British Rail Class 222 Explained

British Rail Class 222
Meridian
Interiorimage:222008 Standard Class Interior.jpg
Interiorcaption:Refurbished East Midlands Trains Standard Class interior
Manufacturer:Bombardier Transportation
Factory:Bruges
Family:Voyager
Successor:Class 810
Formation:4 & 9 car sets (as built)
5 & 7 car sets (present)
Fleetnumbers:222001–222023
222101–222104
Numberbuilt:27 sets
Lines:Midland Main Line
Oakham to Kettering Line
Service:31 May 2004 – present
Yearconstruction:2003–2005
Maxspeed:125mph
Traction:One per car, Alstom alternator, 750v asynchronous ONIX IGBT drive with AGATE traction control, asynchronous traction motors (2 per car)
Brakes:Rheostatic and electro-pneumatic
Engine:Cummins QSK19-R
Enginetype:Inline-6 turbo-diesel[1]
Displacement: per engine
Poweroutput:559kW per engine
Acceleration:0.8m/s2[2]
Owner:Eversholt Rail Group[3]
Operator:East Midlands Railway
Safety:AWS, TPWS
Width:2.730NaN0
Carlength:23.850NaN0 end cars
22.820NaN0 other
Carbody:Steel
Coupling:Dellner 12[4]
Multipleworking:Within Class
Uicclass:1A′A1′+1A′A1′+...+1A′A1′
Wheelbase:Bogies: [5]
Bogies:Bombardier B5005[6]

The British Rail Class 222 Meridian is a group of 5- or 7- car diesel-electric multiple-unit high-speed passenger train capable of 125mph.[2] Twenty-seven sets were built by Bombardier Transportation in Bruges, Belgium.

The Class 222 is part of the Bombardier Voyager family, so it is very similar to the Class 220 Voyager and Class 221 Super Voyager trains used by CrossCountry and Avanti West Coast. In comparison, the Class 222s have a different interior and also have more components fitted under the floors to free up space within the body. Built for Midland Mainline and Hull Trains, today all are operated by East Midlands Railway and are branded as the Meridians.[7]

All 5- and 7-car sets were converted to their present state from cars from the past 4- and 9-car sets.

Details

All are equipped with a Cummins QSK19 diesel engine of 559lk=inNaNlk=in at 1,800rpm.[8] This powers a generator, which supplies current to motors driving two axles per coach. Approximately can be travelled between each refuelling.

Class 222 have rheostatic braking using the motors in reverse to generate electricity which is dissipated as heat through resistors situated on the roof of each coach; this saves on brake pad wear.

In common with the Class 220s, B5000 lightweight bogies are used - these are easily recognisable since the entire outer surface of the wheel is visible, with inboard axle bearings.

The Class 222 are fitted with Dellner couplers,[4] as on Class 220 Voyager and Class 221 Super Voyager trains,[4] though these units cannot work together in service because the Class 222 electrical connections are incompatible with the Class 220 and Class 221 trains.[4]

All Class 222 units are maintained at the dedicated Derby Etches Park depot, just south of Derby railway station.

Formation

Class 222 units are currently running in the following formations:

East Midlands Railway: seven cars with 236 standard seats and 106 first-class seats.

East Midlands Railway: five cars with 192 standard seats and 50 first-class seats

The five-car units can be coupled to form ten-car services at peak times. When coupled together, coaches A-G are found in the front unit and the rear coaches become labelled J, K, L, M, N, but in reverse order, meaning Coach J is usually at the London end, and First Class is in Coaches J and K.

Initially, the 23 units ordered for Midland Mainline were four-car and nine-car. Over time these have been gradually modified to the current formations. The four-car units ordered by Hull Trains had an option when constructed to be extended to five cars if required.[9]

Operations

Midland region

With the exception of EMR Connect services, no route operated by East Midlands Railway is fully electrified. As a result, the majority of its fleet is composed of diesel trains such as the Class 222.

Midland Mainline introduced the first of 23 Class 222 units on 31 May 2004, branding them Meridian. These replaced all the Class 170 Turbostars and some of the High Speed Trains, having better acceleration than both of them.

Seven of the sets were nine-car Class 222 Meridians intended for an enhanced London St Pancras to Leeds service, but after the trains had been ordered, the Strategic Rail Authority decided not to allow them to run the service.[10] The nine-car Meridians were used on London-Nottingham and some London-Sheffield services.

When the trains were ordered, Midland Mainline overestimated the number of first-class passengers, and the four-car Meridians had less standard-class seating than the three-car Turbostars they replaced. Coach D subsequently had a section of first-class seating declassified for use by standard-class passengers.

At the end of 2006, Midland Mainline removed a carriage from each of the nine-car sets and extended seven of the four-car sets, using the removed carriages.

Following the formation of the new East Midlands rail franchise in November 2007, the entire fleet of Class 222 Meridians was inherited by East Midlands Trains, which operated the expanded East Midlands rail franchise, including all routes previously run by Midland Mainline.

East Midlands Trains had named the following Meridians:

Unit numberNameDate namedNamed byNotes
222003Tornado[11] 24 March 2009Tim Shoveller, East Midlands Trains Managing DirectorDriving car 60163 named as it has the same number as Tornado
222017Lions Club International Centenary 1917-2017[12] To mark the centenary of Lions Club International

In 2008 further rearrangements were made to the sets: another carriage was removed from the eight-car Meridians, except for unit 222007, which was reduced to five cars with two of the first-class coaches converted to part standard and part first class.[13] The surplus coaches were then added to the four-car Meridians. These changes, which took place from March to October 2008, resulted in six seven-car sets (222001–222006) and 17 five-car sets (222007–222023).

The seven-car trains are almost exclusively used on the fast services between London St Pancras and Sheffield. Since the retirement of the HSTs, they have commenced working London St Pancras to Leeds via Sheffield. The five-car trains are mainly used between London St Pancras and Sheffield, Nottingham or Corby on semi-fast services, and at off-peak times. The four-car trains supplement the five-car trains on these services, or can alternatively form standalone services.

In December 2008, the Class 222 Meridians started work on the hourly London St Pancras to Sheffield services, because they have faster acceleration than the High Speed Trains and so were able to reduce the Sheffield to London journey time by 12 minutes. The hourly Nottingham service was then transferred to High Speed Train running to cover for the Meridians now working the hourly Sheffield fast service.[14]

In February 2009, units 222101 and 222102 transferred from Hull Trains to East Midlands Trains, and were quickly repainted in the East Midlands Trains white livery. Unit 222104 followed later in the year, and unit 222103 a further few months later after repairs had been completed: unit 222103 had been out of service for two years since early 2007, when the unit fell from jacks at Bombardier's Crofton works.

In August 2019, following the Department for Transport's awarding of the East Midlands franchise to Abellio, all of the 222 fleet transferred to new operator East Midlands Railway.

Hull services

Hull Trains introduced Class 222 Pioneer units, to replace its Class 170 Turbostars in May 2005. The units reduced journey times between Hull and London King's Cross by up to 20 minutes. The Pioneers had a different interior colour scheme and less first-class seating than the Meridians.

First Hull Trains' fleet consisted of four four-car Pioneers.

First Hull Trains decided to use only Class 180 units from 2009 onwards. The Class 222s were transferred to East Midlands Trains in 2008/09[15] and are now branded Meridian.

Refurbishment

East Midlands Trains refurbished its entire Class 222 fleet. The refurbishment included new seat covers and carpets in standard class. First class received new leather seat covers along with a new colour scheme and carpets. The refurbishment started in February 2011 and was complete by spring 2012.[16] [17]

East Midlands Railway began a refurbishment program on its entire Class 222 fleet, the program involves the refurbishment of the seating in standard class.

Incidents

Future

All are scheduled to be returned to Eversholt Rail Group in the future once Class 810s replace them on EMR Intercity services.[24] [25]

Other prospective operators

Enterprise

In 2005, HSBC Rail took delivery of the seven nine-car trains planned for use by Midland Mainline on its London-Leeds service, but the trains were left idle when the Strategic Rail Authority prevented Midland Mainline from operating this service. HSBC Rail made contact with Northern Ireland Railways and Iarnród Éireann, with a view to their leasing these units for use by Enterprise.[26] Using these trains on the Belfast-Dublin line was one of a number of options, which also included the purchase of additional 22000 Class railcars or cascaded coaching stock. In the event, the trains entered service with MML providing the fast services from London to Nottingham, thus releasing High Speed Trains. The trains would have required significant modification to be used by Northern Ireland Railways, including reducing each train from nine to eight cars (the maximum length of stations on the Belfast-Dublin line), and converting them from standard gauge to Irish gauge (5 ft 3 inches).

Grand Central

Grand Central, on the announcement of its open-access operation to Sunderland in the summer of 2006, planned to run its services using five Class 222 units, with the intention of starting by the end of that year. However, this never happened, pushing back the planned start date while the company looked for alternatives. Grand Central finally started operating in December 2007 using three High Speed Trains.[27]

Fleet details

ClassOperatorQty.[28] Year built[29] Cars per unit [30]
222/0East Midlands Railway42003–20057
195
222/14

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Every Track - QSK19 for Rail Applications . Cummins Ltd . Daventry . 09/08 . Bulletin 4087201 . 2 December 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221202140716/https://mart.cummins.com/imagelibrary/data/assetfiles/0043213.pdf . 2 December 2022 .
  2. Web site: CLASS 222. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20190815171507/https://eversholtrail.co.uk/fleet/class-222/. 15 August 2019. 5 August 2021. eversholtrail.co.uk.
  3. Book: Sherratt . Philip . Modern Railways: Review 2023 . 2023 . Key Publishing . Stamford . 978-1-80282-569-5 . 18–19 . ROSCO Fleets.
  4. Book: System Data for Mechanical and Electrical Coupling of Rail Vehicles in support of GM/RT2190 . 22 June 2011 . SD001 . Rail Safety and Standards Board . London . 4 . 22 November 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120401203135/http://www.rssb.co.uk/SiteCollectionDocuments/rv_coupling_system_data/SD001.pdf . 1 April 2012 . dead.
  5. Book: M-Size Bogies: B5000 for Coach and EMU Applications . September 2004 . Bombardier Transport . Crespin . 2 December 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20111004081641/http://www.bogieoperatorforum.com/fileadmin/Downloads_Member/BT_Datasheets/M_MXXXX_B5000_Virgin_03-11_EN_web.pdf . 4 October 2011 .
  6. Chris . O'Doherty . Carolyn Griffiths (Rail Accident Investigation Board, Department for Transport) . RAIB Report: Passenger train derailment near East Langton, Leicestershire . 2 May 2013 . 21, 62. https://www.orr.gov.uk/media/18360/download . PDF . Office of Rail and Road . 2 December 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221202203514/https://www.orr.gov.uk/media/18360/download . 2 December 2022 . live.
  7. Web site: InterCity . East Midlands Railway . 29 January 2021.
  8. TheRailwayCentre.Com
  9. http://www.railwayherald.co.uk/issues/RHUK/Issue4.pdf "Hull Trains launches Class 222 Meridian fleet"
  10. High Speed Hidden Asset . Railwatch . . July 2005 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160826012348/http://www.railwatch.org.uk/backtrack/rw104/rw104p02.pdf . 26 August 2016.
  11. UNITS . . February 2022. 28.
  12. Depo Talk . Rail Express . March 2022 . 31 .
  13. Changes to our trains . 6 June 2008 . . 21 June 2008 . In preparation of our December 2008 timetable where we plan to run additional services we will be moving carriages between trains. Our smaller Meridian trains will get an extra carriage and some larger Meridian trains will lose one. By carrying out this work we will be improving our capacity on our smaller, busy trains in the peak hours where it is needed. Overall, we will reduce overcrowding at peak times. . https://web.archive.org/web/20080501060427/http://www.eastmidlandstrains.co.uk/emtrains/aboutus/news/# . 1 May 2008 . dead .
  14. Web site: East Midlands Trains FAQ Page. https://web.archive.org/web/20071007021313/http://www.eastmidlandstrains.co.uk/midland.php. dead. 7 October 2007.
  15. [Modern Railways]
  16. News: The News in Pictures . Railway Herald . 3 . 257 . 21 February 2011 . 21 February 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110727200131/http://www.railwayherald.org/magazine/pdf/RHUK/Issue257HIGH.pdf . 27 July 2011 .
  17. Web site: 8 February 2011 . East Midlands Trains starts work on Meridian train makeover . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110410041532/https://www.eastmidlandstrains.co.uk/AboutUs/News/Pages/_EastMidlandsTrainsstartswork.aspx . 10 April 2011 . East Midlands Trains.
  18. http://www.railwaysarchive.co.uk/documents/RAIB_Desborough2006.pdf RAIB Rail Accident Report – Passenger door open on a moving train near Desborough
  19. https://assets.digital.cabinet-office.gov.uk/media/547c8ff1e5274a428d00015d/120130_R012012_East_Langton.pdf RAIB Rail Accident Report – Passenger train derailment near East Langton, Leicestershire
  20. News: Nottingham railway station disrupted after engine fire . BBC News . 20 April 2012.
  21. News: Passenger train left with gaping hole after crash . ITN News . 18 February 2016.
  22. Web site: Collision at Barrow-on-Soar . Rail Accident Investigation Branch . 29 February 2016.
  23. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/580e11dde5274a67e8000028/R212016_161027_Barrow_upon_Soar.pdf RAIB Rail Accident Report – Collision between a train and a piece of equipment at Barrow-upon-Soar, Leicestershire
  24. 30 July 2019 . Abellio orders East Midlands inter-city fleet . 5 August 2021 . Railway Gazette International .
  25. EMR Bi-Mode Specification Confirmed . . 856 . January 2020 . 19.
  26. Web site: NIR News 157. https://web.archive.org/web/20071119060838/https://irrs.ie/Journal%20157/157%20News%20NIR.htm . 19 November 2007.
  27. http://www.railpro.co.uk/issues/pdfs/nov07business_people.pdf "The train now arriving from Sunderland is approximately... one year late"
  28. Book: Pritchard, Robert . Diesel Multiple Units . Platform 5 Publishing Ltd . 2020 . 9781909431638 . 34th . Sheffield . 28.
  29. Book: Marsden, Colin J . Rail Guide 2010 . 2010 . Ian Allan . 978-0-7110-3457-0 . 31–32 . */
  30. Web site: Class 222 . 2023-01-04 . eversholtrail.co.uk . en-US.