Electric Loco Shed, Angul

Electric Loco Shed, Angul is a motive power depot performing locomotive maintenance and repair facility for electric locomotives of the Indian Railways, located at Angul of the East Coast Railway zone in Odisha, India. It is one of the two electric locomotive sheds of the Eastern Railway, the others being at Vishakhapatnam (VKSP). As of 1 November 2020, there are 216 locomotives in the shed.[1]

Electric Loco Shed, Angul
Location
LocationAngul, odisha
Coordinates20.861610°N 85.099408°E / 20.861610; 85.099408
Characteristics
Owner(s)Indian Railways
Operator(s)East Coast Railway zone
Depot code(s)ANGL
TypeEngine shed
Roads6
Rolling stockWAG 7
History
Opened2005 (2005)
Former rolling stockWAM 4
WAG 5

History

After Eastern Railway set a deadline to eliminate all steam locomotive operations by 1990, a push was given towards establishing electric locomotion as the primary motive power, and the Steam locomotive sheds were decommissioned.[2] To meet the needs of exponentially increasing rail traffic on the new continuous broad gauge lines from Odisha to rest of India with the completion of gauge conversion, the Angul was selected by Indian railways for a new electric locomotive shed.[3]

This shed was developed in 2005 and presently holding 196 WAG-7 Locomotives only. Initially Diesel Loco Shed (DLS) was commissioned in Angul in 1999. In 2002 Indian railways decided to convert DLS to ELS for homing capacity of 50 Locos. In 2005 Angul DLS/ELS 50 Locos was converted to Electric Loco Shed Angul. Augmentation work from 105 Locos to 150 Locos is under progress.[4].The shed Started life on paper as a diesel shed but soon converted to an electric shed. Received locos even when the shed building was not complete. The WAM-4 and WAG-5 locos were brought from other sheds. In Feb 2006, all Angul WAM-4s have been transferred to VSKP, and henceforth, Angul will home only goods locos like WAG-5s and WAG-7s.

In the late 2003 WAG-5 were introduced which stayed until late 2010, when they were transferred to VKSP. It later got a large fleet of WAG-7 locos from other sheds.[5]

Operations

Being one of the two electric engine sheds in East Coast Railway, various major and minor maintenance schedules of electric locomotives are carried out here. It has the sanctioned capacity of 175 engine units. Beyond the operating capacity, this shed houses a total of 207 engine units, all WAP-7 units. It also housed a few WAM-4 locomotives temporarily.[6] Electric loco Shed, Angul is now housing a large fleet of WAG-7 in Indian Railways and it caters to many long-distance electric trains.[7][8]

Like all locomotive sheds, ANGL does regular maintenance, overhaul and repair including painting and washing of locomotives. It not only attends to locomotives housed at ANGL but to ones coming in from other sheds as well. It has four pit lines for loco repair. Locomotives of Angul ELS along with VKSP ELS were the regular links for all freight trains running through odisha when widespread electrification of railway lines started in East coast Railways. ANGL locomotives are rarely also used for passenger trains as well.

Livery and Markings

Angul WAG-7 locomotives have a standardized livery all over India.

Locomotives

SN Type of Loco HP Holding Comments Images
1. WAG-7 5350 236 In service
Total Locomotives Active as of Fabruary 2021[9]236

Former Locomotives

SN Type of Loco HP Comments Images
2. WAG-5 3850 Moved to VKSP
4. WAM-4 3640 Moved to VKSP, now scrapped
Total Locomotives Active as of July 2020[10]

See also

References

  1. "e-Locos".
  2. "Report of the expert Committee on Coal Consumption on Railways, 1958". INDIAN CULTURE. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  3. "Electric loco shed location". Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  4. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 October 2013. Retrieved 2016-01-18.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. "Nov 2019 Locomotive Holding list" (PDF).
  6. "Indian Railway-shed wise engine.holdings" (PDF). p. 1. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  7. "fleets under sheds". Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  8. "List of Locos in amgul". Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  9. "e-Locos".
  10. "e-Locos".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.