BILEVEL CAR

Double-deck rail car operated by GO Transit, Ontario, Canada
Double-deck rail cars in Germany, used extensively on Regional Express trains (here: Rostock)

The 'bilevel car' (the North American English term) or 'double-decker' (other forms of English) is a design to solve the problem of increasing passenger capacity on railway carriages, without fitting more (smaller) seats into the same space and/or decreasing the pitch (distance between seats).
If one couldn't add cars or increase the length of the car, the only possible direction for expansion is up. This is usually done by reducing the lower floor height closer to the rails and adding a separate upper level floor.
Because of the standard height of tunnels and overhead power wires, many double-deck trains set the bottom deck lower down, between the trucks (bogies in UK and Australasian parlance). Usually the entrance doors are above the bogies, and there is only one deck at the entance area. From there one can go upstairs or downstairs. For example, for the DD-IRM (see below) it is one step up from the station platform to the entrance, and from there seven steps up or four steps down. Some double-decker trains have their entrance doors on the lower level and no steps are needed to get to the lower deck.
Double-deck trains often have curved windows upstairs. In the dark and in tunnels this causes a distorting mirror effect.
Similarly, one may also have bilevel cargo transport. In intermodal freight transport, many modern types of container well cars cars are designed to accommodate "double-stacking."

Contents
Double-deck cars
France
Canada and USA
United Kingdom
Finland
Australia
Other countries
Gallery cars
See also
External links

Double-deck cars


France

État's preserved double-deck coach in Richelieu.
French suburban double-deck train.

The Chemin de Fer de l'État in France ran voitures à 2 étages double-deck suburban coaches from 1933. Its successor, the SNCF, has been running VB2N double decker coaches since 1975, VB2N were introduced from 1975 as a replacement of the État cars.
Since the late 1980s, SNCF has been running double-deck RER trains. SNCF runs double-deck TGV cars on heavily used high-speed services. Many suburban, regional and high-speed services are operated by double-deck DMUs, EMU, coaches and TGV. The French loading gauge dictates that the double-deck cars have a maximum height of 4200 mm or 13'-9.35".
Canada and USA

Other designs, including rolling stock made by Colorado Railcar Manufacturing, Budd, Pullman-Standard, Bombardier (Toronto (GO Transit)) and others, have the entrance on the lower deck rather than an intermediate level. Amtrak Superliners are double-decker cars of this variety, with the entrance a step or so up from the lowest station platform level, or at the level of slightly higher platforms, and allow passage from car to car at upper-deck level.
The north eastern US can accommodate split level (double deck) cars only if they are no higher than 14'-6" or 4420 mm. These double deckers run on the Long Island Rail Road: [1]: and on New Jersey Transit: [2]: (contact Bombardier Transportation: [3]) due to the size of the loading gauge (i.e. bridges, tunnels, etc. are too low). The designs found on the Long Island Rail Road and New Jersey Transit are based on a 1930s Pullman Sleeping Car design for the Pennsylvania Railroad called a Duplex Sleeper. This design provided 24 Roomettes on two levels with the lower level depressed between the trucks. This idea was copied in 1947 for the Long Island Rail Road, making use of a standard P-70 that was electrified. The new cars have the entire center sill lowered to the minimum level between the trucks, providing a depressed floor on that level. The upper level is stacked on top between the trucks. At each end, the a common floor is located in the normal position, with four doors on each side, two of which can be reached only at high level platforms, while the other two are in the normal Vestibular position, with stairs to reach low level platforms. Similarly the structure gauge of the Mount Royal Tunnel limits the height to 14'-6" or 4420 mm [4].
The double deck cars operated by Chicago's Metra regional rail service are known as "gallery cars" as there is an open space between the two sides of the upper deck, allowing ticket collectors to check tickets on both levels from the bottom level. Chicago does not have the loading gauge problems that affect most eastern USA cities (although ex-Metra cars operate on MARC in Baltimore, Maryland), so all Chicago's commuter rail rolling stock is full size bi-level, and many of Amtrak's Superliner trains to the western USA originate from Chicago.
The first bi-level gallery cars were introduced by the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy railroad in 1950.
United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom, and countries with a similarly small loading gauge, the railway system cannot accommodate double-deck trains. A modest attempt at double decking was made in 1948 on the Southern Railway with the two trains of the Bulleid 4DD class. Although innovative, with stepped compartments, where the bottoms of the upper seats are above the heads of the people on the lower level, but the feet of the people above are not, see [5], the loading gauge severely restricted their use and they were removed from service in 1971.
Finland

In Finland, VR began operating double-decker sleeping cars on 1 February 2006. The two-bed cabins on the upper deck have toilets and showers while cabins on the lower deck use shared ones. VR also operates double-decker Inter City trains with at seat power supplies for laptops.
Australia

A Cityrail Millenium Train in Sydney

In 1964, Tulloch Limited built the first double decker trailer cars for use in Sydney. They ran with single deck electric motor cars. The first prototype double deck motor car was built by Comeng in 1969 and production versions entered service in 1972. All CityRail electric commuter trains in Sydney are now double deck. They all have two doors per side per carriage, with a vestibule at each end at platform height. Well-known examples of these trains are the Tangara and Millennium trains. The Sydney double deck commuter trains are 14'-4.5" or 4380 mm high.
The then Public Transport Corporation in Melbourne ordered a prototype Double Deck Development and Demonstration train in 1991. It suffered frequent breakdowns and spent long periods out of use. It was finally withdrawn in 2002 and scrapped in 2006.
Other countries

Dutch bilevel train at station Amsterdam Bijlmer ArenA

Indian Railways operates intercity trains between Mumbai and Surat, and Mumbai and Pune .
In the Netherlands, there are two types of double-deck trains, the DDM and the DD-IRM, also called Regiorunner: see Trains in the Netherlands. In Spain several lines of Cercanías (Renfe's commuter rail service) use double-deck trains. In Israel, many of the routes on the Israel Railways network are served by double decker trains.
In Hong Kong, the Kowloon-Canton Railway Corporation uses double-deck cars, named "Ktt", on its cross-boundary route between Kowloon and Guangzhou. In January to May 1998 the "Ktt" cars were used to serve between the Hung Hom and Lo Wu stations. The "Ktt" cars have lower bottom floor than the ordinary single-deck cars serving on the same pair of tracks.

Gallery cars


Because of the two levels being separate on most cars, there is a physical limitation on the conductor, as he cannot verify, collect payment and sell tickets to such a large concentration of passengers in one car on each level, owing to the short distance between stops.
The ingenious solution came in the form of the design of the "gallery" car, which featured upper levels, which were really mezzanines running along both sides of the car, with an open area between the mezzanines, hence the term "gallery". This enabled the conductor(s) walking along on the lower level to easily reach up and punch/validate tickets of the passengers seated on the mezzanine level.
Passengers would simply place their tickets in clips along a lengthwise panel, located slightly above the conductor's head and within easy reach. The conductor would then quickly check tickets and move to the next car.
An example is the cars provided and leased in the U.S. by Midwest Transportation & Development Corporation of Chicago. They are of a design proven in service and steadily refined since their introduction in the 1950s. These cars, known as "bilevel gallery cars", are among the most successful designs developed, and are currently in daily use in Chicago, San Francisco, and Montreal (Agence métropolitaine de transport). They provide high capacity (155 to 169 passengers each) and use standard, off-the-shelf components, without relying on proprietary, expensive and hard-to-get replacement parts. Chicago's commuter rail system Metra is currently receiving new versions of these cars and Caltrain, the San Francisco area commuter rail authority, has recently overhauled its fleet.
Another advantage of bilevel gallery cars is the relatively low first step of the vestibule entrance to the car, which is 14 5/8" (371 mm) above the head of the rail. The advantage of this is that commuter rail operators do not have to spend scarce funds on building high-level platforms; a low-level platform is all that is necessary, at a far lower cost.
Virgina Railway Express (VRE) is also an owner of gallery cars in Washington DC.

See also



Bombardier BiLevel Coach

Superliner (railcar)

Double decker

Passenger car

Dome car

External links



A photo of gallery car

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves