The British Rail Class 159 is a class of diesel multiple unit (DMU) passenger trains of the Sprinter grouping, built in 1989âÂÂ1992 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 on the West of England Main Line, replacing various locomotive-hauled passenger trains. The units were originally branded by Network SouthEast as South Western Turbo.
In the late 1980s, the locomotive-hauled stock on Network SouthEast's (NSE) West of England route from to , and was in urgent need of replacement. The diesel locomotives were not suited to the stop-start nature of the route and frequently broke down. A single breakdown could cause chaos because of the long sections of single track west of Salisbury, following the Beeching cuts.
Various options were considered, including electrification, shortened HSTs, construction of new locomotives and stock (a passenger version of the proposed Class 48), or the proposed Class 171 (which would have been part of the Networker, an inter-city version of the â not to be confused with the later Turbostars. A study found the best options were electrification or new DMUs.
With the UK economy in decline in the early 1990s, it was found that Regional Railways had over-ordered s, at the same time as NSE was looking for a similar number of new diesel trains. NSE agreed to take on the surplus Class 158s.
The original 22 units were built as Class 158 units, but were rebuilt by Babcock Rail in Rosyth Dockyard before entering traffic. This entailed fitting first-class accommodation and retention toilets, and various other modifications. The rebuild was required because it was not possible for Network SouthEast and the newly-privatised BREL to agree terms on the variation order to NSE specification.
The first unit (159004) was handed over to NSE on 6 January 1993.
The units converted to Class 159 specification during construction are numbered 159001âÂÂ159022, with individual vehicles numbered 57873âÂÂ57894 for driving motor vehicles and 58718âÂÂ58739 for intermediate motor vehicles. The class is maintained at a purpose-built depot at Salisbury.
In 2007, eight further Class 159 units were created through the rebuilding of surplus Class 158 units displaced from the TransPennine Express franchise.
The units feature BSI couplers, which enables them to work in multiple with other units from the same class, but also and the classes of the Pacer and Sprinter groupings.
The units were dedicated to the West of England sector of Network SouthEast, operating services between London Waterloo and Exeter; they also worked services between Salisbury and , and on the Reading to Basingstoke line to replace elderly diesel-electric multiple units. They then transferred to the South West Trains shadow franchise in readiness for privatisation.
Upon the privatisation of British Rail, the West of England route passed to the South West franchise in 1996, which was won by the Stagecoach Group. Starting in 2000, units were progressively refurbished and repainted from NSE's blue, red and white livery into South West Trains' express livery. Other post-privatisation modifications included clearer LED destination displays, upgraded air-conditioning and more openable windows.
Currently, the Class 159s operate mainly from London Waterloo to Salisbury/Exeter in formations of six, eight, or nine coaches (2 ÃÂ Class 159, 2 ÃÂ 159 plus 1 ÃÂ 158, or 3 ÃÂ 159 respectively) and between Salisbury and Exeter in three- or six-coach formations. Until the December 2009 timetable change, some trains continued beyond Exeter to , and ; these usually operated as three-coach units, though at weekends there were some six-coach formations. These services are now operated by Great Western Railway. The service to is now also operated by Class 159s.
Since 2006, the original Class 159 fleet of 22 has been supplemented by eight three-coach Class 158s (renumbered into the 159/1 series) and 11 two-coach versions. The decision to standardise on 158s and 159s allowed the nine Class 170 Turbostar units to be transferred to other operators: eight went to First TransPennine Express, with the remaining unit going to Southern for integration into Turbostars.
These trains serve the following routes:
South West Trains (SWT) began a refurbishment programme for its 22 Class 159/0s in 2000; the seats were retrimmed and interiors repainted and the units were repainted into SWT livery.
The units received another refurbishment in 2008 at Wabtec Doncaster. CCTV and Passenger Information Systems (PIS) were installed, new seating was installed in first class and a modified version of their express livery (with orange doors as opposed to the red doors on units) for compliance with disabled access regulations.
Eight of TransPennine's surplus three-coach Class 158 units were refurbished to match SWT's existing Class 159 units at Wabtec Doncaster, and renumbered into Class 159 subclass /1. The first updated units were delivered to SWT in November 2006 and, by May 2007, all of the new subclass were in service.
The refurbishment included making the first-class accommodation area larger and completely refitting it, with brighter interior lighting with new diffusers and the plating-over of the disused toilet in the MSO vehicle. The Class 159/1s have been fitted with retention toilets. Additional alterations include the installation of CCTV and PIS as is fitted on the 159/0s.
The converted units retained their original Cummins NTA855-R1 engines, which produce less power than the R3 variants fitted to the Class 159/0 fleet.
Some units have received names: