British Rail Class 373 Explained

Background:
  1. 0047AB;color:#ffffff
Interiorimage:Class_373_Refurbished_e300_Interior_Standard_Class.jpg
Interiorcaption:The standard-class interior of a refurbished Class 373
Service:14 November 1994present
Family:TGV
Yearconstruction:1992–1996
Numberservice:11
Numberscrapped:16
Operator:Eurostar
Depots:Current:Former:
Carbody:Steel
Trainlength:387m (1,270feet)
Width:2.81m (09.22feet)
Maxspeed:3000NaN0
Traction:GEC Alsthom GTO-VVVF
Uicclass:(See)

The British Rail Class 373, known in France as the TGV TMST and branded by Eurostar as the Eurostar e300, is a French designed and Anglo-French built electric multiple unit train that was used for Eurostar international high-speed rail services from the United Kingdom to France and Belgium through the Channel Tunnel. Part of the TGV family, it was built with a smaller cross-section to fit the smaller loading gauge in Britain, was originally capable of operating on the UK third rail network, and has extensive fireproofing in case of fire in the tunnel. It is both the second longest—387m (1,270feet)—and second fastest train in regular UK passenger service, operating at speeds of up to 300km/h.

Known as the TransManche Super Train (TMST) or Cross-channel Super Train before being introduced in 1993, the train is designated Class 373 under the British TOPS classification system and series 373000 TGV in France. It was built by the Anglo-French company GEC-Alsthom at its factories in La Rochelle (France), Belfort (France) and Washwood Heath (Britain) and by Brugeoise et Nivelles (BN, now part of Bombardier Transportation)[1] in Bruges (Belgium).

Since the introduction of the new Class 374 e320 units from Siemens in 2015, refurbished versions of the Class 373 or TGV-TMST sets have been officially referred to as e300 by Eurostar to distinguish them from the new Velaro fleet.[2]

Types

Two types of Class 373 were constructed:

The North of London sets were intended to provide Regional Eurostar services from continental Europe to and from north of London, using the West Coast Main Line and the East Coast Main Line, but these services never came to fruition because of long proposed journey times and the proliferation of budget airlines offering cheaper fares; there were also issues with the relatively crude design of British Rail overhead electrified lines and problems with finding suitable routes within Greater London.

Construction

The sets were ordered by the railway companies involved: 16 by SNCF, four by NMBS/SNCB, and 18 by British Rail, of which seven were the North of London sets. Upon the privatisation of British Rail, the BR sets were bought by London and Continental Railways, which named its subsidiary Eurostar (UK) Limited,[5] now managed by SNCF (55%), LCR (40%) and SNCB (5%).[6]

The first Eurostar Class 373 set, 373001/373002, was built at Belfort in 1992.[7] Identified as "PS1" (Pre-Series 1), it was formed of two power cars and seven coaches, and was delivered for test running in January 1993. Its first powered runs were between Strasbourg and Mulhouse, and it was transferred to the UK for third-rail DC tests in June 1993. Full-length pre-series train PS2 was completed in May 1993.

To test the 750 V DC third rail shoes needed on the Southern Region lines in Great Britain, an eight-vehicle locomotive-hauled train was used in early 1994, consisting of a Class 73 locomotive (73205), a converted Class 33 locomotive acting as a Driving Brake Van (33115, reclassified as NZ under TOPS), and six carriages from Class 438 (4TC) multiple units 8007, 8023 and 8028.

An extra power car, numbered 3999, was built as a spare. This was required for a couple of years, when 3999 was renumbered and replaced another power car whilst it underwent rebuilding at Le Landy. It was overhauled and renumbered 3204 in 2016.[8]

Mid-life update

The 22 sets still operating for Eurostar were refurbished in 2004/05 with a new interior, designed by Philippe Starck.[9] The grey-yellow look in standard class and the grey-red look in first class were replaced with a more grey-brown scheme in standard and a grey-burnt orange in first class.

In 2008, Eurostar announced that it was beginning the process to institute a mid-life update, which would not include the Class 373 sets being used by SNCF in France.[10] As a part of the update process, the Italian company Pininfarina was contracted to redesign the interiors;[11] the first refurbished Eurostar was not originally due in service until 2012.[12] The refurbishment programme would also include an engine maintenance and a new external livery. Eurostar later planned for the process to be complete by 2014, allowing the fleet to remain in service beyond 2020,[13] but following additional delays the first refurbished train was not completed until July 2015.[14] [15]

Maintenance

When Eurostar services ran from London Waterloo International, maintenance was carried out at North Pole Depot in West London, next to the Great Western Main Line. Since November 2007, Eurostar maintains its Class 373 fleets at Temple Mills Depot in East London; in France the trains are maintained at Le Landy depot in Paris, and Brussels Forest/Vorst depot.

Current operators

Eurostar

See main article: Eurostar. Eurostar originally ran services to and from Waterloo International along existing mainline tracks, until it moved to St Pancras International in November 2007.

In October 2010, Eurostar ordered ten Class 374 "Eurostar e320" trains from Siemens to run on its existing routes from London to Paris and Brussels as well the newest route to Amsterdam alongside its Class 373 fleet. In 2016, Eurostar announced that it would retain eight Class 373 once the full Class 374 (e320) fleet were in service; the rest of the Class 373 were either stored or scrapped.[16]

As of 2020, eight trains had been refurbished with an additional three un-refurbished units in service.

Following the COVID-19 pandemic e300 trains now run from London to Paris and Brussels with the e320s, as well as exclusively operating the winter ski service to Bourg-Saint-Maurice. [17]

Former operators

Great North Eastern Railway

In May 2000, two Regional Eurostar sets were leased to GNER to operate The White Rose services from London King's Cross to York.[18] From May 2002, the White Rose was altered to operate to Leeds with a third set leased.[19] [20] Sets 33013306 all had GNER livery applied, whereas the rest carried the original Eurostar livery without logos.

The lease expired in December 2005 and they were handed back to Eurostar; they were later used to operate high speed TGV services with SNCF in northern France.[21]

When being used for GNER services, the doors of the first and last carriages were locked out of use at some stations due to the units being too long to stop in the platforms.[22]

Due to restrictions in the power supply on the Hertford Loop Line, only one set was permitted to operate on that route at any one time.[23] They were only allowed to run from King's Cross to York and Leeds because of gauging on the bridges approaching Newcastle. They were not allowed to travel to Bradford Forster Square because the electrical infrastructure beyond Leeds was insufficient. Manually locked selective door opening was used at shorter platforms.

SNCF

SNCF leased three of Eurostar's "Three Capitals" sets for use on French domestic TGV services (mainly between Paris and Lille). The sets remained in the original Eurostar livery with SNCF branding, and some sets had greyish white or silver front ends. In 2007, SNCF added more Class 373 sets to its fleet by leasing the redundant "North of London" sets from Eurostar. SNCF's lease of the sets was scheduled to last until 2011 with the option to keep the sets running for another two years.[24]

In October 2014, the three "Three Capitals" sets were withdrawn from traffic and stored, having been replaced by TGV Duplex sets. Some have since been scrapped having provided spare parts to other Class 373 sets with remaining sets still stored in Ambérieu, France.

IZY

In November 2018, a Class 373 set consisting of 373213 and 373224 was introduced into service by IZY, the low-cost service that used to run between Paris and Brussels by Thalys, replacing a TGV Réseau train.

Fleet information

Each power car has a four-digit number starting with "3" (3xxx). This designates the train as a Mark 3 TGV (Mark 1 being SNCF TGV Sud-Est; and Mark 2 being SNCF TGV Atlantique). The last digit denotes the country of ownership:

Each half-set is numbered separately.

ClassNo. builtUnit number rangeCars per half-set[25] DescriptionOperatorsUnit numbersServices operated
Class 373/022373001–37302210BR setsEurostar373001/373002
373007-373018
373021/373022
London to Paris (Gare du Nord)
London to Brussels
London to Marne-la-Vallée (for Disneyland Paris)
London to Marseille Saint-Charles
London to Bourg St Maurice[26]
Class 373/18373101-373108NMBS sets373101-373108
Class 373/232373201-373232SNCF sets373201/373202
373205–373212
373214-373223
373229–373232
IZY373213/373224Paris to Brussels
SNCF373203/373204
373225/373226
373227/373228
It was withdrawn in October 2014.
Class 373/314373301–3733148BR's setsEurostar373301-373314Former SNCF hired to operate.
Spare powercars1373999Eurostar373999Used as a refurbished and spare vehicle.

Travel classes

Eurostar operates three classes of travel on its Class 373 trains:

As Standard Premier and Business Premier use the same seating, the number of carriages allocated to each class may be varied in line with demand.

For the purpose of travel with Interrail, Eurail, and similar passes, Standard class is considered 2nd class and Standard Premier class is considered 1st class. Business Premier is considered to be above 1st class and pass users cannot travel in Business Premier without purchasing a full public rate ticket.

Train layout

Each Three Capitals set is formed of two power cars and 18 coaches. North of London and Regional Eurostar sets are formed of two power cars and 14 coaches:

Fleet list

Key:In serviceRefurbished and in serviceIn storageScrappedPreserved
Power car number Operator Status Notes
373001/373002 Eurostar Scrapped Scrapped 18 March 2018 at European Metal Recycling, Kingsbury
373003/373004 Scrapped 15 December 2016 at European Metal Recycling, Kingsbury
373005/373006 Scrapped 27 October 2016 at European Metal Recycling, Kingsbury
373007/373008 Eurostar In service Refurbished and in service
373009/373010 Eurostar Scrapped Scrapped 19 January 2018 at European Metal Recycling, Kingsbury
373011/373012 Scrapped 17 February 2018 at European Metal Recycling, Kingsbury
373013/373014 Scrapped 17 March 2017 at European Metal Recycling, Kingsbury
373015/373016 Eurostar In service Refurbished and in service
373017/373018 Eurostar Scrapped Scrapped March 2018 at the SNCF yard in Valenciennes
373019/373020 Scrapped 2 December 2016 at European Metal Recycling, Kingsbury
373021/373022
373101[27] Eurostar Preserved Withdrawn 8 August 2017, preserved at National College for Advanced Transport and Infrastructure, Doncaster[28]
373102 Withdrawn 17 August 2017, preserved at National College for Advanced Transport and Infrastructure, Birmingham
373103/373104 Eurostar Scrapped Scrapped 24 November 2017 at European Metal Recycling, Kingsbury
373105 Eurostar In storage
373106 Eurostar Preserved Preserved at Train World, Schaerbeek, near Brussels[29]
373107/373108 Eurostar Scrapped Scrapped 1 February 2017 at European Metal Recycling, Kingsbury
373201/373202 Scrapped 25 May 2018 at European Metal Recycling, Kingsbury
373203/373204 SNCF Scrapped 23 September 2014 at the SNCF yard in Vaires-sur-Marne
373205/373206 Eurostar In service Refurbished and in service
373207/373208 Eurostar In storage
373209/373210 Eurostar In service Refurbished and in service
373211/373212 Refurbished and in service
373213/373224 IZY In storage On hire to Thalys.[30] Stored at Sotteville since 10 January 2021
373215/373216 Eurostar In service
373217/373218
373219/373220 Eurostar In service Refurbished and in service
373221/373222 Refurbished and in service
373223/373214 Eurostar In service
373225/373226 SNCF Scrapped Scrapped at the SNCF Yard, Culoz
373227/373228 Scrapped 17 May 2017 at the SNCF Technicentre, Romilly-sur-Seine
373229/373230 Eurostar In service Refurbished and in service
373231/373232 Eurostar Scrapped Scrapped 22 September 2017 at European Metal Recycling, Kingsbury
373301/373302 Eurostar In storage
373303
373304Eurostar Preserved preserved at, Margate[31] Power car + a single coach[32]
373305/373306 Eurostar In storage
373307
373308 Eurostar Preserved Withdrawn 7 August 2015, preserved at National Railway Museum, York
373309/373310 Eurostar In storage
373311/373312
373313/373314 3314 to be plinthed at Temple Mills[33]
373999 Eurostar In service Spare power car, refurbished
Named units (All since removed)[34]
!Set!Name
373001/373002Tread Lightly / Voyage Vert
373003/373004Tri-City-Athlon 2010
373007/373008Waterloo Sunset
373009/373010Remembering Fromelles
373013/373014London 2012
373207/373208Michel Hollard
373209/373210The Da Vinci Code
373313/373314Entente Cordiale

Technical details

Power

All Class 373 sets were built as tri-voltage, able to operate on (LGVs, Eurotunnel, High Speed 1, UK overhead electrified lines) and 3kVDC (Belgian classic lines) using pantographs, and 750VDC (UK third rail network) using third-rail pickup shoes. The shoes were retracted when switching to overhead power.[35] After the opening of High Speed 1 in 2007, overhead electrification is used throughout; consequently, the third rail shoes were removed. Five of the SNCF-owned sets are quadri-voltage, able to operate from 1,500VDC (French lignes classiques) in the south of France, used on London–Avignon and ski services.

The trains are powered by asynchronous traction motors. There are four powered axles in each power car and two powered axles in the outer bogie of the front passenger coach (a layout used on the original SNCF TGV Sud-Est (PSE) sets) giving 12 powered axles. Each set draws up to 16MW with 12lk=onNaNlk=on of traction power, but this provides the lowest power-to-weight ratio in the TGV family.

The class uses five different standards of overhead: domestic catenary in each of Belgium, France and the United Kingdom; fixed-height catenary on LGV lines and HS1; and taller catenary in the Channel Tunnel, designed to accommodate double-deck car-carrying trains and roll-on roll-off heavy goods vehicle trains. The driver must manually lower and then raise the pantograph during the transition between catenary systems.

Signalling systems

The Class 373s are fitted with a wide range of signalling systems, these include:

When travelling at high speeds, it is not possible for the driver to accurately see colour-light signals at the side of the track. With the TVM signalling used on the high-speed lines, the target speed for the end of the current block is displayed with a flashing indication on the in-cab display for the next block if it is at a different speed. Auxiliary signalling information, including the location of neutral sections in the overhead supply and pantograph adjustment zones, is displayed in cab and by the lineside. The operation of circuit breakers over neutral sections is handled automatically on TVM-signalled lines only, and pantograph adjustments must always be manually performed by the driver.[39]

Bogies and couplings

The Class 373 was designed to comply with the Channel Tunnel safety regulations, and consists of two independent half-sets, each with its own power car. Most of the trailer cars are supported on Jacobs bogies shared between adjacent coaches, supporting both of them, with the cars next to the power cars and the two middle coaches (carriages 9 and 10 in a full-length set) not articulated. Non-shared bogies are coupled with Scharfenberg couplers, providing three points for separation in the event of an emergency in the tunnel. The electrical supply cables between a power car and the first carriage are designed to break apart during an emergency separation. In the event of a serious fire in the tunnel the passengers would be transferred into the undamaged half of the train, which would then be uncoupled from the damaged half and driven out of the tunnel.[40] If the undamaged part is the rear half of the train, this would be driven by the guard who is a fully authorised driver and occupies the rear driving cab in the tunnel for this purpose.[41] Due to limitations on driving hours, the driver and guard exchange roles for the return journey.

The articulated design is advantageous during a derailment as the carriages will tend to stay aligned. On non-articulated trains couplings may break and the carriages may jackknife. A disadvantage of articulation is that it is difficult to remove and separate the individual carriages for maintenance. Although the power cars can be uncoupled, specialised depot equipment is needed to split carriages by lifting the entire train at once. Once uncoupled, one of the carriage ends is left without a bogie at the point of separation, so a bogie frame is required to support it.

Braking systems

The Class 373s use three braking systems:

A train travelling at 3000NaN0 can slow down to stop in 65seconds, during which time the braking distance is about 2.7km (01.7miles).

Miscellaneous

To combat the hypnotic effect of driving through the tunnel at speed for 20 minutes, the power cars have a very small windscreen when compared to other high-speed trains and TGVs.[42] [43] [44]

Significant events

Accidents and incidents

There have been several minor incidents. In October 1994, there were teething problems relating to the start of operations. The first preview train, carrying 400 members of the press and media, was delayed for two hours by technical issues.[45] [46] [47] On 29 May 2002, a train was accidentally routed towards Victoria instead of London Waterloo, causing it to arrive 25 minutes late. The signalling error that caused the incorrect routeing was stated to have caused "no risk" as a result.[48]

On 5 June 2000, 373101/102, while working a Paris to London service, derailed on LGV Nord near Arras, France at 1800NaN0. 14 people were treated for light injuries or shock, with no serious injuries or deaths. The articulated design was credited with maintaining stability during the incident and the train stayed upright.[49] [50] After investigation, the incident was blamed on a component of the transmission between the motors and axles coming loose. To reduce the unsprung mass, TGV trains have the motors mounted on the car body rather than the bogies. In order for the train to be able to manoeuvre around curves, a sliding tripod assembly is used, which became dislodged.

During the night of 18–19 December 2009, there was heavy snow causing widespread disruption to roads, railways and airports across northern Europe. Five trains, one of which was 373217 + 373218, broke down inside the Channel Tunnel because snow in the engine compartment was quickly melted by the warmer temperatures in the tunnel, the resulting water causing electrical and control system faults. Eurostar commissioned an independent report to evaluate what went wrong and how future events could be prevented or better managed.[51] The report's recommendations included:

The majority of the recommendations were implemented by 23 October 2012.

Record runs

On 30 July 2003, on the opening press run of the Channel Tunnel Rail Link Section 1, 373313/314 established a new British rail speed record of, breaking the previous record of set by an Advanced Passenger Train on 20 December 1979.[52] [53] [54]

On 16 May 2006, 373209/210 created a record for the longest non-stop high-speed journey when it made the journey from London to Cannes in 7 hours 25 minutes.[55] This was a publicity event for the Da Vinci Code film; the train carried actors Tom Hanks and Audrey Tautou, with director Ron Howard, who had jointly named the train The Da Vinci Code prior to departing for the film premiere at the Cannes Film Festival.

On 4 September 2007, the first revenue train to use High Speed 1 to St Pancras set a new speed record:[56] it left Paris at 09:44 BST and arrived at St Pancras 2hours 3minutes and 39seconds later. Officials aboard recorded speeds of up to in France and in Britain.[57] [58]

Exhibitions

On several occasions sets appeared at special events and displays, such as at Lille Flandres in 1995, Rotterdam Centraal Station on 6 April 1996, Berlin-Grunewald station for Eurailspeed 1998, Madrid Chamartín railway station for Eurailspeed 2002 and at the York National Railway Museum for the Railfest 200 celebrations in 2004.

To celebrate ten years of Eurostar service, a barge was floated down the River Thames in London on 16 November 2004, with a power car on board, specially painted by Ben Langlands and Nikki Bell. Named "Language of Places on Eurostar" by Langlands and Bell, it consisted of the three-letter "destination codes for all the places where Eurostar goes or connects". The barge went under Tower Bridge,[59] past the Houses of Parliament and moored beside the museum-warship HMS Belfast.[60]

At the beginning of August 2015, ex North of London powercar 373308 was added to the national collection and put on display at the National Railway Museum in York.[61]

Model railways

In 1995, Hornby Railways launched its first version of the Eurostar in HO gauge which can be extended from four to six cars,[62] Hornby Railways then produced a OO gauge train pack model which was released in October 1996, which again can be extended from four cars to six cars.[63] Hornby Railways released its first OO Gauge train set of the Class 373 in 1997.[64]

See also

References

Sources

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: BN history . https://web.archive.org/web/20110706133819/http://www.abvv-bombardier.dommel.be/ . 6 July 2011 . nl .
  2. Passenger volumes up at Eurostar . Railway Gazette International . 26 October 2014 . 22 April 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180422095401/http://www.railwaygazette.com/news/single-view/view/passenger-volumes-up-at-eurostar.html . dead .
  3. News: Leadbeater. Chris. 13 November 2019. How has Eurostar changed in 25 years – and whatever happened to its night trains?. The Telegraph. 0307-1235.
  4. Web site: Eurostar seating plan . RailEurope.com . 30 April 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20091001014310/http://www.raileurope.co.uk/DOCUMENTS/PDFS/TRAIN%20SEATING%20PLANS/EUROSTAR/EUROSTAR%20SEATING%20PLAN.PDF . 1 October 2009 . dead .
  5. Web site: Ownership & Structure . 11 May 2009 . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090508110025/http://www.eurostar.com/UK/uk/leisure/about_eurostar/company_information/ownership_structure.jsp . 8 May 2009 . dmy-all .
  6. Web site: Information about Eurostar . . 4 December 2014 . 31 August 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150831023818/http://www.eurostar.com/uk-en/about-eurostar/company-information/behind-the-scenes . dead .
  7. Web site: GEC Alsthom: a marriage a la Jack Sprat . Management Today . 25 August 2009.
  8. GBRF to haul Eurostars for scrap . . November 2016 . 6 .
  9. News: Multi-million facelift for Eurostar . BBC News. 27 May 2003. 27 December 2007.
  10. News: Eurostar to tender for refurbishment . Railnews.co.uk . 8 September 2008 . 5 March 2009.
  11. Eurostar refurbishment design contract awarded . . 8 April 2009 . 20 December 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120414235334/http://www.railwaygazette.com/news/single-view/view/eurostar-refurbishment-design-contract-awarded.html . 14 April 2012 . dmy-all .
  12. News: Eurostar interiors to get makeover by Italian luxury car designer. . 9 April 2009 . London . Rebecca . Smithers . 9 April 2009.
  13. News: Eurostar invites bidders to undertake major interior refurbishment of fleet . https://web.archive.org/web/20090620081818/http://viking.eukhost.com/~keepingt/rm/162/RMAN_162.pdf . dead . 20 June 2009 . 8 September 2008 . Rail Management . Dunstable, Beds. . 5.
  14. Eurostar refurbishment behind schedule. 19 November 2014. 1 May 2015. Paul. Prentice. Rail Magazine.
  15. News: Eurostar unveils refurbished high-speed train. 21 July 2015. 29 July 2015. David. Briginshaw. International Railway Journal.
  16. Web site: Eurostar prepares to scrap 186mph Class 373s. Clinnick. Richard. 20 September 2016. Rail Magazine. 20 September 2016.
  17. Web site: Travelling on the older, refurbished Eurostar trains . 3 February 2023 . ShowMeTheJourney . en.
  18. News: Eurostar trains come to aid of east coast passengers . The Guardian. 29 July 1999 . 4 August 2009 . London . Keith . Harper.
  19. White Rose to run to Leeds with extra trains . Rail . 428 . 6 February 2002 . 16 .
  20. Early East Coast Christmas as Leeds White Rose starts . Rail . 437 . 12 June 2002 . 6 .
  21. Regional Eurostars to France . . 135 . March 2007 . 39 .
  22. Class 91s to replace GNER's Eurostars . Rail . 527 . 23 November 2005 . 14–15 .
  23. News: Lack of power cuts rail service . The Guardian. 16 June 2000 . 4 August 2009 . London . Keith . Harper.
  24. News: Trains for high-speed link handed over to the French . The Times. 6 July 2007 . 9 April 2009 . London . Ben . Webster.
  25. including power car.
  26. Avignon and Alps ski-train services are worked by SNCF quad-voltage sets.
  27. [Power car]
  28. Donated Eurostars arrive at HS colleges . . 190 . October 2017 . 13 .
  29. Eurostar preserved in Belgium . . 277 . January 2019 . 68 .
  30. Web site: [FR] First Eurostar train in Izy livery for Paris – Brussels low-cost services]. Railcolor News. 17 November 2018. 18 November 2018.
  31. Eurostar Preserved . . January 2020 . 24 .
  32. Web site: Eurostar 373304 Class 373. 5 July 2021. www.theonetoonecollection.co.uk. 9 July 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210709184319/http://www.theonetoonecollection.co.uk/the-one-one-collection-museum/on-site/eurostar-373304-class-373. dead.
  33. Entente Cordiale power car saved . The Railway Magazine . 1426 . January 2020 . 96 .
  34. Book: Haydock, David. Channel Tunnel: 25 Years of Experience. Platform 5. 2020. 978-1-909431-77-5. 56. English.
  35. Web site: High-speed third rail shoegear . Institution of Mechanical Engineers . 6 May 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110708212645/http://md1.csa.com/partners/viewrecord.php?requester=gs&collection=TRD&recid=42755AN&q=Eurostar+High+Speed&uid=1430138&setcookie=yes . 8 July 2011 .
  36. Book: A. J. L., Pincock. Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers. 212. 1 May 1998. 235–251. Part F: Journal of Rail and Rapid Transit. 10.1243/0954409981530832. 3. 110282209.
  37. Web site: The French signalling system.. Davroux. Thierry. www.thuthuboutick.fr. 25 May 2018. 4 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304121951/http://www.thuthuboutick.fr/bal/signaux4eng.html. dead.
  38. Web site: HS1 New Operator Guide. February 2013. High Speed One. DOC. https://web.archive.org/web/20160623102417/http://highspeed1.co.uk/media/1675/new_operator_guide_february_2013_final_version.docx. 23 June 2016. dead.
  39. Eurostar Driver's eye view. 2004. Documentary. 12:56 min.
  40. Who is going to use the new high speed line? . 579 . 23 November 2007 . Christian. Wolmar. Christian Wolmar. Rail Magazine . 11 May 2009.
  41. News: Eurostar services could be disrupted by strike in run up to Christmas . 27 November 2008. David. Millward. The Daily Telegraph. 11 May 2009 . London.
  42. Web site: Features of the Eurostar: The Windscreen. Keating. Oliver. High Speed Rail (HSR). https://web.archive.org/web/20080413114416/http://www.o-keating.com/hsr/eurostar.htm. 13 April 2008. dead. 29 September 2010. it was found that going down a tunnel at a fast rate for several minutes induced a hypnotic effect on the driver.
  43. Web site: Eurostar Depot. The Newham Story. Newham Council. Robert. Rogers. if a normal size window and side windows were used, it causes Hypnotic effect on the driver when travelling through the Tunnel.. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110714172633/http://www.newhamstory.com/node/850. 14 July 2011.
  44. Web site: Class 373 Eurostar high speed electric multiple units. The Gravesend Railway Enthusiasts Society. Bob. Poole. 27 September 2010. the small size of the drivers window is deliberate, to avoid hypnotic effects while in tunnel.. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110817123919/http://gres.org.uk/page16.html. 17 August 2011.
  45. News: Channel train opens with a breakdown . . Wolmar . Christian . Christian Wolmar. 21 October 1994 . 10 May 2009 . London.
  46. News: Channel train's new breakdown . . 22 October 1994. Simon. Midgley . 23 May 2009 . London.
  47. 10.2307/3107245 . 3107245 . Managing British Public Opinion of the Channel Tunnel . Richard. Rogers . Technology and Culture . 36 . 3 . July 1995 . 636–640 . Society for the History of Technology. 258431282 .
  48. News: Eurostar sent down wrong track . Clark . Andrew . 29 May 2002 . . 11 May 2009 . London.
  49. News: Eurostar train derails in France . . 10 May 2009 . 5 June 2000.
  50. Web site: TGVweb TGV Accidents article . trainweb.org . 10 May 2009.
  51. News: Eurostar Independent Review February 12, 2010 . 23 October 2012 . London.
  52. News: Train smashes speed record. BBC News. 30 July 2003. 2 June 2010.
  53. Book: Eurostar breaks UK high speed record . . 6 July 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110607014728/http://www.eurostar.com/UK/be/leisure/about_eurostar/press_release/press_archive_2003/30_07_03.jsp . 7 June 2011 . dead . dmy-all .
  54. Web site: Eurostar history . . 10 May 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20091029104058/http://www.eurostar.com/UK/be/leisure/about_eurostar/company_information/eurostar_history.jsp . 29 October 2009 . dead.
  55. Web site: Eurostar sets new Guinness World Record with cast and filmmakers of Columbia Pictures' The Da Vinci Code . 27 May 2009 . Eurostar . 17 June 2006 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070514152951/http://www.eurostar.com/UK/uk/leisure/about_eurostar/press_release/press_archive_2006/17_05_2006_world_record.jsp . 14 May 2007 .
  56. Web site: Eurostar breaks UK high speed record . 12 April 2007 . Erik's Rail News . 30 July 2003.
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