Class 159 'South Western Turbo' Profile and Models
159011 at Keynsham in July 2018. ©Hugh Llewelyn
The British Rail Class 159 is a class of British diesel multiple unit passenger trains of the Sprinter family, built in 1989–1992 by British Rail Engineering Limited (BREL)'s Derby Litchurch Lane Works as Class 158. Before entering traffic, the original 22 units were modified at Rosyth Dockyard to Class 159 to operate services from London Waterloo to Salisbury and Exeter St Davids, replacing various locomotive-hauled passenger trains. The units were originally branded by Network SouthEast as South Western Turbo. With the UK economy in decline in the early 1990s, it was found that Regional Railways had over-ordered Class 158s at the same time as Network SouthEast was looking for a similar number of new diesel trains. NSE agreed to take on the surplus Class 158s. Currently, the Class 159s operate mainly from London Waterloo to Salisbury/Exeter in formations of six, eight, or nine coaches (2 × Class 159, 2 × 159 plus 1 × 158, or 3 × 159 respectively) and between Salisbury and Exeter in three- or six-coach formations. |
|
Type of Unit |
Diesel Multiple Unit |
Builder |
Derby Litchurch Lane Works |
Build Dates |
1989 to 1993 |
Total Built |
22 sets + 8 converted from 158 |
Coaches Per Unit |
3-car |
Power Output |
1,050 to 1,200 hp |
Top Speed |
90 mph |
Passenger Capacity |
169 |
Operated By |
British Rail South Western Railway |
Main Duties |
Regional & Express Passenger |
In Service Until |
Present |
Surviving Examples |
All in service |