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Rolling Stock - II
Contents
This page
Freight Wagons
Brakes
Couplers
Power Generation
Miscellaneous
On Page 1
Passenger Coaches
Air Conditioning
Preserved Rolling Stock
Freight Wagons
Q. What are the loading gauge restrictions (maximum dimensions) on IR wagons?
Please see the 1971 standards for rolling stock dimensions and also the older, 1929 standards for rolling stock
dimensions. Also of potential interest in this connection are the dimensions of tracks.
Q. How are freight cars classifed by IR?
The following codes are used now for classifying freight cars. The classification scheme is not entirely systematic.
Older wagons especially have codes that are not easily explained in this way. But in general an optional gauge
code is followed by a type code which is followed by an indication of the coupler and whether the wagon is airbraked.
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Gauge code
M : (prefix) MG
N : (prefix) NG
Wagon type code
B : (prefix) Bogie wagon (sometimes omitted)
BV : Brake van
V : Brake/parcel van (see above for brake van codes)
O : Open wagon (gondola)
C : Covered wagon (boxcar)
F : Flat car
FK : Flat car for container transport
FU : Well wagon
LA : Low flat car with standard buffer height
LB : Low flat car with low buffer height
LAB : Low flat car, one end with low buffers, the other with high buffers
R : Rail-carrying wagon
T : Tanker (additional letters indicate material carried)
U : Well wagon
W : Well wagon
K : Open wagon: ballast / material / refuse transport (older wagons)
C : Centre discharge
S : Side discharge
R : Rapid (forced) discharge, bottom discharge
X : Both centre and side discharge
X : (also?) High sided
Y : Low (medium?) side walls
L : Low sided
H : Heavy load
The B indication is sometimes omitted as all new wagons are bogie stock.
Following the type code in the classification code a letter may denote the type of coupler, nowadays optional, as
all new freight cars are fitted with centre buffer couplers (CBC). An 'N' suffix is for 'pneumatic', or air-braked
wagons. Most newer stock that is air-braked also has CBC couplers, so the 'C' is usually dropped. E.g., BOXN
for air-braked BOX wagons, not BOXCN. Almost all the older stock is vacuum-braked.
Coupler, brake, and other suffixes:
C = Centre buffer coupler (CBC)
R = Screw coupling only
T = Transition coupler (CBC with additional side buffers and screw coupling)
N = Air-braked
M = (suffix) Military
Most wagons are made of steel, except for a few special-purpose wagons. Some specialized wagons have been
made with stainless steel or special steel alloys to reduce corrosion. Some Recently [12/04] with the rising price
of steel IR has been looking into using steel substitutes, and plans have also been drawn up for the production of
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aluminium-body wagons (see BOBNAL, BOBRAL below). It is thought that about 750 aluminium wagons will
be built in 2005-2006. Interestingly, some of these are said to be of a 4-wheel design. The tare weight is
expected to be reduced by about 4.2 tonnes. A few aluminium wagons are already in use on a trial basis.
Aluminium wagons besides being of a lower cost and having a lower tare weight, also have the advantage of
suffering less corrosion in many circumstances. A typical rake with aluminium wagons instead of steel ones would
carry almost 240t more goods.
As seen in the permanent way section, many BG routes have rails that allow axle loads of up to 25t, or in many
cases 22.5t. However, normal operating procedures on IR restrict BG wagons to 20.3t of axle load. Now
[3/05] it has been proposed that this be raised to 23t.
Descriptions of some wagon types follow below.
BOX High-sided bogie open wagon. Side discharge arrangement. 55 ton capacity, 25 ton tare. Used for coal
and other bulk goods. About 7,000 of these are in use [2006]; this class is in decline since the advent of the
BOXN and other variants. There used to be over 14,000 of these in the 1990s, and about 8,800 as late as
2005. BOXT, BOXR, and BOXC are the same with transition, screw, and CBC couplers, respectively.
BOXNBOX variant: High-sided bogie open wagon with pneumatic
brakes, high tensile CBC couplers, CASNUB cast steel bogies,
cartridge tapered roller bearings. Perhaps the most common wagon,
there are around 64,000 or more of these in use [2002-2006]. Used for
bulk movement of material commodities (coal, iron ore, stone, etc.).
Max. axle load
20.32t
12
8
Tare
22.47t
58.81t
64+2 = 66t (RC 13/2007)
86.47+2 = 88.47t
Capacity
56.3m3
Width
Height
Length over headstock
3.2m
3.225m
9.784m
10.71m
6.524m
59
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5233.53t
60 (CC+8+2), 75 (CC)
80 (CC+8+2), 80 (CC)
60km/h (CC+8+2),
75km/h (CC)
80km/h (CC+8+2),
80km/h (CC)
AAR 'E' high-tensile coupler with high-capacity draft gear. CASNUB 22 NLB Cast Steel bogies. Air brakes
and parking brakes. Rated speed 80km/h (some older ones were rated at 75km/h).
BOXN-HA The BOXNHA type is a BOXN variant with improved bogies and higher capacity, fit for 100km/h.
(Suffix 'HA' = 'high axle load'.) Uses IRF 108HS cast steel bogies with secondary suspension, CBC couplers,
and single-pipe air brakes. The wagon is similar to the BOXN wagon in length and width, but taller by 225mm.
Rake loads rise to 3783t from the 3411t of ordinary BOXN wagons.
These wagons were designed for higher speed (100km/h) operations with higher axle loads (22.1t for coal, 23.5t
for iron ore). 301 of these wagons were produced between Nov. 1999 and March 2000 and at first allocated to
the Hospet - Chennai section. However, the track on this section could not handle the higher axle loads (the
wagons required 52kg 90 UTS rails) and upgrade plans were dropped, so the decision was made to run the
BOXN-HA wagons with reduced loading and stop the manufacture of more of them. About 400 more of them
were eventually manufactured before production was halted permanently. RDSO later developed the BOXNHS variants (see below) which later became more widely used for high-speed iron ore and coal loads. BOXNHA production has not resumed although now many main line sections have 60kg rails and are quite capable of
handling the wagons' higher axle loads. It appears that the poor condition of some bridges and other track
structures may have been the reason behind halting the BOXN-HA production. Had this wagon come into
general use, freight rakes of 5220 tonnes could have been run. These wagons number about 731 as of 2006.
Max. axle load
Spring grouping per bogie - outer
Spring grouping per bogie - inner
Tare
Payload (RDSO spec.)
Payload (revised, incl. tolerance)
22.9t
Some variants 23.5t.
14
14
23.17t
65.23t
66+2 = 68t
(RC 102/2007)
88.40t
91.17t
NA
Width
Height
Length over headstock
3200mm
3450mm
9780mm
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10713mm
NA
5392.8t
60km/h (22.9t), 100km/h (20.32t)
BOXN-HS BOXNHS wagons are converted BOXN wagons fitted with CASNUB HS high-speed bogies
raising the max. speed to 100km/h. Developed by RDSO after the BOXN-HA wagons didn't work out; it has a
8% lower capacity compared to the BOXN-HA. Many BOXN-HS wagons have been seen [8/05] with a
name, 'Pragati', stenciled on them. It is not known whether these represent some sort of class name or a variant
design.
Max. axle load
Spring grouping per bogie - outer
Spring grouping per bogie - inner
20.32t
14
12
Tare
Payload (RDSO spec.)
22.47t
58.81t
64+2 = 66t
(RC 13/2007)
81.28t
86.47+2 = 88.47t
NA
Width
Height
Length over headstock
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
59
Total train load (incl. BVZC, RDSO spec., excl. tolerance) 4809.32t
Total train load (incl. BVZC, CC+8+2)
5399.32 (BOXNHSM1) A.L. - 22.9 tt
Total train load (incl. BVZC, revised, incl. tolerance)
5233.53t
RDSO design speed (loaded)
RDSO design speed (empty)
CRS sanctioned speed (loaded, SER)
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BOXN-HL BOXNHL wagons are like BOXNHS wagons but about 250mm longer, and made of stainless
steel and cold rolled sections. Air-braked, CBC couplers, roller bearings.
Max. axle load
22.9t
14
14
20.6t
71.0t
70t
(RC 29/2009)
91.6t
90.6t
Capacity
Width
Height
61.05m3
3250mm
3301mm
10034mm
10963mm
6690mm
58
(RC 05/2009)
Total train load (incl. BVZC, RDSO spec., excl. tolerance) 5326.6t
Total train load (incl. BVZC, CC+8+2)
NA
Total train load (incl. BVZC, revised, incl. tolerance)
5268.6t
RDSO design speed (loaded)
75km/h
Standard rake size (2007)
100km/h
UP
UP
BOXN-CR BOXNCR wagons are corrosion-resistant BOXN wagons built with 3CR12 stainless steel (a
proprietary version of grade 409 stainless steel). Only about 580 of these (10 rakes) have been built so far
[4/02] as part of ongoing service trials. Note: In 2006, IR's published statistics reported holdings of only 286 of
these wagons; it's not clear whether this is a clerical error or whether nearly 300 of them have been
retired/scrapped in recent years.
BOXN-LW The BOXNLW wagons are low-tare-weight BOXN wagons ('LW' = 'low weight') The tare weight
is reduced by 1.8t compared to BOXN wagons, and the payload correspondingly increased by the same
amount. This wagon has a stainless steel body to reduce corrosion. About 250 of these (4 rakes) have been bult
so far [12/04] as part of ongoing service trials Air-braked, CBC coupler, roller bearings..
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20.32t
12
8
Tare
Payload (RDSO spec.)
Payload (revised, incl. tolerance)
Gross load (RDSO spec., excl. tolerance)
Gross load (revised, incl. tolerance)
20.41t
60.87t
81.28t
-t
Capacity
61.09m3
3250mm
3341mm
9784mm
10713mm
Width
Height
Length over headstock
Length over coupler faces
100km/h
UP
UP
BOXN-AL BOXNAL wagons are BOXN wagons with an aluminium body on top of a steel underframe. The
aluminium alloy is 'RDE-40', also used in the BOBR-AL wagons. These wagons are naturally lighter and allow a
higher payload to be carried for the same axle load.
BOXN-EL The BOXNEL wagons are BOXN wagons with 'enhanced loading' features, designed for
transporting coal, ores, etc. CASNUB 22NLC bogies, CBC couplers, single-pipe air brakes.
Max. axle load
Spring grouping per bogie - outer
Spring grouping per bogie - inner
Tare
25t
14
14
22.47t
75.73t
75+2 = 77t
(RC 109/2007)
98.0t
99.47t
Capacity
56.29m3
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Width
Height
Length over headstock
Length over coupler faces
Distance between bogie centres
3200mm
3233mm
9784mm
10713mm
6524mm
60km/h
BOXN-25M BOXN variants produced by Golden Rock Workshops (2012) designed for a 25t axle load and
correspondingly higher carrying capacity. Swing motion bogies.
BOXS BOX wagon with side discharge / flap doors, siding roof (rare)
??? (Code not known) [12/06] New low-height BOXN variants have been seen coupled in sets of 5 wagons
just like the BLCA/BLCB formations (q.v.). Each coupled group of 5 wagons has a CBC at either end. Within
each group the wagons have slackless drawbars connecting them to one another. Like the BLCA/BLCB, these
are expected to allow IR to carry taller loads without running into problems with height clearances.
BCN Bogie covered 8-wheeler wagon, CASNUB bogies, air-braked, CBC. Originally developed in 1984 for
carrying bagged commodities. Original model had entirely riveted construction. This variant has undergone some
changes over the years. Newer ones have snubbers and nested coil springs under bolster, elastomeric pads, with
secondary suspension system.
Max. axle load
Spring grouping per bogie - outer
Spring grouping per bogie - inner
Tare
Payload (RDSO spec.)
Payload (revised, incl. tolerance)
Gross load (RDSO spec., excl. tolerance)
Gross load (revised, incl. tolerance)
Capacity
Width
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20.32t
12
8
27.2t
Older: 25.9t
54.08t
61+1 = 62t
(RC 13/2007)
81.28t
89.2t
104m3
NA
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Height
NA
3671.8t
60km/h (CC+6+2), 75km/h (CC)
80km/h (CC+6+2), 80km/h (CC)
UP (CC+6+2), 75km/h (CC)
UP (CC+6+2), 80km/h (CC)
20.32t
12
8
24.55t
56.73t
63+1 = 64t
(RC 13/2007)
81.28t
88.55t
106.5m3
3200mm
4017mm
13521m
14450mm
9500
Capacity
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UP (CC+6+2), 75km/h
UP (CC+6+2), 80km/h (CC)
AAR 'E' high-tensile coupler with high-capacity draft gear. CASNUB 22 NLB cast steel bogies. Snubbers and
nested coil springs under bolster, elastomeric pads, etc., with secondary suspension system. Air brakes and
parking brakes. Rated for 80km/h.
BCNA-HSBCNAHS wagons are a modified design of the BCNA
wagons with CASNUB HS high-speed bogies raising the max. speed to
100km/h. These wagons are characterised by a patch of red/white
horizontal stripes on the top left.
BCCN BCN variants for carrying bulk cement. Loading is through ports
at the top; unloading via chutes at the bottom.
BCCN/BCCNA/BCCNB Automobile Carriers
A few wagons also marked BCCN like the cement carrier class noted
above are actually single- or double-decker wagons intended for
carrying automobiles; these have a low platform with 840mm wheel
diameter and are fitted with air brakes. Only about 50 of these are thought to exist [4/02]. The explanation of the
class code is that they are thought to have been made by taking old BCCN wagons and modifying them. Also
see 'NMG' below. They were built in 1997 by the Golden Rock Workshops based on designs from RDSO, and
were intended to carry Maruti brand automobiles. These come in two varieties, 'A', and 'B', classified BCCNA
and BCCNB. More recently [11/04] another variation, BCCNR (BCCN-R), has been spotted - see separate
entry below.
BCCNR Automobile carrier wagons introduced in 2004. these are single-deck covered wagons with 10t
capacity and 28.5t tare weight, and a low platform with 840mm diameter wheels. Some of these were limited to
65km/h but later were apparently approved for 100km/h. These were designed to capture more automobile
traffic, especially from the south where many automobile plants are, following the introduction of different car
models by various manufacturers in recent years which could not be carried on the original wagons (taller and
bigger cars can now be carried). These were built starting in 2000 after some trials of in early 1999 of several
variant designs proposed by RDSO. BCCNR wagons are not thought to number more than about 35.
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71.49t
72+1 = 73t (RC 13/2007)
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92.2t
92.71+1 = 93.71t
NA
Width
Height
Length over headstock
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
4980.43t
65km/h
80km/h
UP (22.9t ) 65km/h (20.32t)
BOY-EL BOYEL wagons are low-sided bogie open wagons - a BOY variant for 'enhanced loading'. Designed
for transporting coal, ores, etc. CASNUB 22NLC bogies, CBC couplers, single-pipe air brakes.
Max. axle load
Spring grouping per bogie - outer
25t
14
14
Tare
Payload (RDSO spec.)
20.71t
77.29t
77+2 = 79t
(RC 109/2007)
98.0t
99.7t
Capacity
37.8m3
Width
Height
3134mm
2450mm
11000mm
11929mm
7330mm
NA
5297.9t
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45+5km/h
60+5km/h
UP
UP
BOBS Open hopper car with bottom/side discharge (often used for ballast and ores) Similar to the
BOBR/BOBRN wagons, except that the discharge is to the side (clear of the tracks). Underside doors on the
wagons are operated pneumatically, and can be controlled by a lineside triggering mechanism. The various 'BOB'
variants together number about 1,500 wagons.
Tare
30.4t
25t
14
14
Tare
30.4t
67.6t
68+2 = 70t
(RC 109/2007)
98.0t
100.4t
Capacity
Width
NA
NA
Height
NA
NA
NA
NA
53
Total train load (incl. BVZC, RDSO spec., excl. tolerance) 5207.8t
Total train load (incl. BVZC, CC+8+2)
NA
Total train load (incl. BVZC, revised, incl. tolerance)
5335t
45+5km/h
55+5km/h
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45km/h
12
8
Tare
Payload (RDSO spec.)
26.78t
54.5t
59+2 = 61t
(RC 13/2007 )
81.28t
85.78+2 =
87.78t
Capacity
Width
NA
NA
Height
3.05m
10.718m
NA
7.47m
53
4321.64t
NA
75km/h
75km/h
These wagons have the usual CASNUB 22 NLB bogies and newer ones are provided with CBC, although there
are still many with transition couplers.
BOBC Open hopper car with bottom/centre discharge
BOBX Open hopper car with both bottom/side and bottom/centre discharge
BOBR Open hopper car with rapid (pneumatic) bottom discharge doors. Same as BOBRN (see below) except
that they have vacuum brakes and are rated for lower speeds (80km/h?).
BOBRNOpen hopper car with rapid (pneumatic) bottom discharge doors, air-braked. BOBRN and BOBR
(see above) are most often used for carrying coal to thermal power plants, and also for ore, stone, track ballast,
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etc. Each wagon holds some 60t of coal loaded from the top and
unloaded from the bottom by means of the pneumatically operated
doors. The contents of the wagon can be discharged completely in about
15 seconds.
The door-opening mechanism is triggered by lineside devices running on
a 24V or 32V DC source. As the wagons in a rake pass by the
triggering devices, their doors open and their contents are unloaded into
the pits below the tracks (the 'merry-go-round' system). The versions used by the power plants have 12 bottom
doors, whereas IR uses variants that have 8 doors.
Max. axle load
(CC+6+2)UP(CC) 20.32t
(CC+6+2)UP(CC) 12
(CC+6+2)UP(CC) 8
Tare
Payload (RDSO spec.)
(CC+6+2)UP
(CC) 25.6t
(CC+6+2)UP(CC) 55.68t
(CC+6+2)UP(CC) 60 +2 = 62t
(RC 13/2007 )
(CC+6+2)UP(CC) 81.28t
(CC+6+2)UP(CC) 85.6+2 = 87.6tt
Capacity
57.2m3
Width
3.5m
Height
Length over headstock
3.735m
9.671m
NA
6.79m
(CC+6+2)UP(CC) 59
UP(CC)
(CC+6+2) 4809.32t
UP(CC)
5281.32t (CC+6+2)
A.L. -22.9 tt
(CC+6+2)UP(CC) 5182.2t
UP (CC) 60km/h (CC+6+2)
75km/h (CC)
UP (CC) 70km/h (CC+6+2)
70km/h (CC)
(CC+6+2)UP(CC) 60km/h
(CC+6+2)UP(CC)
(CC+6+2)UP(CC) 65km/h
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(CC+6+2)UP(CC)
Length over coupler faces 11.6m. AAR 'E' high-tensile coupler with high-capacity draft gear. CASNUB 22
NLB cast steel bogies. Air brakes and parking brakes. Rated at 100km/h. (Power plant versions without air
brakes are rated at a lower speed.)
Some BOBRN wagons have been made of aluminium (BOBRAL / BOBR-AL). In these, the underframe is
made of steel while the rest of the body is made of aluminium. The maximum axle load is the same as that of the
regular BOBRN (20.32t), but the tare weight is reduced by 3.2t and the payload correspondingly increased by
the same amount. The aluminium alloy used is 'RDE-40', and has 4% zinc, 2% magnesium, 0.35% manganese,
and 0.15% zirconium.
BOSTAn open bogie wagon, for carrying finished steel products, but also used for coal, stone, etc. BOST-HS
is the high-speed version.
Max. axle load
20.32t
12
8
25t
56.28t
61+2 = 63t
(RC 13/2007)
81.28t
86+2 = 88t
Capacity
NA
Width
Height
3.1m
3.08m
12.8m
NA
8.8m
43
Total train load (incl. BVZC, RDSO spec., excl. tolerance) 3508.84t
Total train load (incl. BVZC, CC+8+2)
Total train load (incl. BVZC, revised, incl. tolerance)
NA
3797.8t
This has the usual CASNUB 22 NLB bogies (high-speed version fitted with CASNUB HS bogies), and nontransition CBC. Air-braked.
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20.32t
12
8
Tare
23.63t
57.65t
62+2 = 64t
(RC 13/2007)
81.28t
87.63t
Capacity
Width
NA
3045mm
Height
2650mm
13716mm
NA
9144mm
40
Total train load (incl. BVZC, RDSO spec., excl. tolerance) 3265t
Total train load (incl. BVZC, CC+8+2)
Total train load (incl. BVZC, revised, incl. tolerance)
NA
3519t
100km/h
100km/h
75km/h
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100km/h
??? 'Crop' wagon for steel plants. Flat platform for finished steel goods, with low sidewalls.
Tare 25t, payload 55t. Length 8.33m, width of carbody 2.66m, height 2.19m. Screw coupling, no continous
brakes (only parking brake). Diamond frame bogies. Limited to 25km/h.
BFR Bogie flat rail-carrying wagon (64 tonne load)
BFU Bogie flat type wagon : for transporting motor vehicles.
BOM Bogie open military wagon.
BRHBogie rail-carrying flat car with roller bearings. This has end-plates that can be removed.
BRHT Bogie rail wagon, heavy load (80 tonne load), with UIC bogies, transition coupler
BRN Developed in 1994 as an improvement on the older BRH wagon. Air-braked wagon with CASNUB
bogies, for rails and steel products and similar heavy loads. These were originally built with 58t capacity, but
around 2,200 of them are being downgraded [10/02] to 48t capacity. BRNA-HS is the high-speed version of
these.
Max. axle load
Spring grouping per bogie - outer
20.32t
12
8
24.39t
56.88t
63+2 = 65t
(RC 13/2007)
81.28t
89.39t
NA
Width
Height
NA
NA
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NA
NA
NA
40
Total train load (incl. BVZC, RDSO spec., excl. tolerance) 3265t
Total train load (incl. BVZC, CC+8+2)
NA
Total train load (incl. BVZC, revised, incl. tolerance)
RDSO design speed (loaded)
3589.4t
65km/h
75km/h
65km/h
75km/h
BRNA A variant of the BRN wagon developed in 1992. Air-braked, CBC couplers, roller bearings.
Max. axle load
20.32t
12
8
Tare
Payload (RDSO spec.)
23.54t
57.91t
62+2 = 64t
(RC 13/2007)
81.45t
87.54t
Capacity
Width
NA
NA
Height
NA
13716mm
14645mm
9144mm
40
Total train load (incl. BVZC, RDSO spec., excl. tolerance) 3271.8t
Total train load (incl. BVZC, CC+8+2)
NA
Total train load (incl. BVZC, revised, incl. tolerance)
3515.4t
65km/h
75km/h
65km/h
75km/h
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BTO Bogie tanker wagon for heavy oil, furnace oil, etc.
BTORX, MBTORX Bogie tanker wagon for vegetable oil, and its MG variant
BTP, BTPNThe most common bogie tanker wagon seen today. Used
primarily for liquid petroleum products (petrol, naphtha, kerosene,
diesel, furnace oil, etc.), and also for molasses, vegetable oil, etc. An
enhanced version, the BTFLN, has been developed recently (see
below). The payload to tare ratio for this tanker is 2.0. There are about
7,300 of these [2006].
Tare
27.0t
Payload
Axle load
54.28t / 70.4m3
20.32t
11.491m
12.42m
4.265m
Width
3.126m
Distance between bogie centres 8.391m
Inside diameter of tanker is 2.85m. CASNUB 22 NLB bogies, CBC non-transition couplers. BTPN variants
are air-braked.
BTFLNImproved frameless bogie tanker wagon, successor to the venerable BTPN (see above) [2004]. Used
primarily for liquid petroleum products (petrol, naphtha, kerosene, diesel, furnace oil, etc.), and also for
vegetable oil and other liquid cargo. The BTFLN wagon was developed by RITES in collaboration with
Azovmash of Ukraine. The tankers are frameless and have no center sill. The tractive and buffing forces are
taken up by the barrel body itself, so that it is subject to biaxial stresses. The tare weight is lower than that of the
BTPN by nearly 3.5t, and the payload is higher for the same axle load. The payload to tare ratio rises to 2.4 with
this tanker.
Tare
23.53t
Payload
57.75t / 76m3
Axle load
Length over headstock
20.32t
11.491m
12.42m
4.265m (?)
Width
3.126m
Distance between bogie centres 8.391m
Inside diameter of tanker is 2.85m. CASNUB 22 NLB bogies, CBC non-transition couplers. BTPN variants
are air-braked.
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26.0t
Payload
55.28t / 38.75m3
20.32t
Axle load
27.9t
Payload
58t / 62m3
Axle load
20.32t
Length over coupler faces 9.78m
Length 12.32m, width of tanker 3.2m, height 4.3m. CASNUB 22 NLB cast steel bogies, AAR 'E' high-tensile
coupler with high-capacity draft gear. Air brakes and parking brakes. Rated for 100km/h.
BTAL Bogie tanker car for anhydrous ammonia
BTPGLN Bogie tanker, for liquefied petroleum gas (LPG).
Tare
41.6t
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BVZI Improved brake van with max. speed of 100km/h, and some improved comfort features compared to the
BVZC. It uses friction snubbers instead of hydraulic dashpots for damping, and has a bogie-mounted brake
system in place of the conventional arrangement.
BVG, BVGT, MBVG, NBVG Brake van for non-block rakes. BGVT
is the same with a transition coupler. MBVG is the MG version and
NBVG is the NG version. 4-wheeled.
VVN (?)Milk tanker these are special tankers for carrying milk at 4
degrees Celsius. The milk is carried in an inner barrel of stainless steel,
surrounded by an outer barrel with insulation between the two.
Pasteurized and chilled milk remains cool enough with such an insulated
design so that it does not spoil on fairly long journeys; there is no need
for refrigeration equipment. These tankers are attached to express trains
and are treated on par with passenger stock, and rated for higher speeds (110km/h) than most freight stock.
They have Flexicoil bogies.
A different kind of milk tanker were the small tankers donated by New Zealand that were in use in the 1980s,
for instance on the Miraj-Pune Passenger. Two of these at a time were mounted permanently on a flat car with
Flexicoil bogies, creating a two-tanker milk wagon with a single base. These appear to have been
decommissioned now. Classification code unknown.
Tare
33.7t
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end. The 'B' type wagon (BLCB, also BLC-B) has only the slackless drawbar couplers at either end. Usually 3,
or sometimes 5 BLCB wagons are coupled together, with a BLCA wagon at either end, forming a semipermanently coupled formation of 5 or 7 wagons.
Being longer than most other wagons, a rake can only have about 45 of these BLC flats, which at the rate of 2
TEU's per wagon works out to a carrying capacity of 90 TEU's per train. A lot of international container traffic
(especially from Mumbai) is carried on these. SR's Golden Rock workshops are expected to take over
manufacturing these wagons. Also see below. New versions [9/04] have automatic load-sensing devices to
provide optimum braking power with different loads.
About 1905 of these were obtained first (in two batches) [6/02] and a third batch of another 1320 wagons were
procured around 2002-2003. Since then there has been a steady growth in these and now [2006] there are
about 4,700 of these in use.
In 2012, Golden Rock Workshops came up with a variant, BLC-25M, intended for carrying heavier loads with
25t axle loads, and provided with swing motion bogies.
Tare
Height
1.009m
Width
Wheel dia.
2.1m
840mm
20.32t
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NA
NA
Tare
19.8t
61t
NA
80.8t
NA
Capacity
NA
Width
2200mm
Height
Length over headstock
1008mm
15220mm
16161mm
10700mm
NA
100km/h
100km/h
NA
NA
TCT (Non-standard classification code) BG Long Covered Wagon, for defence use. Screw couplers and side
buffers, fabricated 4-axle bogie, manual brakes.
Tare
84.7t
Capacity
65.0t
26400mm
Height
4246mm
Width
3200mm
Distance between bogie centres 18850mm
HTC (HCT??) (Non-standard classification code) BG Long Covered Wagon, for defence use. Screw
couplers and side buffers, CASNUB 22NLB bogie, air brakes. Has a 'hood transfer mechanism'.
Tare
40.0t
Capacity
40.0t
26400mm
Height
4042mm
Width
3100mm
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TPGLN, TPGLR Tank wagon (petroleum/LPG products), the latter with screw coupling
TR Tank wagon (coal tar)
TSA Tank wagon (sulphuric acid)
TV Tank wagon (vegetable oil)
TW Tank wagon (water)
TX Tank wagon (liquid chlorine)
TZ Tank wagon (lubricating oil)
TOH Tank wagon (heavy oil, with heating arrangement)
In addition, annotations "WT" (water-tested) or "NWT" (not water-tested) may appear on wagons. "Watertested" means that the wagon has been tested to ensure that it is waterproof and can be used safely with cargo
that would spoil in contact with water.
Additional notes
Double-decker automobile carriers are made by Golden Rock workshops. These are coupled in 5-car
formations similar to the CONCOR container consists described below (the middle three cars having low
buffers). These are (confusingly) also classified BCCN. The A cars can carry 9 automobiles each, and the B cars
can carry 10 automobiles each, for a total of 48 for a 5-car formation.
Some older 4-wheel (non-bogie) tank wagons (TK, TP, etc.) are being re-used in an inventive way: the tank and
part of its base is fitted on to a frame that matches the shape of a half-size standard ISO container frame and
which is then carried on normal container flat wagons. This allows the tank and its frame (which may still have
years of useful life left) to be used even though the original 4-wheeled wagon base is no longer in use. Picture
Special-purpose wagons of various kinds have been used by IR. Some 24-axle threaded beam well wagons and
18-axle well wagons with integral brake vans at either end are used by BHEL for transporting large transformers.
BHEL, Trichy, has a 24-axle saddle wagon named 'Kaveri' for transportation of large electrical equipment, and
BHEL also has an 18-axle well wagon.
The Atomic Energy Commission has some 12-axle and 16-axle saddle wagons as do a few other heavy
industrial concerns, power companies, NPC, etc. A 20-axle well hole wagon was built specially for GEC
Alstom's use in transporting large electrical equipment. Several of these multi-axled heavy wagons were built by
Golden Rock workshops. 'Merry-go-round' wagons used at power plants and mines can tilt sideways to unload
their contents as each wagon in the rake passes by.
Passenger coaches, including EMU stock, have often been converted by IR for use in carrying goods, by sealing
the windows and removing all interior fittings.
Milk vans, because of the perishable nature of their cargo, have the curious privilege of being treated as
passenger coaching stock with corresponding speed limits. Milk vans are often attached to passenger trains and
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are rated for 100km/h. Most are vacuum-braked; however, newer ones are air-braked.
Several of these wagons use 'CASNUB' bogies. These are cast-steel bogies with friction-damping arrangements
(hence the name, from 'CAst steel SNUBber equipped'). These come in some variants, e.g. CASNUB HS is a
high-speed variant allowing speeds up to 100km/h, CASNUB 22 NLB has additional correction and friction
damping mechanisms, CASNUB HA has higher payload capacity, etc.
Q. What are CONCOR container consists?
CONCOR is the organization that handles container traffic in India. More details here. CONCOR has about
1905 BLC type low-bed wagons for fast container traffic. CONCOR also plans to acquire new 45-foot wagons
to carry 22-foot domestic containers as well as 45-foot international containers, and also to take over some
BRN wagons from IR and convert them for use for high-speed container traffic.
CONCOR acquired, in 1997-1998, about 1300 BFKI wagons from IR, upgraded them with air brakes, and
deployed them for domestic 'Contrack' services. CONCOR still has many older container flat wagons obtained
from IR when CONCOR was created in 1988. These are limited in speed and less reliable in transit.
Double-stacking is generally not possible because of clearances, and there are not many flat cars with the
requisite low bed height. For COFC, the general configuration is 6 trucks for 5 cars. More information on
double-stacking.
RCF has recently developed a new model of container flats that can carry 3 ISO 20' containers. These are
[12/01] undergoing trials by RDSO.
More information on CONCOR is available in the section on freight.
Q. How many freight wagons does IR have in its fleet?
As of 1998, IR had nearly 280,000 freight wagons.
PER Goods Wagons Until the mid-1990s or so, it was not uncommon to see wagons with the marking 'PER' in
regular service in freight trains on IR, especially in the east. These were wagons from the former East Pakistan
(PER = Pakistan Eastern Railway) which were taken and deployed for use by IR during the 1971 hostilities with
Pakistan. Many of these remained in India afterwards, and were in use until the 1990s, after which most of them
were scrapped. As the PER stock was not particularly different from the standard wagons used on IR, they
could be used interchangeably with the normal freight stock on the BG lines.
Q. Where are IR's freight wagons manufactured?
Most wagons today are manufactured by private firms such as CIMMCO, Texmaco, HDC, Besco, Binny
Engineering Works, Titagarh, and Modern. Public-sector organizations such as Burn Standard Co., Braithwaite,
Jessops, Bharat Wagon and Engg. Co. (these last four are held by the Bharat Bhari Udyog Nigam, Ltd.), Bridge
and Roof, Indian Standard Wagon, etc., also make some wagons. (Many of these used to be private concerns
but were taken over by the state.)
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A small fraction of the wagons come from IR workshops such as those at Golden Rock, Amritsar, and
Samastipur. Golden Rock especially has built quantities of many different kinds of wagons over the years, and in
recent years have stepped up production to make large numbers of the BLCA/BLCB container flats needed by
CONCOR (see above).
CASNUB and other bogies for IR's freight wagons are made by Burn Standard, Bhilai Engineering Corporation
(BEC), Bharat Wagon and Engg. Co., and others. Mukund Ltd. is another company that in the past supplied
large numbers of cast bogies.
Brakes
Q. What kinds of brake systems do IR coaches and freight cars have?
In older stock, both passenger coaches and freight wagons, the continuous braking system consists of vacuum
brakes. Newer stock is almost always air-braked. The guard often has mechanical brakes acting on his van. In
addition, each piece of stock has mechanical parking brakes.
Continuous brakes were tried out by the various railway companies in the late 19th century. North Western
Railway was the pioneer with trials of continuous vacuum braking in the late 1880s and early 1890s. Vacuum
brakes were chosen for the simplicity of design and lower cost. They also did not have coupling cocks that could
fail mid-train.
Early examples of the use of air brakes on IR include the Metro Cammell EMU stock delivered between 1951
and 1953 (and similar stock later delivered by other manufacturers), which featured the Westinghouse twin pipe
air brake system and electro-pneumatic application (the 1924 and 1928 EMUs (CR and WR) were vacuumbraked). In the 1960s, the Deluxe Exp. (25 Down) and the Frontier Mail (3 Down) are also said to have had air
brakes of the graduated-release kind. (This information has not been verified -- it's likely that the Bombay
Rajdhani was in fact the first long-distance train with air-brakes, which it acquired in 1984.)
However, these were isolated examples and air brakes did not come into wide use until some time beginning in
the late 1970s and the early 1980s. Perhaps the most notable 'convert' of the time was the Mumbai Rajdhani
which switched to being air-braked in 1984, hauled by twin WDM-2 locos. The Howrah Rajdhani also switched
to being air-braked around 1986. Many express trains were vacuum-braked until very recently (e.g., MadrasHowrah Coromandel Exp. was vacuum-braked until 1997.)
Air-braked rakes are now very common. Generally the blue-coloured livery that is now common on IR for
passenger coaches indicates air-braked stock. The air brakes are mostly of the twin pipe system, with a feed
pipe and a brake pipe. Air-braking (with dual pipes) is now standard for all Rajdhani/Shatabdi and most other
high-speed trains. (The twin pipe system fixes a problem with the single-pipe system where the air in the auxiliary
reservoir can be used up faster than the brake pipe can charge it.)
On the broad-gauge network, only a few passenger trains running on low-speed lines are now left with vacuumbraked stock, and most of these are being converted to air brakes rapidly. In some cases, as with the Sahyadri,
Maharashtra, and Koyna Expresses which were vacuum-braked until [2/02], there was no convenient shed
nearby for maintenance of air brakes (Kolhapur at the time did not yet have the required facilities). These trains
have been converted to air brakes now [12/04], as has the Dakshin Express most recently, a vacuum-braked
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Couplers
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Jones couplers were developed in India and later spread to several east African and south-east Asian railways.
Some NG lines still use a basic Norwegian (or 'chopper') coupling, which has a square or circular face with a
slot coming down about half-way from the top.
Some NG lines use(d) the ABC Patent Coupling (ex-GIPR: Arvi-Pulgaon, Achalpulpur-Murtijapur-Yavatmal,
Daund-Baramati, etc.). This has a disk that rotates and latches on to a horizontal loop from the mating coupler.
The Darjeeling Himalayan Railway uses a rudder coupling system to deal with the severe curvature on some
sections of its route. However, the Kishanganj branch of the DHR used chopper couplers, as can be seen on the
DHR C class Pacific at Mumbai and the lone Garratt made for this line.
EMUs use Scharfberg couplers which are a centre-buffer type which automatically connect the electricity and air
links as well. The coupler face is rectangular (from above) and has semicircular ends. A large pin projects from
the end of the coupler, which mates with a corresponding hole in the coupler of the other car. DMUs also use
these couplers with regular twin brake pipes, although in some cases (e.g. Jallandhar DMUs) they are modified
to have different brake hoses than the integrated ones that are part of the couplers. In IR parlance, these
couplers are called 'Shaku' couplers.
Screw Coupler Limitations
The screw couplers in use on passenger stock have some pretty restrictive limits on the tensile force they can
handle. Below are the starting load limits specified for BG stock using screw couplers on different gradients:
Gradient Rake weight
Level
7000t+
1 in 500 5000t
1 in 200 2800t
1 in 150 2250t
1 in 100 1700t
With gradients of 1 in 60 or 1 in 50, the allowable load is as low as 1000t or less, which means that most Mail
and Express trains running today, with 17-18 coaches or even longer rakes, need bankers for such gradients.
Buffers
The side buffers typically used on locomotives, coaches, and wagons mostly use helical springs for compression
resistance. More recently, newer buffer designs have been brought into use that combine the use of helical
springs with rubber or synthetic compression elements, including some buffer designs that rely entirely on multiple
packs of rubber compression packs. Buffer capacity in the past was low, at about 450kgf-m and the standard
loco buffer having a capacity of 490kgf-m. Higher capacity buffers of 1030 and 1225 kgf-m have been
introduced and RDSO's most recent design is for a buffer of capacity 1225kgf-m.
History of Couplers in India
Originally, Indian coupling consisted simply of chains -- one in the middle and one on either side as back-ups -and buffers that were extensions of the side structural members of the coaches ("dumb" buffers) for freight cars.
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Passenger cars often had buffers filled with materials like horsehair.
Spring buffers were employed from about 1850, starting with under-wagon leaf spings, and evolving into the
modern coil-spring buffers that contain the spring mechanism inside the buffer body.
Five-link and 3-link chain couplings survived into the 20th century, especially for low-speed (under 40km/h)
operations. The linking chains evolved to have a screw mechanism (hence "screw coupler") to keep buffers of
adjacent cars touching and slightly in compression so as to provide a smoother transition on starting a train. By
the 1920's chain couplings almost all disappeared, especially as vacuum braking came into wide use.
The only steam class with automatic couplers were the WGx subclass used for heavy freights on SER.
In 1980, IR made the move to using block rakes of CBC wagons as far as possible for goods movement. This
meant that the problems of coupler incompatibility among wagons and among locomotives and wagons at
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cars have now been withdrawn as self-generating coaches and EMUs have become more common; a few rare
examples can be seen [9/01] on some MG trains (Mhow, Indore, Ujjain). These generator cars are mostly for
24V or 48V systems.
Railbuses such as the ones manufactured by BEML use a 24V electrical system.
Regardless of the voltage, such an axle-driven generating system is referred to as Self-Generation (SG).
Air-conditioned coaches
In older stock, for powering air-conditioning equipment, 11kW/15kW inverters were used to convert the DC
output of a set of batteries to 415V AC. For some time now, however, groups of 110V alternators delivering
18-22kW each have been used to power air-conditioning equipment (the voltage is stepped up to 415V). Most
recently, RDSO has developed a newer 25kW 110V alternator with better power circuitry. Lights and fans are
often on a separate DC supply from batteries, or stepped down and rectified from the alternators.
Many air-conditioned coaches are not self-contained with regard to the power supply. For such coaches, a
Mid-on generator (MOG) may be used; this is a 415V 3-phase alternator (either in one of the coaches or in a
separate 'power-car'), the output from which is used both for the air-conditioning, and (stepped down to 110V
and rectified) for the lights and fans. Some End-on generators (EOG) also generate 415V 3-phase AC. Midon Generation has some disadvantages and IR is not currently introducing it for any new trains.
A few express trains (Deccan Queen, for instance) have used separate end-on power generation cars, although
these days [3/00] separate power cars are used almost exclusively with Rajdhani / Shatabdi type trains as
discussed below.
Rajdhani/Shatabdi trains
In these trains and a few others like the Garib Rath Expresses, the provision of dedicated rakes allows the use of
a separate 'power-car' to supply electricity for all the coaches. There are usually 2 generators in each power car;
each generator (an End-on Generator (EOG)) generates 3-phase 750V AC power, which is then distributed
across the train, and stepped down to 415V AC (3-phase) for the air-conditioning, or 110V (single-phase) for
other appliances. The elimination of generation equipment also allows the coach bogies to be designed with
higher speeds in mind. The power car capacity is 250kVA (older models) or 500kVA (newer models, 'highcapacity power cars'). For the higher-power EOGs, often each power car at one end of the rake provides
power when the train is running in one direction while the other operates in the other direction. The lower power
EOGs can usually power up to 18 AC coaches, but their peak efficiency is at a load in the range of 7 to 12
coaches, and so for longer trains both EOG cars are on simultaneously. The two EOGs and the coaches along
the length of the train are connected by two independent sets of 3-phase cables so as to be able to handle a
failure in a cable. In addition, there are usually 24V batteries in the coaches to power a couple of emergency
lights at critical points in the coaches.
These 250kVA power cars were introduced in 1992. Before that the power cars in use had a capacity of
125kVA and used 440V as the AC distribution voltage. With these, most Rajdhanis and Shatabdis needed three
power cars -- one at either end, and one in the middle of the rake, which split the rake into two portions (termed
'Unit I' and 'Unit II'). As the power cars are (were) not equipped for anyone to walk through, there was no way
to get from one portion of the rake to the other while the train was in motion.
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A very small number of other trains also use such EOG cars for power; these EOG cars tend to be different from
the ones used for Rajdhani and Shatabdi trains (some are the older 125kVA versions). At various times, trains
like the Howrah-Amritsar Mail, Poorva Exp., etc. had their own generator cars.
Head-On Generation
Another system, Head-On Generation (HOG) has been under research by IRIEEN and RDSO but not
deployed yet to any trains. In this, power for the hotel load of the train is taken directly from the OHE through a
separate pantograph mounted on a power car, or through a special separate hotel load winding tap provided in
the main transformer of the locomotive. Locomotives such as the WAP-5 series already have the provision for
the hotel load tap. A separate power car is still needed when taking the locomotive tap for hotel load power,
because a transformer must still step down the power drawn for distribution to the coaches.
If using a separate power car with a pantograph, the placement of the power car within the rake is likely to be at
the rear to ensure safe inter-pantograph distance between it and the pantograph(s) of the locomotive and
simultaneously to minimize coach shunting for forming the rake. Mechanisms like Locotrol need to be used to
raise and lower the pantograph remotely from the locomotive cab.
Whether the power is drawn from the OHE or from the locomotive tap, it still needs to be further converted to
415V 3-phase / 110V 1-phase as required for the coach air-conditioning and lighting systems. This can be done
in a Bulk Coach Converter in the power-car, or in individual coach converters provided in each coach (or in
every two or three coaches.
EOG
HOG
Traction
Independent of traction
Reliability
Environment
Operating cost
Local noise and smoke pollution from diesel Pollution is referred back to the electric
generators
power plant; far less noise.
Diesel generation costs of electricity are high Standard grid power costs
Maintenance
Economics - Weight
Lower dead-weight
Power supply
Continuous power
Catenary
No impact to OHE
EMUs/MEMUs/DEMUs
Mumbai EMUs take power from the overhead 1500V DC line, and use a motor generator to convert it to 110V
AC for powering lights and fans. Lights and fans are also powered in some cases (e.g. DMUs) by auxilliary
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Miscellaneous
Q. Freight stock often has the words "Not to be loose shunted" what does this mean?
In marshalling yards and elsewhere, a common technique of moving a wagon around is "loose shunting", where
the wagon to be moved is not coupled to the shunting loco, and simply pushed to the correct location.
Usually, a rake that is being built up is on one of several sidings branching off from a section of track where the
shunting loco is working. The points are set to divert all wagons to the appropriate siding. The shunting loco
pushes the wagon and imparts it sufficient speed so that it travels over to the selected siding under its own
momentum. Once it reaches the rake that it is to be attached to, the "khalasi" staff couple it up to the rake.
The loco driver has to judge the distances and the weight of the wagon precisely so that the wagon does not stop
short of the rake (which would necessitate using the shunting loco again to push it further), and so that the wagon
does not have too much momentum which would cause it to crash into the rake being assembled with undue
violence. Nevertheless, this process of loose shunting does involve a certain amount of violent impacts on all the
wagons involved.
Such impacts are not desirable for wagons that are carrying sensitive cargo, such as cattle, poultry, or even
human passengers in the case of sectional carriages being reattached to rakes, and extremely dangerous in the
case of cargo such as petroleum products where an impact can cause leakage and ignition of the cargo with
disastrous consequences. Hence, such wagons are marked "not to be loose shunted", implying that they will
always be shepherded gingerly into place coupled to a shunting loco.
Related Sections
Rolling Stock: Passenger coaches
Rolling Stock: Weight Comparisons
Rolling Stock Dimensions, 1971
Rolling Stock Dimensions, 1929
Goods sheds, marshalling yards
Production units and workshops
IRFCA Picture Gallery: Wagons
IRFCA Picture Gallery: Coaches
Off-Site Links
ICF
RCF
Trainweb.org: Air Brakes
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