V250 / ETR.700 | |
Interiorimage: | FS ETR.700 Business Class Interior.jpg |
Interiorcaption: | Business Class interior of Frecciargento ETR.700 |
Service: | 2012–2013 (High Speed Alliance) 2019–present (Trenitalia) |
Manufacturer: | AnsaldoBreda |
Factory: | Pistoia |
Yearconstruction: | 2004-2011 |
Yearservice: | 9 December 2012 (High Speed Alliance) 9 June 2019 (Trenitalia) |
Refurbishment: | 2019 (into ETR 700) |
Yearscrapped: | 2013 (High Speed Alliance) |
Numberbuilt: | 19 |
Numberservice: | 17 |
Formation: | 8-car sets mAk+AD+mAB+B+B+mB+B+mBk |
Fleetnumbers: | 4801-4816, 4881-4883 |
Capacity: | 546 127 first, 419 second class |
Operator: | High Speed Alliance Trenitalia |
Depots: | Amsterdam Watergraafsmeer |
Lines: | HSL-Zuid HSL 4 SNCB line 25 Adriatic railway |
Trainlength: | 200.9frac=16NaNfrac=16[1] |
Carlength: | driving cars 26.95frac=16NaNfrac=16[2] intermediate cars 24.5frac=16NaNfrac=16 |
Width: | 2.87frac=16NaNfrac=16 |
Height: | 4.08frac=16NaNfrac=16 |
Floorheight: | 1.26frac=16NaNfrac=16 |
Doors: | 24 |
Art-Sections: | 8 |
Maxspeed: | 250km/h |
Weight: | 423t full loaded service weight 485t |
Poweroutput: | 5500kW |
Acceleration: | 0.58m/s2 max |
Deceleration: | 1.2m/s2 max |
Electricsystem: | Overhead catenary
|
Collectionmethod: | Pantograph |
Uicclass: | Bo′Bo′+2′2′+Bo′Bo′+2′2′+2′2′+Bo′Bo′+2′2′+Bo′Bo′ |
Safety: | TVM, BAcc/SCM ETCS L2 |
The Trenitalia ETR 700, originally NS Hispeed V250, is a high-speed train designed by Pininfarina and built by AnsaldoBreda originally for NS International and NMBS/SNCB to operate on the Fyra service, a high speed train between Amsterdam and Brussels with a branch to Breda on the newly built HSL-Zuid in the Netherlands and its extension HSL 4 in Belgium.
V250s were delivered with a significant delay. Full commercial services with V250 started on 9 December 2012 but stopped only 39 days later on 17 January 2013, after the Belgian Railway Inspection Agency suspended the trains' operating license, because of safety and structural problems with the construction and maintenance of the V250s. All were removed from service and sent back to AnsaldoBreda in Italy.
In August 2017, Trenitalia purchased all 19 V250 sets to expand its high speed fleet and rebranded them as ETR700s. After being refurbished, they entered service on Frecciargento services, on the Adriatic railway, between Milan and Lecce in 2019. Seventeen sets will be used for services, with the remaining two used for spare parts.
NS International and NMBS/SNCB ordered 19 train sets in 2004 for operations between Amsterdam and Brussels and Breda on the HSL-Zuid and HSL 4 high speed railway lines.[2] Initial delivery was foreseen for 2007.[3] In 2008 expectations were for deliveries by 2009 and an introduction into service by the middle of 2009.[4]
The first sets had been manufactured by March 2009, and initial tests on the Velim test circuit in the Czech Republic took place in early 2009,[5] In April 2009 the first unit arrived in Arnhem in the Netherlands, and was towed to Amsterdam for tests.[6]
NS International had claimed that the delay of introduction of any trains was due to the lack of a formal ETCS level 2 specification; by March HSA was close to financial ruin due to lack of any income, and a re-organisation of track access charges for the unused HSL-Zuid line had to be arranged with the Dutch government.[7]
Finally, the service, branded Fyra, was introduced, along with the formal presentation of the prototype V250 train, at the high speed train depot at Watergraafsmeer in the Netherlands on 7 July 2009.[2] The prototype underwent testing on both high speed lines, with an expected in-service date of Autumn 2010,[2] The introduction of any service on the HSL-Zuid had been delayed due to problems with the ETCS signalling system, and the line was built without any legacy safety system.[4] Services on the line began in September 2009 with conventional locomotive hauled trains, but the introduction of level 2 ETCS on the whole line was not in place, and expected by June 2010.[8]
In 2010, the Dutch transport minister Camiel Eurlings stated that any introduction of a commercial V250 service on Dutch high speed lines would not take place until December 2011.[9] Driver training on high-speed lines in the Netherlands began in March 2012, with commercial use of the V250 planned for September 2012.
A limited service of one return train per 3 hours in the Netherlands began in September 2012 between Amsterdam and Rotterdam, and the trains were also provisionally certified for use in Belgium in the same month.
Regular Fyra service between Amsterdam and Brussels with V250 trains began on 9 December 2012.
Following their introduction, the V250 trains experienced numerous technical problems. All V250s were suspended from commercial service on 16 January 2013, after only one month of service, due to reliability and safety concerns in snowy weather.[10] Two days later certification for the V250 in Belgium was revoked after a floor plate that had fallen off a V250 was found along the tracks.[11]
The continuous problems with the V250 trains caused a public outcry in both Belgium and the Netherlands, including accusations in the Belgian and Dutch media that only financial considerations were behind the decision to grant the contract to AnsaldoBreda. Initially, the maximum speed requirements were fixed at 220km/h, which would have reduced the purchase cost per seat drastically. However, after comparing offers by Alstom (manufacturers of French TGV trains) and Siemens (who manufacture the German ICE trains) with that of AnsaldoBreda, it was revealed that the Italian producer offered a cheaper train with a higher top speed of 250km/h, which ultimately gave the Italian company the edge.[12]
On 31 May 2013, the Belgian railway company NMBS/SNCB decided to stop the Fyra project, due to the many technical issues, and safety concerns. No trains had been delivered and the company refused delivery of the trains still on order, on the grounds that the manufacturer was unable to resolve the numerous issues within the contractually allowed 3 months.[13]
On 3 June 2013, the Dutch national railway company NS announced that it had made a similar evaluation, and expressed its desire to cancel the V250 project.[14] [15] The Dutch department of finance agreed, and recommended that NS do "everything in its power" to get a refund from AnsaldoBreda.[16] At a press conference on 6 June 2013, the manufacturer claimed that the trains had been handled poorly by running them too fast (i.e. at maximum commercial speed of 250km/h) under snow conditions. AnsaldoBreda also threatened to sue the railways for the damage to its reputation.[17] [18] Moreover, a report published by the consultancy firm Mott MacDonald showed how the trains were meeting the specification agreed in the contract, with technical issues that could be easily solved.[19]
On 17 March 2014, NS announced a settlement with AnsaldoBreda had been reached. The 9 NS trains would be returned to AnsaldoBreda for a refund of €125 million, €88m less than originally paid. NS would receive an additional compensation for each resold unit to a maximum of €21m.[20]
Similarly, in May 2014 NMBS/SNCB, AnsaldoBreda and its controlling company Finmeccanica announced that they reached a settlement that confirms the cancellation of the train orders and included a payment of €2.5m to NMBS/SNCB.[21]
In August 2017, Trenitalia purchased all 19 V250 sets to expand its high speed fleet and rebranded them as ETR700s. Seventeen sets will be used for services, with the remaining two used as sources of spare parts.[22] [23] [24] Testing began in February 2019.[25] The first four entered on 9 June 2019 on Frecciargento services on the Adriatic railway between Milan and Ancona with all to be in service by early 2020 with services extended to Lecce.[26]
The 8-car sets are designed to operate on 3 kV DC, 1.5 kV DC and 25 kV 50 Hz AC overhead power supply, allowing operations on both Dutch and Belgian electrified networks. Traction is distributed with alternating powered and trailer vehicles in MTMTTMTM formation.[27] Electric traction power is controlled by water-cooled IGBT inverters powering asynchronous motors. They are fitted with ETCS Level 2 and local train safety systems.[1]
The carbodies are constructed of aluminium, except the driving cab which is of steel.[1] Three of the coaches are used for first class accommodation, giving 127 first class seats out of a total seated capacity of 546.[5] First class seating is in [2+1] formation, second in [2+2] formation.[1] The design company Pininfarina also contributed to the design.[28]