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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

X1
X1 at Årstaberg station
In service1968–2011
ManufacturerASEA
Constructed1967–1975
Entered service1968-2011
Scrapped2004-2011
Number built104
Number scrapped103
Formation2 cars
Fleet numbers3001–3104
Capacity196
OperatorsStorstockholms Lokaltrafik
Lines servedStockholm commuter rail
Specifications
Train length49.55 m (162 ft 7 in) (2 cars)
Maximum speed222 km/h (138 mph)
Weight78 t (76.8 long tons; 86.0 short tons)
Power output1,120 kW (1,500 hp)
Electric system(s)15 kV  16.7 Hz AC catenary
Current collector(s)Pantograph
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)

X1 was a series of two-car electric multiple units (twin units) operated by Greater Stockholm Transport (SL) on the Stockholm commuter rail. The X1 was operated in sets of up to five units, making ten-car trains, each unit consisting of one motor car and one unpowered car. 104 units were built by ASEA in 1967–75 and were replaced by the new X60. The X1 also served as the foundation for the later X10–X14 series trains, built in the 1980s and 1990s.

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Transcription

History

The X1 was based on the SJ X6 taken into service in the 1960s, that had replaced locomotive-pulled trains. The X1 interior was based more on the Stockholm Metro with five-abreast seating and three doors per car. Since the start in 1968 the trains were renovated several times, although they look mostly the same today as they did in the 1960s. An X1 train was used as a test train during the development of the high speed train X 2000, with technologies and techniques such as tilt being added, that would later make it into the final train (X2000). With these adjustments, this X1 train managed to reach a speed of 222 km/h during testing, which was a new record for the train.[1] They were completely compatible with the X10 introduced in the 1980s. The X1 began to be taken out of service in 2004 and was planned to be completely retired in 2007/2008. Due to problems with the new X60 trains the deadline was delayed several times. The last X1 units were taken out of service in April 2011. One unit has been preserved at the Swedish Railway Museum in Gävle[2]

References

  1. ^ [a b c d e] Nordin, Tore (2003). Svenska Elmotorvagnar. Stockholm: Svenska Järnvägsklubben. ISBN 91-85098-97-3
  2. ^ "Järnvägsmuseet Fordonslistor" (PDF). www.jarnvagsmuseet.se. 2018. Retrieved 12 November 2022.

External links

This page was last edited on 17 February 2024, at 16:56
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