British Rail Classes 485 and 486

The British Rail Class 485 (or 4Vec) and British Rail Class 486 (or 3Tis) electrical multiple units were originally built for the London Electric Railway from 1923-31 as their 'Standard' tube stock. They were purchased by British Rail in 1967 and transported to the Isle of Wight to work 'mainline' services on the newly electrified Ryde to Shanklin line. At the time the units had already worked for over forty years on the London Underground, but their introduction allowed the final steam locomotives on the line to be withdrawn.

British Rail Class 485
British Rail Class 486
Shanklinstn.jpg
485045 at Shanklin.
In service1923 - 1964 on London Underground
1967 - 1992 on Island Line
ManufacturerMetro Cammell, Union Construction Company, Cammell Laird
Family nameTube
Formation
  • 4 cars per trainset (4-VEC)
  • 3 cars per trainset (3-TIS)
  • DMBSO+TSO+TSO+DMBSO (4-VEC)
  • DMBSO+TSO+DTSO (3-TIS)[1]

  • 5 cars per trainset (5-VEC from 1985)
  • 2 cars per trainset (2-TIS from 1985)
  • DMBSO+TSO+TSO+TSO+DMBSO (5-VEC from 1985)
  • DMBSO+DTSO (2-TIS from 1985)[2]
Capacity
  • 132 seats (4-VEC)
  • 106 seats (3-TIS)
OperatorNetwork SouthEast
Specifications
Maximum speed45 mph (72 km/h)[3]
Weight
  • 94 t (93 long tons; 104 short tons) (4-VEC, set)
  • 65 t (64 long tons; 72 short tons) (3-TIS, set)
  • 32 t (31 long tons; 35 short tons) (MBSO)
  • 19 t (19 long tons; 21 short tons) (TSO)
  • 17 t (17 long tons; 19 short tons) (DTSO)[1][3]
GaugeLua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'Module:Track gauge/data' not found.

British Rail Classes 485 And 486 Media

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Class 485, 486 - 4VEC, 3-TIS". The Railway Centre. Archived from the original on 17 July 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  2. "Southern E-Group - Class 485 and 486". Archived from the original on 8 April 2008. Retrieved 2 April 2008.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Fox 1987, p. 92