British Rail Classes 112 and 113

The Class 112 and Class 113 DMUs used the standard Cravens body used on Class 105s but had a single Rolls-Royce C8NFLH engine rated at 238 hp (177 kW) per car, all of which formed into 'power twins' – two car sets with both vehicles powered.

British Rail Classes 112 and 113
Last train from Nottingham Arkwright Street, 1969
In service1960–1969
ManufacturerCravens
Family nameFirst generation
ReplacedSteam locomotives and carriages
Constructed1959–1960
Scrapped1968–1969
Number builtClass 112: 25 sets (50 cars)
Class 113: 25 sets (50 cars)
Number scrappedAll
FormationPower-twin: DMBS-DMCL
CapacityDMBS: 52 second
DMCL: 12 first, 51 second
Operator(s)British Rail
Line(s) servedLondon Midland Region
Specifications
Car body constructionSteel
Car length57 ft 6 in (17.53 m)
Width9 ft 3 in (2.82 m)
DoorsSlam
Maximum speed70 mph (110 km/h)
WeightDMBS: 30 long tons 0 cwt (67,200 lb or 30.5 t),
DMCL: 30 long tons 0 cwt (67,200 lb or 30.5 t)
Prime mover(s)One Rolls-Royce C8NFLH
Power output238 hp (177 kW) per car
TransmissionClass 112: Mechanical 4-speed epicyclic gearbox
Class 113: Hydraulic
UIC classification(1A)(A1)+(1A)(A1)
Braking system(s)Vacuum
Coupling systemScrew-link
Multiple working Blue Square
Track gauge4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)

There were two batches built, the first 50 vehicles (25 sets) had standard mechanical transmission via a gearbox and were allocated the Class 112. The second batch of 50 cars (25 sets) had hydraulic transmissions, and became Class 113s.

The cars were built for services in the LMR Central Division and in the Liverpool - St Helens area, where the gradients in the Lancashire & Yorkshire area required more power. Both types also spent some time working from Cricklewood.

The gross weight of a set with all seats occupied was approximately 70 tons, giving 6.8 hp (5.1 kW) per ton. Empty, it was 8.1 hp/ton, which compared favourably with 5.7 hp/ton that the Cravens power/trailer had.

Orders

Lot No.DiagramCar TypeQtyFleet numbersNotes
30533602Driving Motor Brake Third (DMBS)2551681–51705Class 112
30534603Driving Motor Composite with lavatory (DMCL)2551706–51730Class 112
30535604Driving Motor Brake Third (DMBS)2551731–51755Class 113
30536605Driving Motor Composite with lavatory (DMCL)2551756–51780Class 113

Other technical details

  • Coupling Code: Blue Square
  • Transmission: Standard Mechanical (Class 112), Hydraulic (Class 113)

Due to incidents that occurred when Class 113 units, which had hydraulic transmission and automatic gear change, were coupled to a unit with mechanical transmission and gear change - usually, a Class 112 - the Class 113 units were changed to the Red Triangle coupling code. (The Red Triangle code had previously been used for the early Derby Lightweight dmus used in the Leeds area, but those were all now withdrawn.) The basic problem occurred when a unit being driven automatically (Class 113) failed to mesh with a unit that could not be driven automatically (most Blue Square types). The latter units tended to catch fire. If such a pairing occurred, the driver of the automatically driven unit was supposed to drive it as if it were a mechanical transmission unit, so the two units gears would work together. If an automatic transmission unit was driven from a mechanical transmission unit, the problem did not occur as the automatic drive unit would change gears as if it was a mechanical drive unit. The Class 112 and 113 units looked similar and one assumes this led to the driving errors. By changing Class 113 to Red Triangle, the incompatible coupling should not occur. (One can envisage this problem by thinking of trying to drive a car with mechanical gears as if it was an automatic gear-change car: the car might end up trying to speed at 80mph whilst still in first gear!)

Withdrawal

All 112s and 113s were withdrawn between 1968 and 1969 and none survive.

References

  • The Railcar Association
  • Motive Power Recognition: 3 DMUs. Colin J. Marsden
  • British Railway Pictorial: First Generation DMUs. Kevin Robertson
  • British Rail Fleet Survey 8: Diesel Multiple Units- The First Generation. Brian Haresnape
  • A Pictorial Record of British Railways Diesel Multiple Units. Brian Golding
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