Nez Cassé Explained

The Nez Cassé series of locomotives is a large family of electric and diesel locomotives intended primarily for fast passenger service on the French SNCF railway system. Produced by Alsthom for use under multiple electrification networks and un-electrified lines, they have been in widespread use from 1976 into the 21st century. Classes produced in the main series were BB 7200/7600 and CC 6500 under 1.5 kV DC, BB15000 under 25 kV 50 Hz AC, BB 22200 (7200+15000) and CC 21000 under dual 1.5 kV DC and 25 kV 50 Hz AC, and the diesel CC 72000/72100.

The locomotive series was developed from the 1964 quadruple-voltage CC 40100, designed by Paul Arzens,[1] which was mainly used for Trans Europ Express international service. The CC 40100 featured a forward-leaning nose and windshield that drew comparisons with a broken-nose facial profile ("Nez Cassé"). A greater emphasis on crash protection for engine drivers in the following series added depth to the nose and changed the broken-nosed profile.[2] [3] [4]

List of Nez Cassé locomotives

Below is a list of all current locomotives around the world built in this style.

ClassCountryOperator(s)Build Date(s)Wheel Arrangement (UIC)Wheel Arrangement (AAR)Image
SNCF Class BB 7200FranceSNCF1976-1985Bo'Bo'B-B
SNCF Class BB 15000FranceSNCF1971-1978Bo'Bo'B-B
SNCF Class BB 22200
Class 22 (II)
SNCF1976-1986Bo'Bo'B-B
SNCF Class CC 6500FranceSNCF1969-1975Co'Co'C-C
SNCF Class CC 21000FranceSNCF1995-1996Co'Co'C-C
SNCF Class CC 72000FranceSNCF1967-1974Co'Co'C-C
SNCF Class CC 40100FranceSNCF1964, 1969-1970Co'Co'C-C
SNCB Class 18 (Alsthom)BelgiumNMBS/SNCB1973-1974Co'Co'C-C
Amtrak X996United StatesAmtrak1977Co'Co'C-C
CP Class 2600PortugalComboios de Portugal1974-1975Bo'Bo'B-B
CP Class 2620PortugalComboios de Portugal1987-1989Bo'Bo'B-B
CP Class 1900PortugalComboios de Portugal1981Co'Co'C-C
CP Class 1930PortugalComboios de Portugal1981-1982Co'Co'C-C
NS Class 1600NetherlandsGermany1981-1983Bo'Bo'B-B
NS Class 1700NetherlandsNederlandse Spoorwegen1990-1994Bo'Bo'B-B
NS Class 1800NetherlandsNederlandse Spoorwegen1981-1983Bo'Bo'B-B
SŽ Series 363SloveniaSlovenian Railways1975-1977Co'Co'C-C
Korail Class 8000South KoreaKorail1972-1990Bo'Bo'Bo'B-B-B
ONCF Class DF 100MoroccoONCFN/ACo'Co'C-C
ONCF Class DF 115MoroccoONCFN/ACo'Co'C-C
ONCF Class E 1300MoroccoONCFN/ABo'Bo'B-B
ONCF Class E 1350MoroccoONCFN/ABo'Bo'B-B
FEPASA 2200BrazilFerrovia PaulistaN/ABo'Bo'B-B

Similarly styled locomotives

Below is a list of locomotives with a similar "broken nose" aesthetic to them but aren't technically regarded as part of the "Nez Casse" family of locomotives.

!Class!Country!Operator(s)!Build Date(s)!Image
DR13FinlandVR Group1962-1965
2TE116Russia (+ some other ex-Soviet nations)Russian Railways (+ other ex-Soviet Railways)N/A
2TE10MRussia (+ some other ex-Soviet nations)Russian Railways (+ other ex-Soviet Railways)1981-
2TE10MKKazakhstanKTZ1981
2TE10VRussia (+ probably some other ex-Soviet nations)Russian Railways (+ probably other ex-Soviet Railways)1975-1981
2TE10GRussia (+ probably some other ex-Soviet nations)Russian Railways (+ probably other ex-Soviet Railways)1988
2TE10SRussia (+ probably some other ex-Soviet nations)Russian Railways (+ probably other ex-Soviet Railways)1988
2TE10URussia (+ probably some other ex-Soviet nations)Russian Railways (+ probably other ex-Soviet Railways)1989-
2TE10UTRussia (+ probably some other ex-Soviet nations)Russian Railways (+ probably other ex-Soviet Railways)1989-1997

Other operators

The Nederlandse Spoorwegen NS Class 1600 and NS Class 1700 versions of BB 7200 continue in use on the Dutch railway system under 1.5 kV DC. The Belgian Railways Class 18 was the Belgian equivalent of CC 40100, and was in service from 1973 to 1999.[5]

Moroccan operator ONCF uses diesel locomotives similar to CC 72000, the ONCF DF 100. The ONCF E 900 is similar to the CC 6500 and the ONCF E 1300/1350 is similar to the BB 7200, both under 3 kV DC . The Portuguese CP Class 1900 and CP Class 1930 were built under license by Sorefame in 1981 as versions of CC 72000 and CP Class 2600 (electric) as version of BB22200. The South Korean Korail Class 8000 is a development for 25 kV 60 Hz AC with a Bo-Bo-Bo arrangement. Slovenian Railways uses 3 kV DC versions of CC 6500 (identical to the ONCF E900 and using the same transmition) as SŽ series 363.

FEPASA in São Paulo State, Brazil ordered 80 3 kV DC locomotives in the mid-1980s for its metre gauge and Irish gauge network called FEPASA 2200 series (or Alsthom EC-386) for use on the and other prospective electrified lines on its network. The locomotives were to be assembled by Brazilian manufacturer EMAQ using knock-down kits imported from France, however, the bankruptcy of said manufacturer and severe financial difficulties at FEPASA meant that only two locomotives were actually completed. Both locomotives were used by FEPASA until its privatisation in the late-1990s and were abandoned, because its successor concessionary companies Ferroban and Rumo Logística have largely abandoned further electrification work on the rest of the FEPASA network.[6]

A single CC 21000 locomotive, CC 21003, was temporarily allocated to the U.S. Amtrak system as X996 in 1977 for testing on Amtrak's Northeast Corridor.[7]

Notes and References

  1. 2003 . Automobilia . Toutes les voitures françaises 1940 - 46 (Les années sans salon) . Paris . Histoire & collections . 26 . 52.
  2. Book: Haydock . David . French Railways: Locomotives and Multiple Units . 2016 . Platform 5 . 978-1-909431-34-8 . 20-21, 23-27, 61-63 . 6.
  3. Book: Redoutey . Denis . Le Matérial Moteur SNCF en 2016 . 2016 . Éditions La Vie du Rail . 978-2-37062-040-8 . 185-189, 192-193, 196-197, 256-257 . 7.
  4. Web site: Gehant . Benoit . La famille des locomotives "nez cassé" . Sur les rails . 6 September 2020.
  5. Book: Haydock . David . Fox . Peter . Garvin . Brian . Benelux Railways: Locomotives and Coaching Stock . 1994 . Platform 5 . 1-872524-65-6 . 19 . 3.
  6. Web site: FEPASA - 3400 HP Alsthom-EMAQ Electric Locomotive. www.tsfr.org.
  7. Web site: Amtrak's X996 . Amtrak Historical Society . 6 September 2020.