Blue Pullmans

The Blue Pullmans were luxury trains used from 1960 to 1973 by British Rail. They were the first Pullman diesel-electric multiple units, incorporating several novel features.

Blue Pullman
Blue Pullman at Swansea station in 1967
Interior of Pullman Motor Parlour Second No.W60646
In service1960–1973
ManufacturerMetropolitan-Cammell
Family nameBlue Pullman
ReplacedSteam locomotives and carriages
Constructed1959–1960
Entered service12 September 1960
Refurbished1969
Scrapped1974–1975
Number built5 sets (2 × 6-car; 3 × 8-car)
Number scrappedAll
SuccessorSeparate locomotives and Mark 2 coaches
Formation6 or 8 cars per set
Fleet numbers
  • DMBFL: M60090–3
  • DMBS: W60094–9
  • MSL: W60644–9
  • MFLRK: M60730–3
  • TFLRK: W60734–9
  • TFL: 60740–9
Capacity6-car sets: 132
8-car sets: 218
Operator(s)British Rail
Depot(s)
Line(s) served6-car sets: London Midland Region (1960-1967) and Western Region (1967-1973)
8-car sets: Western Region
Specifications
Car body constructionSteel
Semi-integral
Train length395 ft (120.40 m) (MR)
545 ft 1 in (166.14 m) (WR)
Car length66 ft 5.5 in (20.26 m) (power cars)
65 ft 6 in (19.96 m) (intermediate vehicles)
Width9 ft 6 in (2.90 m)
Height12 ft 4.5 in (3.77 m)
DoorsHinged slam, centrally locked
Maximum speed90 mph (145 km/h)
Weight6-car sets: 299 long tons (335 short tons; 304 t)
8-car sets: 364 long tons (408 short tons; 370 t)
Prime mover(s)NBL/MAN V12 Supercharged 64L(×2)
Power output1,000 hp (750 kW) (×2)
Transmissiontraction motors: 199 hp (148 kW) (×8)
AuxiliariesRolls-Royce C8NFLH @ 190bhp, under floor for air conditioning[1]
UIC classification6-car sets: 2′Bo′+Bo′2′+2′2′+2′2′+2′Bo′+Bo′2′
8-car sets: 2′Bo′+Bo′2′+2′2′+2′2′+2′2′+2′2′+2′Bo′+Bo′2′
BogiesMetro-Schlieran frictionless
Braking system(s)Westinghouse Electro-pneumatic brake featuring a high speed control
Multiple working2 sets (6-car units (1967-1973)
Track gauge4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)

Named after their original Nanking blue livery, the trains were conceived under the 1955 Modernisation Plan to create luxury diesel express trains aimed at competing with the motor car and the emerging domestic air travel market. Although not entirely successful – they were seen as underpowered, and ultimately not economically viable – they demonstrated the possibility of fixed-formation multiple-unit inter-city train services, that a decade later was developed as the InterCity 125, which resembled them in having an integral power car at each end of the train.

There were two versions, built by Metro-Cammell in Birmingham: two first-class six-car sets for the London Midland Region (LMR), and three two-class eight-car sets for the Western Region (WR). They were initially operated by the luxury train operator the Pullman Car Company, which the British Transport Commission (BTC) had recently acquired. Shortly after their introduction, in 1962, Pullman was nationalised, and operation was incorporated into the British Railways network. Originally given the last Pullman vehicle numbers, towards the end of their operational life the trains gained the British Rail TOPS classification of Class 251 (motor cars) and Class 261 (kitchen and parlour cars), although they never carried these numbers.

The WR sets operated from London Paddington to Birmingham and Wolverhampton, and to Bristol, Cardiff and Swansea. The LMR sets operated the Midland Pullman between London St Pancras and Manchester Central via the Midland Main Line, a journey it accomplished in a record 3 hours 15 minutes with a maximum speed of 90 mph.[2] The Midland Pullman was withdrawn in 1966 following electrification of the Euston to Manchester line, which brought greatly reduced journey times with which the Midland route could not compete. The LMR sets were then transferred to the WR, where some of the first-class seating was downgraded to form two-class sets.

The sets were an advanced and luxurious design, befitting a Pullman train, although they did suffer some criticism particularly over a persistent ride quality problem. Over time it became costly to maintain such a small fleet of trains. By 1972, with the development of first-class accommodation in Mark 2 coaching stock, the surcharge for Blue Pullmans seemed uneconomical and unreliable to passengers and BR managers, and in 1973 the trains were withdrawn. None of them was preserved.

The sets featured in three films, one of the same name as a documentary of the design and development, and an observation of the first service. From 2006, the Blue Pullman name was revived as a charter railtour, operated by various companies.

History

The Midland Pullman at Cheadle Heath before its regular non-stop morning run to London St Pancras on 28 September 1960

Inception

In June 1954, the BTC, which operated the railways through its British Railways subsidiary, purchased the full equity of the Pullman Car Company, a private operator of luxury carriages on the otherwise nationalised passenger network.[3]

Under the 1955 Modernisation Plan there was a push toward diesel power to replace steam locomotives, and Pullman coaching stock was ageing. The BTC and PCC formed a committee to examine the possibility of running diesel express passenger trains using new trains. Initially proposed as the Midland Pullman, it was timed to compete on the London to Manchester route against car and air travel. After being initially rejected for operational reasons, the BTC decided to make use of the reputation of the recently acquired Pullman company to operate the new service. Two six-car units, all first class, were ordered for the LMR, and three 8-car units for the WR in 1957.[4][5]

Services

Blue Pullman at Old Oak Common TMD

The selection of Pullman caused some initial delays due to trade union staffing problems, variances in pay and conditions of the Pullman staff compared to BR train staff.[2][6] After some production delays, the first set appeared for trials in October 1959. These trials revealed that rough ride quality was a problem, and modifications were made. These mitigated the problem, but it was never entirely removed.[7]

After a demonstration run on 24 June 1960, Midland Pullman commenced on 4 July 1960, and the WR trains on 12 September.[8][9] They operated Monday to Friday only.[10] Weekends were reserved for maintenance, and also allowed their occasional use on special or charter services to events such as the Grand National.[11]

The Midland Pullman ran from 1960 to 1966 in the morning from Manchester Central to London St Pancras calling at Cheadle Heath, a fill-in journey from St Pancras to Leicester, Loughborough, Nottingham and return, and an evening return to Manchester.[2] With completion in 1966 of the electrification of the West Coast Main Line from London Euston to Manchester Piccadilly, there was the opportunity for a faster electric-locomotive-hauled Pullman service than the diesel sets, and the Midland Pullman sets were transferred to the WR in March 1967. The introduction of new non-air conditioned Mark 1 Pullman cars on the East Coast Main Line in 1961 had been questioned as it was believed the ER had not waited for the completion of evaluation of the Blue Pullmans. The later introduction of 2nd-class air-conditioned Mark 2 coaches on these services hastened the perception that the Pullman supplement was not value for money.

South Wales Pullman at Paddington in 1973

The WR Birmingham Pullman ran in the morning Wolverhampton Low Level to London Paddington, via Birmingham Snow Hill and through High Wycombe, with a fill-in journey from Paddington to Birmingham Snow Hill and back, before the evening return to Wolverhampton. The Bristol Pullman from Bristol Temple Meads to London Paddington and back, twice in a day. The two morning services were booked to arrive at the same time at Paddington, giving the possibility of a side-by-side arrival.

From 1961, an additional morning train, the South Wales Pullman, operated from Paddington to Cardiff and Swansea.

With the imminent withdrawal of the Midland Pullman, in 1965 one operated a trial from London King's Cross to Leeds via the East Coast Main Line.[12] However they were not introduced on this route and after the Midland Pullman ceased, the sets were transferred to the WR to be used on a new non-stop service for Oxford, and on additional out-and-back services on the Bristol and Swansea routes. The Birmingham services were eventually withdrawn, with the last services being to South Wales.

Withdrawal

Towards the end of their operational life, the sets operated as three makeshift sets formed from various original cars to maintain a working service. With declining reliability, the last sets were withdrawn en masse in May 1973.[13] A farewell commemorative special journey out and back from Paddington was run by the Western Region, travelling for 12 hours via High Wycombe, Banbury, Leamington Spa, Kenilworth, Coventry, Birmingham New Street, Cheltenham, Bristol Temple Meads, the Severn Tunnel, Swansea, Cardiff, Bristol Parkway, Didcot and Slough.

After service

Ten cars (6 Midland and 4 Western) had been reportedly saved from the scrapyard in July 1975 for preservation,[14] however, none have been preserved.

Some of the motor cars were retained at Bristol Temple Meads and Bristol Bath Road TMD until mid-1974 as standby electricity generators during industrial action in the electricity and coal-mining industries.

The Irish national rail and bus operator Córas Iompair Éireann gave "serious consideration" to acquiring (and by implication, re-gauging by exchanging the standard gauge bogies with broad-gauge ones) the Blue Pullman sets but ultimately decided against it.[15]

Design

8-car Bristol Pullman set arriving at Bristol Temple Meads on 5 May 1973 (the final day of operation).

The sets had a maximum speed of 90 mph (140 km/h). The fixed couplings reduced much of the jerky movement experienced by conventionally buffered carriages and allowed smooth acceleration and stable running. The bogies had hydraulically damped helical springs, and the axles were pneumatically braked in a two-stage system, allowing highly controlled stopping.

They were air-conditioned with automatic humidity control. Motor cars had a large primary diesel engine and generator for motive power, and a secondary Rolls-Royce C8NFLH diesel engine and auxiliary 150 kVA 3-phase 400 V generator beneath the floor provided power for the air-conditioning, fridges and ancillary equipment.[16] A single auxiliary per set was normally sufficient. An onboard Travelling Maintenance Attendant monitored the supply of services.[17]

Seating was 2+1 armchair-type round tables with a table lamp and with steward call button. The saloons were protected from track noise by extra insulation in the bodywork and double-glazed windows with Venetian blinds between the panes.

Livery

To emphasise the new type of service, a Nanking blue livery and associated brand image replaced the traditional Pullman livery of brown and cream, and cars bore the word "PULLMAN" rather than individual names. Seating was also different from traditional first-class Pullman cars, increasing from 1+1 to 1+2.

The original livery was Nanking blue with white window surrounds and the Pullman crest on the front and sides. From mid-1966 full wrap-around yellow ends were applied to the driving cars. From October 1967 the sets were repainted in a reverse corporate blue and grey livery, similar to other Pullman coaches and the prototype Class 252, though some retained the Nanking blue livery into 1969.

Technical details

Power car (one at each end of set):

  • Introduced: 1960
  • Weight: 67 tons 10 cwt
  • Engine: NBL/MAN 1,000 bhp (750 kW)
  • Motors: two 199 hp (148 kW) GEC traction motors (plus two on the adjoining car)
  • Maximum tractive effort: Not known
  • First, second and third bogies from each end were of 9'6" wheel centres, all other inboard bogies had 8'6" centres. The four traction motors at each end were mounted on the second and third bogies.
  • Driving wheel diameter: 3 feet 6 inches.
  • Coupling code: Not known
  • Train heating: Electric, powered by 190 bhp (140 kW) Rolls-Royce underfloor engine on adjoining vehicle

Formation

The sets were formed from three basic types of car: motor car, kitchen car and parlour car. The cars were permanently coupled and hermetically sealed for maintenance of the air-conditioning settings. The sets were symmetrical with a motor car at each end, and two kitchen cars serving their respective halves of the train. In an emergency, the buffers on the front of the sets were used in conjunction with a normally concealed coupling hook.

The LMR operated two sets of six first-class cars, the WR three sets of eight cars with first- and second-class seating. Withdrawal of the Midland Pullman allowed operation of 12-car formations. The seating in the full length of the parlour cars was augmented by seated sections in the kitchen cars, and motor cars also had a passenger compartment. Kitchen cars and Midland Pullman power cars had one toilet, parlour cars two.

Formations were made up as follows:

London Midland Region
DMBFMFKTFTFMFKDMBF
600906073060740607416073160091
600926073260742607436073360093
London Midland Region Class 251 and Class 261
Western Region
DMBSMSTFKTFTFTFKMSDMBS
6009460644607346074460745607356064560095
6009660646607366074660747607376064760097
6009860648607386074860749607396064960099
Western Region Class 251 and Class 261

Recreations

FM Rail Mark 2 in Blue Pullman livery

In January 2006 charter operator FM Rail revived the Blue Pullman brand, repainting two Class 47s and a set of Mark 2 carriages into the original nanking blue livery.[18][19][20] After FM Rail ceased trading, they were operated by Cotswold Rail from February 2007.[21][22]

In 2020 an HST set operated by Locomotive Services Ltd was repainted in replica Blue Pullman livery. The train made it's inaugural run on December 12th of that year, from London St Pancras to Crewe and back.[23][24]

In film

The units starred in the 1960 British Transport Films Blue Pullman directed by James Ritchie, which followed their development, preparation and a journey on the train. As with earlier British Transport films, many of the personnel, scientists, engineers, crew and passengers were featured. It won several awards, including the Technical & Industrial Information section of the Festival for Films for Television in 1961. It is particularly notable for its score, by Clifton Parker.[25]

The units were the subject of the British Transport Film Let's Go To Birmingham in 1962. This was of a run from London Paddington to Birmingham Snow Hill via Leamington Spa and was largely a sped-up "cab view" film in the style of London to Brighton in Four Minutes.[26] Sadly, the driver in the film, Ernest Morris, was killed on 15 August 1963 in the Knowle and Dorridge rail crash when his express train collided with a freight train at 20 mph (32 km/h). His train was a Birmingham Pullman hauled by a Class 52 Western diesel-hydraulic locomotive, a stand-in for the regular Blue Pullman set.

In the 1963 British Transport Film Snow there are very short passing shots of a set (5m09s and 6m23s), and two views of a LMR set with 6 intermediate cars, in panorama (5m10s to 5m26s) and from the cab of an approaching train (5m28s to 5m38s).[27]

A Blue Pullman made brief appearances in the 1965 Norman Wisdom film The Early Bird, destroying Pitkin's milk cart at a level crossing.

Models

Bachmann Branchline OO scale blue Pullman power car. Note lighting in cab and passenger compartments.

There have been several commercial models, of varying dimensional accuracy.

Kitmaster produced an unpowered polystyrene injection-moulded model kit at 00 scale. In late 1962, the Kitmaster brand was sold by Rosebud Dolls to Airfix and it is thought the tools were destroyed in a fire, so no further kits were produced.[28]

From 1964 to 1967 Tri-ang (later Tri-ang Hornby) produced ready-to-run models of the power cars and one type of parlour car.[29][30]

In May 2010, Olivia's trains of Sheffield announced its intention to produce a ready-to-run model in association with Heljan models of Denmark. On Bachmann's announcement that it would be producing a model, the project was cancelled.

In July 2010 Bachmann announced two Nanking blue versions of the Midland Pullman, with and without full yellow wrap-around ends. The models were released in late 2012.[31] In June 2016, Bachmann released a collectors' edition of the Midland Pullman, which included a book about the Midland Pullman, written especially for the product by Kevin Robertson, a reproduction menu card, a print of the artwork featured on the box, as well as a set of stewards and train crew figures.[32]

Graham Farish made an N gauge model in Nanking blue, and in January 2018 announced planned production of versions of the Western Pullman in grey and blue livery.[33][34]

See also

References

  1. BR 33003/81 (1960), p. 2.
  2. Allen, G. Freeman (December 1959). "Talking of trains: The 'Midland Pullman'". Trains Illustrated. Hampton Court: Ian Allan Publishing. p. 574 ff.
  3. BTC Offer for Pullman Shares The Railway Magazine issue 638 June 1954 page 432
  4. High-Speed Diesel-Electric Pullman Expresses for British Railways Railway Gazette 29 March 1957 page 376
  5. Tufnell 1984, p. 58.
  6. Tufnell 1984, p. 61.
  7. Tufnell 1984, p. 64.
  8. The Midland Pullman Railway Gazette 8 July 1960 pages 35
  9. New Western Region Pullman Trains The Railway Magazine issue 714 October 1960 page 675
  10. Heaps 1988, pp. 66–67.
  11. Western Pullman at Lime Street The Railway Magazine issue 781 May 1966 page 270
  12. Midland Pullman on Great Northern The Railway Magazine issue 777 January 1966 page 49
  13. In Brief Railway Gazette International December 1972 page 338
  14. Fox, Peter (1980). Multiple Unit Pocket Book: 1980 Edition. Sheffield: Platform 5 Publication. ISBN 0-906579-02-3. p. 65.
  15. "Córas Iompair Éireann: Not On" (PDF). Irish Railfans' News. 19 (4). November 1973. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 April 2014. Retrieved 4 September 2013.
  16. BR 33003/81 (1960), pp. 2,20.
  17. BR 33003/81 (1960), p. 20.
  18. Blue Pullman makes a comeback Rail Express issue 113 October 2005 page 5
  19. FM turns VT Mk2s into Blue Pullmans - Class 47s next The Railway Magazine issue 1257 January 2006 page 78
  20. Return of the Blue Pullman Today's Railways UK issue 51 March 2006 page 10
  21. The Blue Pullman Train Cotswold Rail
  22. Blue Pullman battle lines drawn The Railway Magazine issue 1272 April 2007 page 91
  23. "LSL HST set for Pullman Blue Livery as new railtour announced". RailAdvent. 1 August 2020. Retrieved 2 November 2020.
  24. "BR Blue Midland Pullman HST set through Coventry tonight 30/10/20 - YouTube". YouTube. Retrieved 2 November 2020.
  25. "Blue Pullman (1960) - BTF". www.britishtransportfilms.co.uk. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  26. "Let's Go To Birmingham (1962) - British Transport Films". www.britishtransportfilms.co.uk. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  27. BFI (13 January 2009), Snow (1963) - Geoffrey Jones | BFI National Archive, retrieved 5 May 2019
  28. Knight, Stephen (1999). Let's Stick Together: An Appreciation of Kitmaster and Airfix Railway Kits. Clopthill: Irwell Press. ISBN 1-871608-90-2.
  29. Tri-ang Railways - Minic Motorways Catalogue 10th Edition. Tri-ang Railways. 1964.
  30. Tri-ang Hornby - Model Railways Catalogue 13th Edition. Tri-ang Hornby. 1967.
  31. "Bachmann announce Blue Pullman". RMweb.
  32. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 16 August 2016. Retrieved 19 July 2016.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  33. "Graham Farish 2018 New Releases". Bachmann Europe Latest News. 7 January 2018. Retrieved 17 May 2019.
  34. "NEWS: Graham Farish 6-car DMU Western Pullman". www.world-of-railways.co.uk. 21 February 2019. Retrieved 17 May 2019.

Bibliography

  • Heaps, Chris (1988). "End of the Blue Pullmans". BR Diary: 1968–1977. Ian Allan Publishing. pp. 66–67. ISBN 0-7110-1611-9.
  • Tufnell, R.M. (1984). The British Railcar: AEC to HST. David and Charles. ISBN 0-7153-8529-1.
  • 2,000HP Diesel Pullman Trains. British Railways. May 1960. 33003/81.

Further reading

  • Kevin Robertson (2005). Blue Pullman. Kestrel Railway Books.
  • Ian Allan ABC of British Railways Locomotives. Summer 1966.
  • Allen, Geoffrey Freeman (June 1982). "Blue Pullman". Rail Enthusiast. EMAP National Publications. pp. 6–11. ISSN 0262-561X. OCLC 49957965.
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