The 4D was a prototype double deck electric multiple unit built for the Public Transport Corporation in Victoria, Australia, for operation on the Melbourne railway system. It remains the only double deck train to have ever operated in Melbourne. The train's name stood for "Double Deck Development and Demonstration."[3]

4D
4D train at Spencer Street, 2000
Lower deck Interior showing passenger seats and stairs
In service1992-2002
ManufacturerA Goninan & Co
Built atBroadmeadow
Family nameTangara
Entered service10 March 1992
Retired25 February 2002
Scrapped30 March 2006
Number built1
Number scrapped1
Formation4 carriages
Fleet numbers6000T-5000M-5002M-6002T
Capacity346 seated, 628 standing
OperatorsPublic Transport Corporation
DepotsBayswater
Lines servedLilydale Belgrave
Specifications
Car body constructionStainless steel
Car length20.32 m (66 ft 8 in)
Width2.89 m (9 ft 6 in)
Height4.27 m (14 ft 0 in)
Doors4 twin-leaf plug doors per carriage
Wheel diameter940 mm (37 in)
Maximum speed130 km/h (81 mph)
Weight186 tonnes (183 long tons; 205 short tons)
Traction systemMitsubishi GTO–4-quadrant chopper control
Traction motors8 × Mitsubishi MB-3303-B 170 kW (228 hp) 2-phase DC shunt-wound motor
Power output1,360 kW (1,824 hp)
Transmission4.94:1 (84:17) gear ratio[1]
Acceleration0.75 m/s2 (2.5 ft/s2)
AuxiliariesToshiba
Electric system(s)1,500 V DC (nominal) from overhead catenary
Current collector(s)Pantograph
UIC classification2′2′+Bo′Bo′+Bo′Bo′+2′2′
BogiesNippon Sharyo bolsterless[2]
Coupling systemScharfenberg coupler
Track gauge1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in)

Depending on sources, the intention was for this train to be the demonstration unit for a future order of either 20 or 50 extra sets, had the tests been successful.[citation needed]

Design

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Vestibule, 6000T Interior looking at stairs, seats and door entrance, 2000

A tender for the design and construction of 19 double-deck trains was opened on 24 November 1989.[4] The number of carriages to be built was at the discretion of the builder, however it had to comply with capacity and length requirements.[4] By 11 April 1990, when the tender was closed, a number of tenders were received, including from Comeng and A Goninan & Co.[4] However, the project was stopped by the State Government, due to financial constraints.[4] Instead, The Met was granted approval to acquire a single double-deck train for evaluation purposes.[4] A contract was signed with Goninan in late 1990, for the delivery of a four carriage set.[4]

Built in Broadmeadow, New South Wales, it was delivered by rail into Melbourne on 10 December 1991.[5][6] After being bogie exchanged, it was transferred to Jolimont Workshops on 18 December of the same year, for an inspection and final fit out.[4] Funding for the train was supplied from both the Victorian and Commonwealth governments.[7]

The train's design was based on the Tangara train being built by A Goninan & Co for CityRail in Sydney, however it was similar only in terms of interior and exterior bodywork; the train's electrical system was much closer to that of the Comeng sets. The design was further modified for use on Melbourne's broad gauge track, and its control system was designed specifically to allow in-service coupling and operation with Comeng sets.[8] In addition, the individual carriages were narrower and shorter in both length and width against their predecessors, to fit the Melbourne loading gauge. Altogether, it was 78 metres long; same length as a four-car Harris set, but seven metres shorter that a three-car Hitachi set.[4]

It was manufactured from stainless steel and was fitted with air-conditioning, tinted windows, and inter-car doors, allowing passengers to access all carriages of the train. Much of the equipment matched Sydney's Tangara fleet, from the traction motors (8x MB 3303B) down to small fittings like console buttons.

The four-car set had a total passenger capacity of 974 passengers (346 seated and 628 standing); considerably more than a three-car Comeng train of similar length, which would only hold 763 passengers in crush load conditions, including 263 seated. However, the set had about the same seating capacity as a Tait train - 10 seats per compartment, 34 compartments per four-carriage set, with no data available on crush loads.[7]

As part of the trial, the Belgrave and Lilydale lines were selected as main testing grounds for the unit and necessary works were performed to accommodate the train's somewhat unconventional dimensions. Preparations for the train occurred at Flinders Street and near the Princes Bridge in May 1991, when the tracks were lowered.[4] The overhead wire to Belgrave and Lilydale was also altered, including the power feeds, and platforms were cut back where required.[4] It was known that the train was physically too large for the Jolimont tunnel between Jolimont and West Richmond stations, on the Hurstbridge and Epping lines. Given that the train was a demonstrator, it was likely that production designs or future infrastructure plans would have dealt with this.

By early 1993, the Victorian Government had decided not to proceed with the acquisition of any further double deck trains, deciding infrastructure changes required to accommodate the larger trains were too expensive.[9]

Service

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Power car, 2000
 
4D carriages being scrapped at Brooklyn Tip, March 2006

The unit broke from Melbourne tradition by being configured as Driving Trailer-Motor-Motor-Driving Trailer (D-TM-TM-D); all other sets in service at the time were configured as Driving Motor-Trailer-Driving Motor (M-T-M). In a further break from tradition, the 4D did not use the 'D' code for a driving trailer, instead it was coded simply as T-M-M-T. The car numbers were also placed far outside the usual range; the 4D was numbered as 6000T-5000M-5002M-6002T.

Most of the time the 4D was on the rails, it was parked in the stabling facilities at Bayswater, on the Belgrave line.

It first ran under its own power on 27 December 1991, when it conducted a test run to Lilydale and back. By January 1992, it was running tests coupled with a Comeng set, testing for performance, clearances and its effect on signalling. By 28 January of the same year, it was conducting tests between Bunyip and Longwarry, on the Gippsland line. Testing continued through February 1992.[4]

On 5 March 1992, it was officially launched. It departed Flinders Street in the morning, running to Parliament station to collect the Minister for Transport and the awaiting media, before proceeding to Ringwood. On the return journey, it stopped at Box Hill and Camberwell. Throughout the remainder of the day, it conducted tours around the City Loop for Public Transport Corporation staff and their family members. Over the Labour Day weekend, this was repeated for the public.[4]

It entered revenue service on 10 March 1992, after testing and a subsequent media launch.[8] Eight trips were scheduled for its first day in service, the first being the 08:36 service from Flinders Street to Box Hill, followed by the 09:08 return, on which the train suffered door problems, the first of its many failures. This required the train to be removed from service at Camberwell, and the cancellation of the remaining trips.[4]

Initially, the 4D was run coupled to a three-car Comeng set until 1996, when, after a troubled conversion to driver-only operation, it was permitted to operate on its own. Often as not, though, it was towed or pushed by a three or six-car Comeng set following a failure.

When the suburban system was split into two in 1998, in preparation for privatisation, it was allocated to Hillside Trains, which became Connex.

Throughout its 10 years in Melbourne, the 4D continued to be plagued by reliability issues that saw it constantly in and out of service. After its disappointing entry to service, the train saw little use and was in storage by 1999. It was revived in June 2000, but lasted only a year.[4]

A final attempt was made on 22 February 2002 to return the set to service, but after three days, it again failed, and was placed back in storage, never to operate in revenue service again.[10][11][4]

Disposal

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Ownership of the 4D was transferred back to the Victorian Government's Department of Infrastructure, and the set was moved under its own power to Newport Workshops in December 2002, for long-term storage.[12]

By 2004, the set, which was once stored near the Australian Railway Historical Society's railway museum, was transferred to the western side of the workshops, for a potential return to revenue service. However, this did not eventuate, and the 4D remained in storage.[4]

In 2006, the 4D was purchased by RailCorp and stripped of parts compatible with the Tangaras. It was transferred by El Zorro to metal recyclers Sims Metal, Brooklyn for scrapping.[13]

References

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  1. ^ "Technical Report Vol.62 No.6" (PDF). Mitsubishi Electric (in Japanese). June 1988. pp. 53–58. Retrieved 3 July 2024.
  2. ^ Allen, Geoffrey Freeman (1 November 1991). Jane's World Railways 1991-92. Jane's Information Group. p. 75. ISBN 9780710609557.
  3. ^ "VICSIG".
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p John Scott (March 2011). "4D Double-Deck Development and Demonstration Train". Newsrail. Vol. 39, no. 3. Vic: ARHS Victoria Division. pp. 78–79. ISSN 0310-7477. OCLC 19676396.
  5. ^ "Introduction of Four D Train to Melbourne". Newsrail. Vol. 19, no. 11. Vic: ARHS Victoria Division. November 1991. pp. 348–349. ISSN 0310-7477. OCLC 19676396.
  6. ^ Interstate Rolling Stock Railway Digest February 1992 page 73
  7. ^ a b Melbourne's double-deck experiment and Sydney's Millenium trains Railway Digest March 2003 pages 15-17
  8. ^ a b 4D train Vicsig
  9. ^ "Melbourne abandons double deck plans" Railway Digest March 1993 page 84
  10. ^ Vicsig photo: "The 4D lasted 3 days in service during 2002. It is shown here on a Blackburn to Flinders St service at Laburnum" - Friday, 22 February 2002
  11. ^ Vicsig photo: "The 4D withdrawn and stored at Ringwood" 24 March 2002
  12. ^ Vicsig photo: "The 4D in storage at Newport Workshops" - 14 December 2002
  13. ^ Melbourne 4DD train scrapped Railway Digest May 2006 page 17
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