R188 (New York City Subway car)
R188 | |
---|---|
An R188 train on the leaving 52nd Street. | |
Interior of an R188 car. | |
In service | 2013-present |
Manufacturer | Kawasaki Rail Car Company |
Built at |
Yonkers, New York, US and Kobe, Hyōgo, JP |
Family name | R100-R199 R type contract series, NTT (new technology train) |
Replaced | All R62As on the (reassigned to the , not scrapped) |
Constructed | 2011–2016 |
Entered service | December 15, 2013 |
Number built | 506 (126 new cars, 380 conversions) |
Number in service | 506 (308 in revenue service during rush hours) |
Formation |
5-car sets (A-C-B-B-A) 6-car sets (A-C-B-B-B-A) |
Fleet numbers |
Conversion Sets: 7211-7590 New Sets: 7811-7898 New "C" Cars: 7899-7936 |
Capacity |
176 (A car) 188 (B & C cars) |
Operator(s) | New York City Subway |
Depot(s) | Corona Yard (506 cars)[1] |
Service(s) assigned |
– 374 cars (34 trains) 363 cars (33 trains) |
Specifications | |
Car body construction | Stainless steel with fiberglass end bonnets |
Train length | 11 car train: 564.63 feet (172.10 m) |
Car length | 51.33 feet (15.65 m) |
Width | 8.60 feet (2,621 mm) |
Height | 11.89 feet (3,624 mm) |
Platform height | 3.6458 ft (1.11 m) |
Doors | 6 per car |
Maximum speed |
55 mph (89 km/h) Service 70 mph (110 km/h) Design |
Weight |
"A" car: 73,332 pounds (33,263 kg) "B" and "C" cars: 67,721 pounds (30,718 kg) |
Traction system |
Bombardier MITRAC propulsion system, 3-Phase AC Traction Motors Model 1508C |
Prime mover(s) | electric motor |
Power output |
150 hp (111.855 kW) per motor axle 4,500 hp (3,355.649 kW) per 11 car train |
Acceleration | 2.5 mph/s (1.1 m/s2) |
Deceleration |
3.0 mph/s (1.3 m/s2) (full service), 3.2 mph/s (1.4 m/s2) (emergency) |
Power supply | Third rail |
Electric system(s) | 625 V DC |
Current collection method | Contact shoe |
Braking system(s) | Dynamic braking propulsion system; tread brake system |
Safety system(s) | emergency brakes |
Track gauge | 4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) |
The R188 is an A Division new technology (NTT) car constructed by the Kawasaki Heavy Industries Rolling Stock Company for the New York City Subway. The MTA is displacing the R62As from the 7 <7> services with these cars to automate the IRT Flushing Line. The R188 is part of both the fourth and fifth generation of New York City Subway A Division rolling stock; many fourth-generation R142As are being converted to R188s, along with deliveries of new R188 cars. The R188s comprise fleet numbers #7211-7590 and #7811-7936.
In addition to providing six extra 11-car trains for the 7 Subway Extension, the R188s will allow twenty R62A cars to be freed up for the other IRT services.
Timeline and composition of trainsets
All planned orders |
# of conversion cars | # of new C cars | # of new A & B cars | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total | Total | Total | ||||
Main order |
Option order |
Main order |
Option order |
Main order |
Option order | |
Original order[2] | 140 | 46 | 320[note 1] | |||
10 | 130 | 3 | 43 | 20 | 300 | |
2010–2014 Capital Program[3] |
360 | 46 | 100 | |||
10 | 350 | 3 | 43 | 20 | 80 | |
Modification[4] | 380 | 46 | 80 | |||
10 | 370 | 3 | 43 | 20 | 60 |
At the time that the R188 order was placed, forty R62A 11-car trainsets were assigned to the 7 service. The R188 order originally consisted of 186 new cars, as well as 131 converted R142A cars compatible with communication-based train control (CBTC) and an additional 189 R142A conversion kits for MTA, totaling a possible 506 cars, or in other words, 46 11-car trains. Given this number, it can be deduced that 230 of these cars will be arranged in 5-car sets while the remaining 276 cars will be arranged in 6-car sets.[2] Six extra R188 trainsets were ordered in conjunction with CBTC installation and 7 Subway Extension.
According to the 2010–2014 capital plan, 146 new cars were to be purchased. Of these new cars, 110 cars would go to make up 10 new 11-car trains, while the remaining 36 cars were to be "C" cars that would go to expanding 36 CBTC upgraded R142A 5-car sets (360 existing cars) to 6-car length. The original planned total of 46 11-car trains (506 cars) would still result from this order.[3]
In the latest revision, however, only 88 new cars were to be purchased to form 8 new 11-car trains, with 38 "C" cars, rather than ten 11-car trains. Likewise, the number of conversion cars was altered to 370. This change was made with the knowledge that only two ten-car R62A growth sets for the mainline IRT would be needed, as opposed to the projected four sets, and thus the MTA and Kawasaki opted to convert two additional R142A train sets in place of manufacturing two new sets. The MTA also decided to have Kawasaki perform all of the conversions at the Yonkers plant instead of 207th Street Shop as part of that contract modification.[4]
Description
Contract, delivery, and revenue service
The R188 contract was awarded in spring 2010 to Kawasaki Heavy Industries, who won by default since only two manufacturers qualified and Bombardier Transportation opted not to bid on the contract citing the small order and large requirement for engineering resources. The contract was specified at $87,094,272 for the base order, which consisted of 33 cars (23 new cars and 10 conversions), and $384,315,168 for the option order, which consisted of 473 cars (123 new cars, and 350 conversions) for a total price of $471,409,440.
According to a February 2012 update, the MTA had expected to have 8 conversion sets in service by the time that the 7 Subway Extension is opened for revenue service. In addition, the breakdown of the trainsets has been disclosed. Operationally, the R188s are coupled as such: A-C-B-B-A+A-B-B-B-C-A; where dashes signify link bars and the addition sign denotes couplers. Thirty-eight R142A B cars, therefore, will be converted into R188 "C" cars, in addition to the 38 deliveries of new "C" cars (not including the "C" cars in the eight new 11-car sets).[5]
The 10 converted R142A cars from the base order (#7211-7220) were completed in December 2011 at Kawasaki's Yonkers facility, and were delivered for testing on the Flushing line in 2012. The 23 new cars from the base order (two eleven-car sets, #7811-7832, and one conversion set "C" car, #7899) were completed in mid-2012, delivered in November 2013, and entered service in December 2013. The 66 new option cars (#7833-7898) were also completed in mid-2012 and have been delivered, while the remaining 37 new cars and the 370 conversions were set to be converted and delivered from February 2014 until the 4th quarter of 2015.[6][7]
On November 9, 2013, the first R188 train, consisting of cars #7811-7821, were placed in service on the 7 train as part of its 30-day revenue acceptance test.[8] After successful completion, it entered revenue service by December 15, 2013. By July 2014, the delivery schedule had slipped by about 6–7 months.[9] However, delivery of the cars sped up; all remaining R188 cars were expected to be delivered by the end of July 2016, but the last R188 cars were delivered in late June 2016.[10]
Features
The R188s are equipped with the latest control system, HVAC, and public address system to guarantee the utmost safety and passenger comfort. They are similar to the R142As, but can only be compatible with the converted R142As that feature CBTC.
Like the R142, R142A, and R143, the R188s feature the electronic strip map with all stops on the 7 line with an indicator that can be set to either a local or express train.
In June 2016, one set of R188s was retrofitted with green circle & red diamond LED signs on its destination signs, similar to those on the R62As originally used on the 7, as well as the R62As currently on the 6. This is presumably due to the fact that passengers cannot visually differentiate between an express train and local train, despite the announcements and digital signage.[11] It is unknown if the remainder of the R188 fleet will be retrofitted with this feature.
Gallery
- R188s 7811-7821 testing on the IRT Dyre Avenue Line at Gun Hill Road.
- R188 destination sign. This 7 train is heading toward Flushing–Main Street.
See also
- New Technology Train - A list of all NTT trains on the New York City Subway.
- R142A (New York City Subway car) - a similar car built by Kawasaki Railcar. Most R188s were converted from R142As.
- R142 (New York City Subway car) - a similar car built by Bombardier Transportation.
Notes
- ↑ This was the total of 131 converted R142A cars compatible with communication-based train control (CBTC) and an additional 189 R142A conversion kits. The option order of 473 cars was broken down as follows: 163 new R188 cars, conversion of 124 R142/R142A cars, and providing 186 conversion kits of R142/R142As.
References
- ↑ New York Subway Barn Assignments – November 6, 2016
- 1 2 http://www.thejoekorner.com/cars/r34188sol.pdf
- 1 2 Page 92
- 1 2 http://i42.tinypic.com/r2oqb8.jpg Modification to purchase document
- ↑ http://mta.info/mta/news/books/pdf/120227_1400_CPOC.pdf
- ↑ Page 100 (Document), or Page 108 (PDF reader)
- ↑ DVV Media Group GmbH. "CBTC trials on New York's Flushing Line". Railway Gazette. Retrieved 2014-08-24.
- ↑ "MTA | news | New Subway Cars Being Put to the Test". New.mta.info. 2013-11-18. Retrieved 2014-08-24.
- ↑ http://web.mta.info/mta/news/books/pdf/140728_1200_CPOC.pdf
- ↑ Rebecca Harshbarger and Sheila Anne Feeney (26 January 2016). "Subway cars of future include Wi-Fi, cameras, charging stations". am New York.
- ↑ "Untitled". R36_9346. 14 June 2016.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to R188 (New York City Subway car). |
- nycsubway.org - NYC Subway Cars: R188
- IRT Car Assignments – November 6, 2016
- New York City Subway Car Fleet June 2010 through November 2016
- Kawasaki Rail Car, Inc.: R188
- Car Status/Assignment