Streamliner cars (rail) explained

The streamliner cars are a class of streamlined passenger railroad cars built from the 1930s through the 1960s for long distance passenger train services in North America.

Predecessors

The first streamliner in the United States was the M-10000 in service with the Union Pacific Railroad in February 1934. The second was the Pioneer Zephyr in service with theChicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad. Both were built as Diesel Multiple-Units; the M-10000 was made of aluminum and the Pioneer Zephyr of stainless steel.

Modernization

In 1944 American Car and Foundry (ACF) was visited by the Spanish inventor Goicoechea looking for a manufacturer for his invention, the lightweight articulated streamlined Talgo. ACF and Goicoechea signed the contract on December 8, 1945 and ACF began fabricating three trainsets, two for Spain and one for demonstration and experimental purposes in the USA. ACF built the Talgo using a lightmetal body like Budd's Pioneer Zephyr including the non-European observation cars at the rear. It wasn't until 1955 that ACF could sell the Talgo concept but ACF got familiar with the techniques needed.[1] After World War II the railroad companies in the United States wanted to modernize their fleets of passenger cars. They chose the flexibility of individual cars instead of multiple-units or Talgo. However the design of the streamlined cars was derived from the Pioneer Zephyr, although the Pullman cars got a smooth body surface and the others the typical ribbed body surface. The streamliner cars were built by three railcar manufacturers: the Budd Company, Pullman Standard, and ACF. Nine primary types were produced:

In operation

From the 1930s through the 1950s, many trains in the United States and Canada were upgraded with streamliner cars. One of the most notable trains equipped with such cars was the California Zephyr, jointly operated by Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad (CB&Q), Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad (D&RGW) and Western Pacific Railroad (WP). By 1955 the Canadian National Railway (CN) and the Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) also operated trains with streamliner cars, such CP's The Canadian and CN's Super Continental.

OperatorService(s)introduced
Champion1939
Baltimore and Ohio RailroadColumbian1931
Chicago, Burlington and Quincy RailroadPioneer Zephyr1934
Great Northern RailwayEmpire Builder1929
Louisville and Nashville RailroadHumming Bird1946
Missouri Pacific RailroadTexas Eagle1948
Pennsylvania RailroadBroadway Limited1912
New York Central Railroad20th Century Limited1902
Northern Pacific RailwayNorth Coast Limited1900
Denver and Rio Grande Western RailroadRio Grande Zephyr1970
Super Chief1937
Seaboard Air Line RailroadSilver Meteor1939
Southern Pacific RailroadCoast Daylight1922
Western Pacific RailroadCalifornia Zephyr1949
Canadian National RailwaySuper Continental1955
Canadian Pacific RailwayThe Canadian1955

In 1971, Amtrak took over all intercity passenger rail service in the United States. Approximately 1200 streamliner cars were inherited by Amtrak to run these services. In the late 1970s Amtrak began a program to rebuild these cars to use Head-end power (HEP). These rebuilt cars were known as the Heritage Fleet. This rebuild program extended the lifetime of most of the cars by about 20-40 years, as most were used until the late 1990s/early 2000s, with some cars, chiefly baggage and dining cars, used into the late 2010s, until Amtrak retired all of its heritage equipment in 2019. The Canadian, now operated by Via Rail, is the only train in North America that still operates with a full "streamliner" trainset.

External links

Notes and References

  1. M. Galán Eruste, De un sueño a la alta velocidad, Las Matas 2010,