Hamburg U-Bahn Type A

HHA-Baureihe A/B/T/TU1/TU2

HHA Type A built in 1920
In service 1912–1970
Manufacturer AEG, Busch, Credé, Falkenried, Siemens, Waggonbau Görlitz
Constructed 1911-1929, 1940, 1943
Entered service 1912
Refurbishment 1947-49 + 1959-61
Scrapped 1970
Number built 377 cars
Number preserved 6 cars (1 converted to work service)[1]
Number scrapped 371 cars
Fleet numbers 11-417
Capacity 34 seats [2]
Operator(s) Hamburger Hochbahn AG
Depot(s) Barmbek
Specifications
Train length 12.80 m (42 ft 0 in)
Width 2.56 m (8 ft 5 in)
Height 3.14 m (10 ft 4 in) [2]
Doors 4 per car
Maximum speed 60 km/h (37 mph) [2]
Weight 24.6 t (24.2 long tons; 27.1 short tons) [2]
Prime mover(s) 2x AEG U109 with 81 kW
Power output 162 kW (220 hp)
Acceleration 0.6m/s²
Electric system(s) 750 V DC
UIC classification Bo'Bo'
Braking system(s) Knorr air main brakes
Safety system(s) Sifa
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)

The Type A (since late 1950s Type T) is a subway car type built for Hamburg Hochbahn. It was first constructed in 1911 and it was the first type of subway cars in Hamburg. Their passenger service began on the Rathausmarkt - Barmbeck line on 15 February 1912.

History

The first discussions about developing a new subway system in Hamburg began in the 1890s, in 1906, the first short stretch of the Ringbahn (Circle line, now U3 line) near Uhlandstraße was built. In October 1911, the first cars arrived.

Construction

The body of the cars rested on a steel substructure, while the body consisted of a wooden frame which was clad with metal panels. Most of the cars had a driver's cab at one end of the car, some cars were delivered with a second driver's cab to use a single car for branches with low traffic volume. In 1929 the delivery of the last cars was completed for the moment but in 1940 and 1943, some new cars for testing purposes for new electrical components were constructed but because of the Second World War they have been delivered without their electrical components. In 1946, they received conventional components to stay compatible to the older cars.

Rebuilding

In the Second World War, some cars had been destroyed in the Bombings of Hamburg. After the war, beginning in 1947, the destroyed cars had been lengthened and rebuilt. To differ the undamaged cars from the rebuilt cars, the undamaged cars were designated as A cars, the rebuilt cars as B cars. In 1955, every single car has been equipped with a speedometer and an odometer. In the late 1950s, the A cars were renamed in T cars, the rebuilt B cars were renamed in TU1 cars. Beginning in 1959, 100 T cars were refurbished to lower the maintenance costs. These cars were called TU2 and were rebuilt and clad with stainless steel instead of metal panels. This procedure was completed in 1961.

Withdrawal

The first cars were retired in October 1965, the last cars which were TU2 in December 1970. They had been replaced by DT2 and DT3 trains. Some cars had been converted to maintenance service cars. In 2012 only six cars are left, four of them are still operational as heritage train.[3]

Gallery

References

  1. hochbahnbuch.de - German - restored trains
  2. 1 2 3 4 hamburger-untergrundbahn.de - German - Section "Die ersten Hochbahnwagen"
  3. Heritage trains. - German

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 2/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.