsequently adopted as the basic layout for the Class 313 design.
Description
Given the need to use the Northern City Line tunnels, Class 313 units were built to a slightly smaller loading gauge than conventional trains. They were of standard length and width, but the roof was lower, which was most noticeable due to the lack of a "well" for the Stone Faiveley AMBR pantograph on the centre coach. They had to comply with regulations for underground trains, such as having doors at each end of the train for evacuation onto the tracks, and when on 750 V DC supply the traction supply for each motor coach was separate, whereas on conventional 750 V DC trains each coach in a unit is linked by a 750 V bus line. Due to this, each motor coach had shoe gear on both bogies, whereas normally it would only be on the leading bogie. They were fitted with trip-cocks that are struck by a raised train-stop arm at red signals and will apply the brakes if the train passes one.The units were originally numbered 313001–313064. Each unit was formed of two outer driving motors and an intermediate trailer with a pantograph. This was a reversal of the practice started in the 1960s, where the motors and pantograph were on an intermediate vehicle, with the outer vehicles being driving trailers. Part of the reason was to simplify the equipment to allow dual-voltage operation, and to keep down weight by spreading the heavy transformer and motors between vehicles. The intermediate trailer carried the pantograph and a transformer and rectifier, which on 25 kV AC provides 750 V DC to the motor coaches, each of which had four GEC G310AZ direct current traction motors, two per bogie. On 750 V DC each motor coach drew its supply directly through its shoe gear. The traction motors were driven by a camshaft-controlled resistance system with series and parallel motor groupings and weak field steps. Originally the heating in the motor coaches was provided by passing air over the hot traction and braking resistors in addition to conventional heaters, but this feature was later taken out of use and the pneumatic dampers were disabled. Great Northern and Southern retrofitted their units with cab air conditioning.
313s had rheostatic braking in addition to conventional three-step air-operated disc braking. During braking if wheelslide was detected by the Wheel slide protection, rheostatic braking was disabled and disc-braking only was used. Great Northern units had sanding equipment. Unlike some other DMU/EMU classes, additional brake force was not available when the emergency brake application was initiated and was the equivalent force of a step 3/full service application. WSP was still active when making an emergency application.
In addition to the primary suspension of rubber chevron spring and oil dampers, secondary suspension was provided by two air bellows per bogie - flow into each bellows was controlled independently by a levelling valve and arm assembly that allowed the suspension to inflate/deflate when the weight of the coach was increased or decreased by passenger loading. The air suspension was linked to the braking system via a Variable Load Valve, which increased air brake pressure when the coach was more heavily loaded to compensate for the additional weight.
All units had standard class seating only.
As built, the sliding doors were opened by the passengers. Once the driver had stopped the train and the guard had activated the master door release, a passenger could move the door handle gently sideways which operated a switch controlling the individual door opening circuit. Many people did not wait for the guard's release and gave the handle a much harder tug, which could force the door open even if the train had not stopped. Concerns over passenger safety rapidly led to removal of the handles, after which the guard had sole control of the doors. Passenger-operated push-buttons were provided as replacements for the removed handles from March 1977 onwards.
Modifications led to renumbering and reclassification. All units originally had shoebeams on the inner bogie of each motor coach, which was sufficient for third-rail duties between Drayton Park and Moorgate. Some units became surplus, and in 1987 four were transferred to the Clacton/Walton route, which has no DC sections; they had the shoegear removed, and were renumbered from 313061–313064 to 313096–313099. Following an accident involving one unit at Walton-on-the-Naze in August 1987, they were replaced by units in 1988. Units 313001–313016 had shoegear fitted to the outer bogies in addition, and were transferred to the Watford DC route where there are long gaps in the third rail. They were renumbered into a new 313/1 subclass, leaving the unmodified units in subclass 313/0.
Following the privatisation of British Rail, ownership of the Class 313 fleet passed to leasing company Eversholt Rail Group. In June 2012 Eversholt sold twenty units to newly formed lessor Beacon Rail.
Operations
Network Rail
Network Rail leased Beacon Rail-owned unit 313121 as a test vehicle for the European Rail Traffic Management System installation on the Hertford Loop.The unit was repainted into Network Rail's yellow house colours and internally refurbished at Alstom's Wembley Intercity Depot, to
include a new driving desk, technician's workstation, kitchen and toilet facilities, and the necessary ERTMS equipment. The work was completed in June 2013 and the unit was tested for the first time on Friday 5 July 2013 between Wembley and. It commenced testing on the Hertford Loop later that month. Following conclusion of the Hertford Loop works, it was placed in store at Eastleigh Works in May 2018. It was expected to be used again when ERTMS was ready for testing on the Great Western Main Line, but Network Rail instead listed the unit for sale by tender in January 2023.
Silverlink/London Overground
inherited 23 units from British Rail. These were mainly operated under the Silverlink Metro brand on the North London, West London, and Watford DC lines, although they were also regularly used on the St Albans AbbeyWatford Junction branch line between 1988 and the end of the Silverlink franchise in 2007.In 2007 they were used on services transferred to London Overground, which replaced Silverlink Metro. London Overground branding was added, and some seats were removed to provide additional standing room. They were replaced by trains, with longitudinal seating to improve standing room.
The final day of scheduled 313 operation on the North and West London Lines was 19 February 2010, although units remained in use as ad-hoc substitutes for unavailable 378/0s. By August 2010 only 313121 and 313123 were still in service with London Overground, as the 378/2 Capitalstars were by then in use on the Watford DC Line. They last ran for London Overground on 13 September 2010.