Budd Rail Diesel Car Explained

Budd Rail Diesel Car (RDC)
Interiorimage:Budd RDC-1 interior 1949.JPG
Interiorcaption:Interior of the RDC-1 demonstrator in 1949
Service:1949–present
Manufacturer:Budd Company
Yearconstruction:1949–1962
Numberbuilt:398
Carbody:Stainless steel
Width:10feet
Height:14feet
Maxspeed:85mph
Weight:109200lb118300lb
Transmission:Hydraulic torque converter
Electricsystem:N/A
Brakes:New York Air Brake air brakes

The Budd Rail Diesel Car (RDC), also known as the Budd car or Buddliner, is a self-propelled diesel multiple unit (DMU) railcar. Between 1949 and 1962, 398 RDCs were built by the Budd Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. The cars were primarily adopted for passenger service in rural areas with low traffic density or in short-haul commuter service, and were less expensive to operate in this context than a traditional diesel locomotive-drawn train with coaches. The cars could be used singly or coupled together in train sets and controlled from the cab of the front unit. The RDC was one of the few DMU trains to achieve commercial success in North America. RDC trains were an early example of self-contained diesel multiple unit trains, an arrangement now in common use by railways all over the world.

Budd RDCs were sold to operators in North America, South America, Asia, and Australia. They saw extensive use in the Northeast United States, both on branch lines and in commuter service. As passenger service declined in the United States the RDC was often the last surviving conveyor of passengers on a particular route. Most RDCs were retired by the 1980s. In Canada, RDCs have remained in continuous use since their introduction in the 1950s. The RDC inspired several derivatives, including the unsuccessful Budd SPV-2000. The New York Central Railroad installed two jet engines on an RDC in 1966 and set a United States speed record of 184mph, although this experimental configuration was never used in regular service.

Background

The self-propelled railcar was not a new concept in North American railroading. Beginning in the 1880s railroads experimented with steam-powered railcars on branch lines, where the costs of operating a conventional steam locomotive-hauled set of cars was prohibitive. These cars failed for several reasons: the boiler and engine were too heavy, water and fuel took up too much space, and high maintenance costs eliminated whatever advantage was gained from reducing labor costs. In the 1900s steam railcars gave way to gasoline, led by the McKeen Motor Car Company, which produced 152 between 1905 and 1917. The J. G. Brill Company sold over 300 railbuses in the 1920s. Newcomer Electro-Motive Corporation, working with the Winton Motor Carriage Company, dominated the market at the end of the 1920s but had left it completely by 1932 as the Great Depression gutted rail traffic.

The Budd Company entered the market in 1932, just as EMC left. Until then, Budd had been mainly an automotive parts subcontractor, but had pioneered methods for working with stainless steel, including the technique of shot welding to join stainless steel components. This permitted the construction of cars which were both light and strong. Budd partnered with Michelin to construct several rubber-tyred stainless steel rail cars powered by gasoline and diesel engines. These saw service with the Reading Company, Pennsylvania Railroad, and Texas and Pacific Railway. The cars were under-powered, the tires proved prone to blowouts and derailments, and the cars were unsuccessful.

Budd revived its railcar concept after diesel engines with a suitable combination of power and weight became available in 1938, although with more conventional steel wheels. In 1941 Budd built the Prospector for the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad. This was a two-car diesel multiple unit. Each car had a pair of diesel engines and was capable of independent operation. The cars were constructed of stainless steel and included a mix of coach and sleeping accommodations. The design was popular with the public but undone by the difficult operating conditions on the D&RGW. It was withdrawn in July 1942, apparently another failure. However, several technical advances during the Second World War encouraged Budd to try again.

Design

During the years of the Second World War, there were improvements in the lightweight Detroit Diesel engines and, just as importantly, the hydraulic torque converter. Budd, which by then had produced more than 2,500 streamlined cars for various railroads, took a standard 85feet coach design and added a pair of 2750NaN0 6-cylinder Detroit Diesel Series 110 engines. Each drove an axle through a hydraulic torque converter derived from the M46 Patton tank, for a 1A-A1 wheel arrangement. The top speed for the design was . The control systems allowed the cars to operate singly, or in multiple. The result was the RDC-1, which made its public debut at Chicago's Union Station on September 19, 1949.

Variants

Budd manufactured five basic variants of the RDC:

Several railroads used the designation "RDC-5": the Canadian Pacific Railway for RDC-2s converted to full-coach configuration and the Canadian National Railway for RDC-9s it purchased from the Boston and Maine Railroad.

In 1956, Budd introduced a new version of the RDC, with several improvements. The new cars had more powerful versions of the Detroit Diesel 6-110 engines, each of which produced instead of . They also featured higher-capacity air conditioning and more comfortable seating. The appearance changed slightly as well: the side fluting continued around to the front of the car and the front-facing windows were smaller.

Jet propulsion

See main article: M-497 Black Beetle. In an experiment toward high-speed rail, the New York Central Railroad fitted a pair of General Electric J47 jet engines from a Convair B-36, complete in their twinned nacelle from the bomber's engine installation, atop one of their RDCs and added a shovel nose front (much like a later automotive air dam) to its cab, but extended upwards, covering the entire front end. This RDC, which NYC had numbered M497, set the United States speed record in 1966 when it traveled at just short of 184mph between Butler, Indiana, and Stryker, Ohio. It was never intended that jet engines propel regular trains. With high-speed trains advancing overseas, particularly the Japanese Shinkansen bullet trains, American railroads were under pressure from the federal government to catch up. The test runs and subsequent American rail speed record set on July 23, 1966, provided valuable data on the interaction between flanged wheels and rail at high speeds, as well as stress on wheel bearings and track infrastructure.[1]

At the same time the test took place, the Central announced plans to discontinue most of its long-distance trains, including the renowned 20th Century Limited. Trains editor David P. Morgan observed that "...[the New York] Central will never quite convince anyone that the RDC's jet exploit was more a scientific feat than a calculated circus to take the curse off the Centurys funeral notice." Historian Chuck Crouse expressed skepticism in 1990 about the test's usefulness: "What, if anything, did the tests prove is anyone's guess."

Derivatives

In 1956, the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad ordered a custom-built, six-car train set they named the Roger Williams,based on the RDC design. It consisted of two single-ended cab units and four intermediate cars to make a complete train. The units were fitted with third-rail shoes, electric traction motors, and associated gear for operation into Grand Central Terminal, though this was short-lived. In the New Haven's later years, the set was broken up, and used with regular New Haven RDCs, and by Amtrak into the 1980s.

In 1961, five cars were built under license in Australia for the Department of Railways New South Wales. They were shorter and narrower than the North American models.

In the late 1970s Budd sought to replace the aging RDCs with a new design, the SPV-2000. The body shell was based on an Amfleet coach, not the RDC. Like the RDC it was long, stainless steel, and powered by twin diesel engines. The design was beset with mechanical problems, and Budd sold only 30 cars.

In 1966, Tokyu Car built 31 DR2700 series cars for the Taiwan Railway Administration. Tokyu got a licence from the Budd Company and the bodywork of the DR2700 series was based on the RDC. There were 25 powered driving cars (each with a Cummins diesel engine producing) and 6 trailers. The DR2700 series was the fastest train in the following decade with a top speed of . They were withdrawn from regular service in 2014 while several powered driving cars were still active for special trains.

From 1982 to 1984 Tokyu Car built 45 of a heavily specialized, meter-gauge RDC design for the Taiwan Railway Administration under license from Budd. Designated the DR2800 series, the units are organized into 15 permanently-coupled three-car sets (30 powered driving cars and 15 trailers). Like other RDC trainsets before them, each cab unit only has a cab at one end and two cab units bracket a trailer in a standard set. Unlike other RDC sets, however, the trailer's diesel engine is used exclusively to provide head-end power for the entire three-car set, while the engines in the driver cars are used for propulsion. To prevent dependency on the trailer's engine for cooling, the cooling fans of the driver cars are driven hydraulically instead of electrically. This configuration results in each set producing for a top speed of . All 15 sets are still in service as of 2022. All DR2800 series were withdrawn from service on April 26, 2023.[2]

History

United States

The vast majority of RDCs were owned and operated by railroads in the United States. They could be found on branch lines, short-haul intercity routes, commuter routes, and even long-distance trains. The Western Pacific Railroad used a pair of RDC-2s to operate the Zephyrette, a supplement to the California Zephyr. The two cars ran between Oakland, California and Salt Lake City, Utah,, three days a week. Examples of shorter intercity services were the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad's Memphis, TennesseeAmarillo, Texas Choctaw Rocket and the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad's Daylight Speedliner. The latter ran between Pittsburgh and Philadelphia and included full dining service. A notable example of the RDC's flexibility occurred on the Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines, where a single train would depart Camden, New Jersey and split into multiple trains to serve different destinations on the Atlantic coast.

The largest RDC fleets were in the Northeast United States. The New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad (New Haven) acquired 40 RDCs, which it called "Shoreliners", in 1952–53. By 1955 these accounted for 65% of the New Haven's passenger routes. This achievement was eclipsed by the Boston and Maine Railroad, whose fleet grew to 108 by 1958. The B&M's RDCs operated 90% of the company's passenger routes, including its extensive commuter operations around Boston, Massachusetts.

The results in commuter service outside the B&M were mixed. Budd had not designed the RDC for commuter service and discouraged operators from using it to haul coaches. The Long Island Rail Road and Chicago and North Western Railway, which had extensive networks in Long Island and Chicago, respectively, evaluated the RDC but made few orders. Conversely, the Reading Company's 12 RDC-1s lasted on the Philadelphia–Reading and Philadelphia–Bethlehem routes well into the SEPTA era.

For several railroads the RDCs, because of their low overall cost and operational flexibility, were the last passenger trains in operation. Examples include the Duluth, Missabe, and Iron Range Railway, the Duluth, South Shore and Atlantic Railway, the Lehigh Valley Railroad, and the Northwestern Pacific Railroad, where RDC service survived until the formation of Amtrak in 1971.

Many RDCs remained in service throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Amtrak acquired 24 (including three from the Roger Williams), mostly for use in Connecticut. The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) acquired the B&M's fleet and continued operating them until 1985. The Alaska Railroad acquired five RDCs, three from SEPTA and two from Amtrak between 1984 and 1986. These were all sold or out of service by 2009.[3] Trinity Railway Express acquired thirteen RDCs from Via Rail in 1993 for use on commuter service between Dallas and Fort Worth, Texas.[4] The Denton County Transportation Authority leased several for A-train service pending the arrival of new Stadler GTW 2/6s diesel multiple units.[5]

Despite their advanced age, a market for Budd RDCs has continued. Oregonian transit authority TriMet purchased and refurbished two RDCs in 2009 to provide backup for its commuter rail service, WES, following reliability issues with the primary DMUs for that service, which had been purpose-built by Colorado Railcar.[6] In 2017, a Vermont company, AllEarth Rail, bought twelve 1959 Budd cars from Dallas Area Rapid Transit for $5 million. The cars had previously been owned by Via Rail Canada, which also bid on the lot. AllEarth said it planned to use the cars for commuter rail service in Vermont, possibly starting with a Burlington-to-Montpelier route.[7] TriMet subsequently purchased two of these cars from AllEarth later the same year, in addition to its existing two, and stated they would enter WES service in 2021;[8] however, those plans were postponed indefinitely in view of a COVID-19 pandemic-related ridership decline.

Canada

Both the Canadian National Railway (CN) and Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) purchased RDCs. The Canadian National purchased 25 cars outright, and acquired many more second-hand from the Boston and Maine Railroad. These cars, which CN called Railiners, were used primarily on secondary passenger routes. CP purchased 53 cars. The first one ran on November 9, 1954, between Detroit and Toronto. It was the first stainless-steel passenger train to operate in Canada. CP used the RDCs, which it called Dayliners, throughout its system. CP also made extensive use of them on commuter trains around Montreal and Toronto. CP's subsidiary in Nova Scotia, the Dominion Atlantic Railway also operated two RDCs lettered for its line.[9] Via Rail inherited many of these cars when it took over CN and CP passenger services in 1978. Via continues to use RDCs on the Sudbury–White River train in Ontario.[10]

Another Canadian purchaser of RDCs was the Pacific Great Eastern Railway, which operated passenger service between North Vancouver and Prince George. RDCs continued to operate on this route until all passenger service ended under BC Rail, PGE's successor, in 2002.[11]

Refurbished RDCs were considered for Blue22, a rail service between Toronto Union Station and Pearson Airport, by 2010. The service, which was transferred to Metrolinx ownership and opened in 2015 as the Union Pearson Express, ultimately used new Nippon Sharyo DMU trains instead.[12]

Australia

See main article: Commonwealth Railways CB class railcar.

In 1951, the Budd Company exported three standard RDC-1 railcars to Australia, which Budd engineer Joseph F. Grosser accompanied. Designated the CB class, they ran on the standard-gauge Commonwealth Railways lines in the sparsely populated north of South Australia not served by the South Australian Railways. Invariably referred to as "Budd cars", they operated between Port Pirie, Woomera, Tarcoola, Marree and Whyalla.[13]

In July 1975, when the Commonwealth Railways were succeeded by the Australian National Railways Commission (successively branded as ANR, Australian National and AN), they were withdrawn from service and stored. In 1986, however, they were reinstated on the Iron Triangle Limited service from Adelaide to Whyalla and the Silver City Limited service from Broken Hill.[14] [15] The cars were withdrawn from service in 1990., CB1 was preserved at the National Railway Museum, Port Adelaide; CB2 and CB3 were privately owned.

See main article: New South Wales 1100 class railcar.

In 1961, Commonwealth Engineering built five RDC-1 derivative cars[13] in Australia under licence for the New South Wales railways department. Four were self-propelled and one was a trailer car.[16] Allocated as the 1100 class, they followed Budd car layouts but were smaller than standard RDC-1 models, being 8feet shorter at 77sigfig=3NaNsigfig=3 and built to a New South Wales Railways loading gauge smaller than that of North American railroads (and Commonwealth Railways). The trailer car was built with a buffet/snack bar in one end. The cars worked the South Coast Daylight Express between Sydney and Bomaderry. Age and mechanical problems led to the cars' conversion to locomotive-hauled coaches, beginning in 1982; the last self-propelled run occurred in 1986.

Brazil

See also: Rail transport in Brazil. RFFSA (Brazilian Federal Railways) purchased four RDC-1s and two RDC-2s in 1958. These were gauge but otherwise standard configuration. RFFSA ordered 23 more cars in 1962–1963. Four of these were gauge RDC-1s. The other 19 were gauge and varied considerably from the standard RDC-1 design. The car body was based on the Pioneer III coach. Internal seating was 48 with a small buffet area or 56 in an all-coach configuration. Several RDCs remain active on the Serra Verde Express tourist train.

Cuba

See also: Ferrocarriles de Cuba. In the 1950s, both major railway companies in Cuba purchased RDCs. Consolidated Railways of Cuba (Ferrocarriles Consolidados de Cuba) ordered 11 RDC-1s and 5 RDC-2s in 1950. These operated either singly or in multiple units of up to three cars. The Western Railways of Cuba (Ferrocarriles Occidentales de Cuba) ordered four RDC-1s and six RDC-3s in 1956–57. The cars remained in use after the Cuban Revolution with the Ferrocarriles de Cuba and operated into the 1980s. At least one Cuban RDC-1 still existed in 2017, stripped of all mechanical components and serving as a passenger coach.

Saudi Arabia

See also: Saudi Railways Organization. The Arabian American Oil Company constructed a standard gauge railway in cooperation with the Saudi government. The company ordered three RDC-2s in 1951, supplemented by a fourth in 1958. The cars operated on various routes originating in Dammam. All were converted to unpowered trailers by 1965.

Original owners

Budd constructed 398 RDCs between 1949 and 1962. The table below does not include the six cars which comprised the Roger Williams, nor derivative designs built under license.

RailroadModelQuantityRoad numbers
Arabian American Oil CompanyRDC-248000–8003
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe RailwayRDC-1 2DC-191, DC-192
Baltimore and Ohio RailroadRDC-1121908–1911, 6510–6517
RDC-241960–1961, 6550–6551
Boston and Maine RailroadRDC-1576100–6156
RDC-2156200–6214
RDC-376300–6306
RDC-9306900–6929
Budd (prototype/demonstrator)RDC-112960
Canadian National RailwaysRDC-19D-200–D-201, D-102–D-108
RDC-25D-201–D-203, D-205, D-250
RDC-35D-100–D-101, D-302, D-351–D-352
RDC-46D-150–D-151, D-401–D-402, D-451–D-452
Canadian Pacific RailwayRDC-1239050–9072
RDC-2229100–9115, 9194–9199
RDC-359020–9024
RDC-439200, 9250–9251
Central Railroad of New JerseyRDC-17551–557
Chicago and Eastern Illinois RailroadRDC-11RDC1
Chicago and North Western RailwayRDC-129933–9934
RDC-219935
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific RailroadRDC-359002–9004, 9015–9016
Commonwealth Railways (Australia)
(later named Australian National Railways)
RDC-13CB1–CB3
Consolidated Railways of CubaRDC-111
RDC-25
Dominion Atlantic RailwayRDC-129058-9059
Duluth, Missabe and Iron Range RailwayRDC-311
Duluth, South Shore and Atlantic RailwayRDC-11500
Duluth, Winnipeg and Pacific RailwayRDC-31D301
Grand Trunk Western RailroadRDC-21D204
RDC-31D303
Great Northern RailwayRDC-312350
Lehigh Valley RailroadRDC-1140
RDC-2141
Long Island Rail RoadRDC-113101
RDC-213121
Minneapolis and St. Louis RailwayRDC-4232–33
Missouri-Kansas-Texas RailroadRDC-3120
New York Central RailroadRDC-116M-451–M-465
RDC-21M-480
RDC-33M-497–M-499
New York, New Haven and Hartford RailroadRDC-12920–48
RDC-22120–121
RDC-36125–130
RDC-43135–137
New York, Susquehanna and Western RailwayRDC-14M-1–M-4
Northern Pacific RailwayRDC-21B30
RDC-32B40–B41
Pacific Great Eastern RailwayRDC-13BC10–BC12
RDC-34BC30–BC33
Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore LinesRDC-112M-402–M-413
Reading CompanyRDC-1129151–9162
RFFSA (Brazil)RDC-18ED11–ED14, M504–M505, M552–M553
RDC-119M600–M610, M700–M707
RDC-22ED51–ED52
Southern Pacific RailroadRDC-1110
Western Pacific RailroadRDC-22375–376
Western Railroad of CubaRDC-14901–904
RDC-36951–956

Preservation

Numerous RDCs have been preserved on tourist lines and in museums. Holders include:

See also

Select bibliography

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: M-497: Built for Speed . Otto M. Vondrak . July 2016 . Railfan & Railroad Magazine . December 12, 2019.
  2. Web site: 行政院全球資訊網 . 2.16.886.101.20003 . zh-tw . 1 December 2011.
  3. Web site: Appendix 10: Locomotive Emission Reduction . 2011 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20140930031553/http://alaskarailroad.com/Portals/6/pdf/pr/2011_06_14_Appx_10_Loco_Emissions_PR.pdf . September 30, 2014 . dead . March 4, 2015.
  4. Web site: Train Facts . . https://web.archive.org/web/20120205063240/http://www.trinityrailwayexpress.org/trerollingstock.html . February 5, 2012 . March 4, 2015.
  5. Web site: Take the A-Train . Sampson, Rich . Community Transportation Association . March 4, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150402091321/http://web1.ctaa.org/webmodules/webarticles/articlefiles/Take_the_A-Train.pdf . April 2, 2015 . dead .
  6. News: Rose, Joseph. TriMet's new (used) WES trains inside and out. October 29, 2009. The Oregonian. March 4, 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20140809151439/http://blog.oregonlive.com/commuting/2009/10/trimets_new_used_wes_trains_in.html. August 9, 2014.
  7. Web site: David Blittersdorf bets on Vermont Commuter Rail . Picard . Ken . August 2, 2017 . Seven Days . Da Capo Publishing, Inc. . January 16, 2018.
  8. Web site: Making History. Trimet. February 27, 2020.
  9. https://www.dardpi.ca/wiki/index.php?title=Category:RDC "Dominion Atlantic Railway Rail Diesel Cars", Dominion Atlantic Railway Digital Preservation Initiative
  10. Web site: Passenger cars - Rail Diesel Car-2 . . July 26, 2013.
  11. Fifty Years of the Rail Diesel Car in Canada . Angus, Fred F. . Canadian Rail . November–December 2002 . 491 . 205 . March 4, 2015 . August 15, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150815235040/http://www.exporail.org/can_rail/Canadian%20Rail_no491_2002.pdf . dead .
  12. Web site: Backgrounder 2 – Union Pearson Airlink Group's Blue22 Service . November 13, 2003 . . August 8, 2011 . April 26, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120426062916/http://www.westoncommunitycoalition.ca/Nov%202003%20Selection%20of%20SNC%20and%20Backgrounder.pdf . dead .
  13. Web site: Commonwealth Railways CB class Budd Railcars . Drymalik, Chris . October 14, 2015 . Chris's Commonwealth Railways Information . May 7, 2016.
  14. Western Report . . February 1987 . 53 . 0157-2431.
  15. Web site: Abbreviations and Glossary of Terms: Iron Triangle Limited . Drymalik, Chris . October 14, 2015 . Chris's Commonwealth Railways Information . May 7, 2016.
  16. Book: Cooke. David. Railmotors and XPTs. Australian Railway Historical Society NSW Division. 1984. 0-909650-23-3.
  17. Web site: Rail Diesel Car 6211 . August 14, 2014 . . April 6, 2015.
  18. Web site: B&O No. 1961 . B&O Railroad Museum . July 6, 2016.
  19. News: Railroad society's 1950s-era train car to be restored . Buckwalter, Jenn . January 8, 2015 . Centre County Gazette . April 6, 2015.
  20. Web site: Conway Scenic Railroad . 2012 . Visit New Hampshire . April 6, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304125132/http://www.visitnh.gov/uploads/Conway_Scenic_ProfileSheet_2012.pdf . March 4, 2016 . dead .
  21. Web site: NH RDC 32 at Danbury Railway Museum . . https://web.archive.org/web/20120328015919/http://www.danbury.org/DRM/nhrdc32.htm . March 28, 2012 . dead . March 3, 2015.
  22. Web site: Equipment Listing . . https://web.archive.org/web/20150407082800/http://www.hoborr.com/equipnew.html . April 7, 2015 . dead . April 6, 2015.
  23. News: Free of debt and stored rail cars, railroad sees clear tracks ahead . Anderson, Chuck . July 28, 2011 . . December 4, 2012 . July 19, 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180719054504/https://www.lagrandeobserver.com/News/Local-News/Free-of-debt-and-stored-rail-cars-railroad-sees-clear-tracks-ahead . dead .
  24. Web site: Roster of Equipment: Chicago & North Western 9933 . . August 19, 2023 .
  25. News: RDC trips scheduled on Reading & Northern . . May 5, 2016 . May 6, 2016 . Laepple, Wayne.
  26. Web site: Budd Railcar CB 1 . . November 2017 . National Railway Museum . November 6, 2017.
  27. News: North Carolina museum acquires Alco switcher, RDC . Laepple, Wayne . May 5, 2014 . . April 6, 2015.
  28. Web site: The Train . Orford Express . July 18, 2018 . May 29, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150529065138/http://www.orfordexpress.com/en/train.htm . dead .
  29. News: New Haven RDC makes first run on Naugatuck Railroad . Hartley, Scott A. . June 1, 2015 . . June 2, 2015.
  30. Web site: Saving RDC-1 VIA 6133 . May 3, 2016 . . en-US . July 18, 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180719054312/https://rapidotrains.com/saving-6133-update/ . July 19, 2018 . dead .
  31. News: Pottsville, railroad to begin rail excursions from city . Pytak, Stephen J. . September 14, 2014 . . April 6, 2015.
  32. Web site: Waterloo Central Railway . . May 24, 2022.
  33. Web site: WCRA Collection . . July 18, 2018.