German Umlaut Alt Codes
Type | A | O | U | Eszet |
---|---|---|---|---|
Capital | Ä | Ö | Ü | ß |
Alt Code | 0196 | 0214 | 0220 | 0223 |
Lowercase | ä | ö | ü | |
Alt Code | 0228 | 0246 | 0252 |
2000 class railcar page as it stood before it was butchered citing fancruft
2000 / 2100 Class Jumbos | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Manufacturer | Commonwealth Engineering (Comeng) |
Built at | Granville, New South Wales |
Constructed | 1979–80 |
Entered service | 1980 |
Number built | 12 (2000) 18 (2100) |
Number in service | 10 (2000) 16 (2100) |
Fleet numbers | 2001–2012 2101–2118 |
Capacity | 64 passengers (2000) 104 passengers (2100) |
Operators |
State Transport Authority (STA) TransAdelaide |
Depots | Dry Creek Gawler Lonsdale Belair |
Specifications | |
Maximum speed | 140 km/h 90 km/h Network Speed |
Weight | 68t (2000) 42t (2100) |
Prime mover(s) | Diesel Hydraulic (2000) Trailer (2100) |
Transmission | Voith T420r (2000) |
Track gauge | 1600 |
This article needs additional citations for
verification. (September 2007) |
The "2000" class railcars are self-propelled diesel railcars which are used by TransAdelaide on the Adelaide metropolitan rail network. The body shell design was based on the Budd SPV2000, Metroliner and Amfleet cars but the 2000 class railcars have a slightly different curve to the Amfleet. They were built by Commonwealth Engineering and entered service in 1980. They acquired the nickname "Jumbos" due to the raised driving cab, similar to that of the Boeing 747 "Jumbo Jet". This raised cab was designed so that two passengers could sit at the front or rear window, or in a 3 car set look into the leading trailer.
There are 26 currently in operation. Power cars are Numbered #2001–#2012 while trailer cars are numbered #2101-#2118. According to the 2008–09 State Budget these trains will all be withdrawn from suburban service by 2018 and replaced by new trains. [1]
Each power car currently contains two turbocharged Cummins 6-cylinder diesel engines under the floor driving a Voith hydraulic transmission; the original engine used throughout the 1980s and early 1990s was a V12 turbocharged MAN AG engine. The trains can be used in 2-car (power-trailer) or 3-car (trailer-power-trailer) configurations as well as multiple-set configurations as long as six cars. Five- and six-car sets were last used in 1995; today, the maximum length is four cars (2x 2-car sets).[ citation needed]
These trains are most often seen during weekdays (mainly peak hours) and sometimes, but very rarely, on Saturdays on the Noarlunga Centre, Gawler, Outer Harbor, Grange lines and formally on weekends and public holidays but never on the Belair line. Operation of the railcars was too expensive and have only done rare trips to Belair since mid-2007. When the Christmas Pageant is held in Adelaide in November each year (normally second Saturday of the month), the Jumbos are used to transport pageant goers. Also when the Royal Adelaide Show is on at the Wayville Showgrounds each year, these trains are seen running the 'Showground Central' shuttle services most days.
As of 4 February however, these railcars are only seen on the Gawler Central line, since the Noarlunga Centre, Tonsley & Belair lines have been closed from 2 January as a result of the electrification of the Noarlunga (to be extended to Seaford) & Tonsley lines & the Goodwood yard works that involve separation of the ARTC interstate line from the suburban tracks, thus eliminating the diamond crossover. The 2000/2100's will almost certainly be banned from running on the southern lines as a result of the overhead wires that will be dangerously close to the driver's cabin of these railcars. So far, 2009 & most recently 2105-2011-2106 have been retired, with more most likely to follow once the new A-City trains enter service on the Seaford & Tonsley lines, which will render the 2000/2100 class railcars redundant.
Jumbos normally run in the following configurations:-
Other non-standard configurations have run on rare occasions in past. For example:
During the 1980s and first half of the 1990s, five and six car Jumbos regularly operated peak-hour trains on the Noarlunga Centre line. These longer trains were formed by coupling a 2-car set with a 3-car set, two 3-car sets and on rare occasions three 2 car sets. Since the mid-1990s trains on normal suburban workings have been no more than 4 cars. However, 5 or 6-car sets do run occasionally when traffic conditions dictate.
The various power cars and trailers are semi-permanently coupled as two and three car sets, which are re-arranged depending on traffic and maintenance needs. Unlike the 3100-class, the sets do not follow any numeric sequence. For example powercar #2001 usually uses trailers #2102 and #2113 and is a 3 car set which has been fully repainted.
Trailer car no. #2117 had a section of seating removed to provide extra accommodation for bikes. This was used for weekend Belair services, usually as a 2-car set with powercar #2008 and on weekday services to Gawler and Gawler Central. #2117 eventually had its full 2x3 seating layout restored. Now it is used on a second 4-car set with any one of the 2-car sets listed below (usually #2114-#2010), or another. Trailer #2118 which was also on the set prior to its repaint, used to be added to the consist for weekday services (the bike area is used for standing room in peak hour services on the Gawler and Noarlunga lines. But now #2118 is on another unrepainted set #2115-#2012 combining the STA and Adelaide Metro liveries together. All of the orange Jumbos actually contain a badly faded STA logo.
Throughout the 1980s and 1990s the consists were randomised where any powercar could be with any trailer and with all 30 cars in service there were 6 two car sets and 6 three car sets. But today the powercars are usually assigned to certain trailers but sometimes the ordering of the consists is changed due to cars going in for maintenance, for example #2101 was withdrawn due to repairs and replaced with #2106. Now repainted, #2106 has been swapped back to repainted #2105-#2011 and orange #2109 has been swapped from #2108-#2002 onto orange powercar #2005 until #2101 is returned to the rails. There are seven 3-car sets and four 2-car sets with their usual number arrangements as below. All four 2-car sets are joined into two separate 4-car sets for peak hour usage on the Noarlunga Centre and Gawler lines and are shuffled around. Sometimes a 2-car set can be still seen, especially when a trailer is getting maintenance done to it. However since August 2009, 2 car sets have become a regular sight.
Perhaps the most unusual 2000 class working took place on Saturday 30 July 2005. The 2-car bike train set #2008–#2117 failed at Belair. A 3-car set comprising #2107-#2004–#2110 was dispatched from Adelaide to retrieve the failed cars and pull them back to Adelaide (stopping all stations to Goodwood then express to Adelaide). The resultant 5-car set was #2107-#2004–#2110-#2008–#2117 with only powercar #2004 active. This is probably the only time a 5-car set of 2000 class railcars has worked on the Belair line. 3 car sets regularly worked up to Belair and Bridgewater in the 1980s, and in 1981, a 6-car set ran to Bridgewater. [2]
Standard 2000 class consists as of today
Most 2000 class railcars contain a five-abreast seating layout, 2X3, but refurbished trailers #2103, #2112 and #2116 have been reconfigured in 2x2 seating to allow for more standing room.
The 2000 class power cars are prone to emitting large puffs of diesel smoke when first pulling off from a station, this is much less common in the 3000 class railcar.
On 27 September 2007, a packed four car Jumbo set with about 600 people on board #2111-#2007–#2101-#2005 was involved in a low speed derailment after departing Adelaide Station on a peak hour service to Noarlunga Centre. Nobody was injured. Cars #2101 and #2005 derailed at a speed of about 20 km/h which flattened a signal pole in the process. A crossover accident was the cause. #2101 was withdrawn from service for repairs while #2111-#2007 was undamaged. #2005 suffered no damage has returned to service with various trailers, until #2101 was repaired. The 4 car consist is now back together again. [3] In May 2011, #2010–#2114-#2117-#2008 derailed about 1 km from Adelaide. All railcars sustained only minor damage but the damage on trailer #2117 was significant enough that repairs were needed. #2008 was coupled to #2116-#2006–#2112. It' returned to #2117 when it was repaired.
In 1982, powercar No #2008 suffered a head on collision with a truck at a railway crossing and sustained severe front end damage. The railcar along with trailer 2114 which suffered rear end damage was eventually repaired and returned to service.
On 9 December 2004, Jumbo Powercar #2011 (with trailers #2105 and #2106) caught on fire at Adelaide station at around 8 am. The fire was contained to an electrical cabinet in the diesel alternator room. As the diesel alternator room is airtight, with only oxygen coming in from the air intake for the engine, there was minimal damage to the interior of the car. The railcar was returned to service with #2105 and #2106 (which were used with #2002 when #2011 was taken out) all in the Adelaide Metro livery after being repaired. #2102-#2001–#2113 also was repainted.
Between 1980 and 1988 the railcars displayed destination codes consisting of two numbers and a letter. The destination windows were eventually painted over, except for cars #2003, #2005, #2011, #2107, #2113, #2115 and #2117 which retained a window with no number. (The windows of #2003 and #2113 were covered over by yellow decal when converted to Adelaide Metro livery.) The numbers indicated the route, either from or to Adelaide and the letter indicated the stopping pattern. At the time of their introduction to traffic, destination codes had not been decided, so initially the trains showed the destination code OOX regardless of the destination or stopping pattern. Sometime during 1980, destination codes were decided and are shown as follows:
41 | Adelaide – Islington Works (later Adelaide – Salisbury) |
42 | Adelaide – Northfield (later Adelaide – Dry Creek) |
43 | Adelaide – Penfield 3 |
44 | Adelaide – G.M.H. |
45 | Adelaide – Gawler |
46 | Adelaide – Gawler Central |
51 | Dry Creek – Port Dock |
54 | Dry Creek – G.M.H. |
61 | Adelaide – Port Dock (later Adelaide – Glanville) |
62 | Adelaide – Grange |
63 | Adelaide – Outer Harbor |
71 | Adelaide – Tonsley |
72 | Adelaide – Brighton |
73 | Adelaide – Noarlunga Centre |
81 | Adelaide – Mile End Plant Depot |
82 | Adelaide – Belair |
83 | Adelaide – Bridgewater |
The letter part of the destination code indicated the stopping pattern and varied according to which line the train was running on.
Gawler Central line | |
---|---|
A | Stopping all stations |
B | Express to Salisbury then stopping all stations |
D | Express to Dry Creek then stopping all stations |
E | Stopping Salisbury, Elizabeth, Womma, Gawler, Gawler Oval, Gawler Central |
F | Express to Greenfields then stopping all stations |
Dry Creek – Port Dock Line | |
---|---|
A | Stopping all stations |
Grange/Outer Harbor Lines | |
---|---|
A | Stopping all stations |
C | Express to Woodville then stopping all stations |
E | Express to Ethelton then stopping all stations |
G | Change at Woodville for Grange Line stations |
Tonsley/Noarlunga Centre Lines | |
---|---|
A | Stopping all stations |
B | Stopping Oaklands, Brighton then stopping all stations |
C | Express to Brighton then stopping all stations |
D | Express to Goodwood then stopping all stations |
E | Stopping Brighton, Hallett Cove Beach then all stations |
F | Express to Woodlands Park then stopping all stations |
G | Stopping Brighton, Hallett Cove, Hallett Cove Beach then all stations |
X | Express from Adelaide to Noarlunga Centre and (or) back |
Belair/Bridgewater Lines | |
---|---|
A | Stopping all stations |
B | Stopping Mitcham, Eden Hills then all stations |
D | Express to Goodwood then stopping all stations |
E | Stopping Blackwood, Belair then all stations |
It should be noted that during the time destination codes were in use, STA Working Timetables showed both the number and letter while the relevant Public Timetables only showed the number. In theory, both the relevant number and letter codes were meant to be displayed but in practice the letter code displayed was almost always A regardless of the stopping pattern.
2000/2100-class Railcars | ||
---|---|---|
2000-class | 2100-class | |
Type: | Diesel Hydraulic | Trailer |
Track Gauge: |
Broad Gauge 1600mm (5 ft 3in) |
Broad Gauge 1600mm (5 ft 3in) |
Transmission: | Voith T420r | N/A – Trailer |
Power Plant: | Two turbocharged Cummins 6-cylinder 390 kW (525 hp) underfloor diesel engines [These replaced the original 505 hp (377 kW) MAN D3650 turbocharged engines in the early 1990s], plus two torque converters and 175 kVA alternator | N/A – Trailer |
Maximum Speed: | 140 km/h (conservative) but limited to 90 km/h in service | Same |
Number in class: | 11* (originally 12) | 18 |
Unit numbers: | 2001–2012 | 2101–2118 |
Introduced: | 1980 | 1980 |
Built by: | Comeng | Comeng |
Passenger Seating Capacity: | 64 | 98 (90 in 2103, 2112 & 2116) |
Weight: | 68 tonnes | 40 to 42 tonnes |
"2000 Class Railcars", Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin, March 1988, pp. 49–69.
Category:Transport in Adelaide
Category:Diesel multiple units of Australia
German Umlaut Alt Codes
Type | A | O | U | Eszet |
---|---|---|---|---|
Capital | Ä | Ö | Ü | ß |
Alt Code | 0196 | 0214 | 0220 | 0223 |
Lowercase | ä | ö | ü | |
Alt Code | 0228 | 0246 | 0252 |
2000 class railcar page as it stood before it was butchered citing fancruft
2000 / 2100 Class Jumbos | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Manufacturer | Commonwealth Engineering (Comeng) |
Built at | Granville, New South Wales |
Constructed | 1979–80 |
Entered service | 1980 |
Number built | 12 (2000) 18 (2100) |
Number in service | 10 (2000) 16 (2100) |
Fleet numbers | 2001–2012 2101–2118 |
Capacity | 64 passengers (2000) 104 passengers (2100) |
Operators |
State Transport Authority (STA) TransAdelaide |
Depots | Dry Creek Gawler Lonsdale Belair |
Specifications | |
Maximum speed | 140 km/h 90 km/h Network Speed |
Weight | 68t (2000) 42t (2100) |
Prime mover(s) | Diesel Hydraulic (2000) Trailer (2100) |
Transmission | Voith T420r (2000) |
Track gauge | 1600 |
This article needs additional citations for
verification. (September 2007) |
The "2000" class railcars are self-propelled diesel railcars which are used by TransAdelaide on the Adelaide metropolitan rail network. The body shell design was based on the Budd SPV2000, Metroliner and Amfleet cars but the 2000 class railcars have a slightly different curve to the Amfleet. They were built by Commonwealth Engineering and entered service in 1980. They acquired the nickname "Jumbos" due to the raised driving cab, similar to that of the Boeing 747 "Jumbo Jet". This raised cab was designed so that two passengers could sit at the front or rear window, or in a 3 car set look into the leading trailer.
There are 26 currently in operation. Power cars are Numbered #2001–#2012 while trailer cars are numbered #2101-#2118. According to the 2008–09 State Budget these trains will all be withdrawn from suburban service by 2018 and replaced by new trains. [1]
Each power car currently contains two turbocharged Cummins 6-cylinder diesel engines under the floor driving a Voith hydraulic transmission; the original engine used throughout the 1980s and early 1990s was a V12 turbocharged MAN AG engine. The trains can be used in 2-car (power-trailer) or 3-car (trailer-power-trailer) configurations as well as multiple-set configurations as long as six cars. Five- and six-car sets were last used in 1995; today, the maximum length is four cars (2x 2-car sets).[ citation needed]
These trains are most often seen during weekdays (mainly peak hours) and sometimes, but very rarely, on Saturdays on the Noarlunga Centre, Gawler, Outer Harbor, Grange lines and formally on weekends and public holidays but never on the Belair line. Operation of the railcars was too expensive and have only done rare trips to Belair since mid-2007. When the Christmas Pageant is held in Adelaide in November each year (normally second Saturday of the month), the Jumbos are used to transport pageant goers. Also when the Royal Adelaide Show is on at the Wayville Showgrounds each year, these trains are seen running the 'Showground Central' shuttle services most days.
As of 4 February however, these railcars are only seen on the Gawler Central line, since the Noarlunga Centre, Tonsley & Belair lines have been closed from 2 January as a result of the electrification of the Noarlunga (to be extended to Seaford) & Tonsley lines & the Goodwood yard works that involve separation of the ARTC interstate line from the suburban tracks, thus eliminating the diamond crossover. The 2000/2100's will almost certainly be banned from running on the southern lines as a result of the overhead wires that will be dangerously close to the driver's cabin of these railcars. So far, 2009 & most recently 2105-2011-2106 have been retired, with more most likely to follow once the new A-City trains enter service on the Seaford & Tonsley lines, which will render the 2000/2100 class railcars redundant.
Jumbos normally run in the following configurations:-
Other non-standard configurations have run on rare occasions in past. For example:
During the 1980s and first half of the 1990s, five and six car Jumbos regularly operated peak-hour trains on the Noarlunga Centre line. These longer trains were formed by coupling a 2-car set with a 3-car set, two 3-car sets and on rare occasions three 2 car sets. Since the mid-1990s trains on normal suburban workings have been no more than 4 cars. However, 5 or 6-car sets do run occasionally when traffic conditions dictate.
The various power cars and trailers are semi-permanently coupled as two and three car sets, which are re-arranged depending on traffic and maintenance needs. Unlike the 3100-class, the sets do not follow any numeric sequence. For example powercar #2001 usually uses trailers #2102 and #2113 and is a 3 car set which has been fully repainted.
Trailer car no. #2117 had a section of seating removed to provide extra accommodation for bikes. This was used for weekend Belair services, usually as a 2-car set with powercar #2008 and on weekday services to Gawler and Gawler Central. #2117 eventually had its full 2x3 seating layout restored. Now it is used on a second 4-car set with any one of the 2-car sets listed below (usually #2114-#2010), or another. Trailer #2118 which was also on the set prior to its repaint, used to be added to the consist for weekday services (the bike area is used for standing room in peak hour services on the Gawler and Noarlunga lines. But now #2118 is on another unrepainted set #2115-#2012 combining the STA and Adelaide Metro liveries together. All of the orange Jumbos actually contain a badly faded STA logo.
Throughout the 1980s and 1990s the consists were randomised where any powercar could be with any trailer and with all 30 cars in service there were 6 two car sets and 6 three car sets. But today the powercars are usually assigned to certain trailers but sometimes the ordering of the consists is changed due to cars going in for maintenance, for example #2101 was withdrawn due to repairs and replaced with #2106. Now repainted, #2106 has been swapped back to repainted #2105-#2011 and orange #2109 has been swapped from #2108-#2002 onto orange powercar #2005 until #2101 is returned to the rails. There are seven 3-car sets and four 2-car sets with their usual number arrangements as below. All four 2-car sets are joined into two separate 4-car sets for peak hour usage on the Noarlunga Centre and Gawler lines and are shuffled around. Sometimes a 2-car set can be still seen, especially when a trailer is getting maintenance done to it. However since August 2009, 2 car sets have become a regular sight.
Perhaps the most unusual 2000 class working took place on Saturday 30 July 2005. The 2-car bike train set #2008–#2117 failed at Belair. A 3-car set comprising #2107-#2004–#2110 was dispatched from Adelaide to retrieve the failed cars and pull them back to Adelaide (stopping all stations to Goodwood then express to Adelaide). The resultant 5-car set was #2107-#2004–#2110-#2008–#2117 with only powercar #2004 active. This is probably the only time a 5-car set of 2000 class railcars has worked on the Belair line. 3 car sets regularly worked up to Belair and Bridgewater in the 1980s, and in 1981, a 6-car set ran to Bridgewater. [2]
Standard 2000 class consists as of today
Most 2000 class railcars contain a five-abreast seating layout, 2X3, but refurbished trailers #2103, #2112 and #2116 have been reconfigured in 2x2 seating to allow for more standing room.
The 2000 class power cars are prone to emitting large puffs of diesel smoke when first pulling off from a station, this is much less common in the 3000 class railcar.
On 27 September 2007, a packed four car Jumbo set with about 600 people on board #2111-#2007–#2101-#2005 was involved in a low speed derailment after departing Adelaide Station on a peak hour service to Noarlunga Centre. Nobody was injured. Cars #2101 and #2005 derailed at a speed of about 20 km/h which flattened a signal pole in the process. A crossover accident was the cause. #2101 was withdrawn from service for repairs while #2111-#2007 was undamaged. #2005 suffered no damage has returned to service with various trailers, until #2101 was repaired. The 4 car consist is now back together again. [3] In May 2011, #2010–#2114-#2117-#2008 derailed about 1 km from Adelaide. All railcars sustained only minor damage but the damage on trailer #2117 was significant enough that repairs were needed. #2008 was coupled to #2116-#2006–#2112. It' returned to #2117 when it was repaired.
In 1982, powercar No #2008 suffered a head on collision with a truck at a railway crossing and sustained severe front end damage. The railcar along with trailer 2114 which suffered rear end damage was eventually repaired and returned to service.
On 9 December 2004, Jumbo Powercar #2011 (with trailers #2105 and #2106) caught on fire at Adelaide station at around 8 am. The fire was contained to an electrical cabinet in the diesel alternator room. As the diesel alternator room is airtight, with only oxygen coming in from the air intake for the engine, there was minimal damage to the interior of the car. The railcar was returned to service with #2105 and #2106 (which were used with #2002 when #2011 was taken out) all in the Adelaide Metro livery after being repaired. #2102-#2001–#2113 also was repainted.
Between 1980 and 1988 the railcars displayed destination codes consisting of two numbers and a letter. The destination windows were eventually painted over, except for cars #2003, #2005, #2011, #2107, #2113, #2115 and #2117 which retained a window with no number. (The windows of #2003 and #2113 were covered over by yellow decal when converted to Adelaide Metro livery.) The numbers indicated the route, either from or to Adelaide and the letter indicated the stopping pattern. At the time of their introduction to traffic, destination codes had not been decided, so initially the trains showed the destination code OOX regardless of the destination or stopping pattern. Sometime during 1980, destination codes were decided and are shown as follows:
41 | Adelaide – Islington Works (later Adelaide – Salisbury) |
42 | Adelaide – Northfield (later Adelaide – Dry Creek) |
43 | Adelaide – Penfield 3 |
44 | Adelaide – G.M.H. |
45 | Adelaide – Gawler |
46 | Adelaide – Gawler Central |
51 | Dry Creek – Port Dock |
54 | Dry Creek – G.M.H. |
61 | Adelaide – Port Dock (later Adelaide – Glanville) |
62 | Adelaide – Grange |
63 | Adelaide – Outer Harbor |
71 | Adelaide – Tonsley |
72 | Adelaide – Brighton |
73 | Adelaide – Noarlunga Centre |
81 | Adelaide – Mile End Plant Depot |
82 | Adelaide – Belair |
83 | Adelaide – Bridgewater |
The letter part of the destination code indicated the stopping pattern and varied according to which line the train was running on.
Gawler Central line | |
---|---|
A | Stopping all stations |
B | Express to Salisbury then stopping all stations |
D | Express to Dry Creek then stopping all stations |
E | Stopping Salisbury, Elizabeth, Womma, Gawler, Gawler Oval, Gawler Central |
F | Express to Greenfields then stopping all stations |
Dry Creek – Port Dock Line | |
---|---|
A | Stopping all stations |
Grange/Outer Harbor Lines | |
---|---|
A | Stopping all stations |
C | Express to Woodville then stopping all stations |
E | Express to Ethelton then stopping all stations |
G | Change at Woodville for Grange Line stations |
Tonsley/Noarlunga Centre Lines | |
---|---|
A | Stopping all stations |
B | Stopping Oaklands, Brighton then stopping all stations |
C | Express to Brighton then stopping all stations |
D | Express to Goodwood then stopping all stations |
E | Stopping Brighton, Hallett Cove Beach then all stations |
F | Express to Woodlands Park then stopping all stations |
G | Stopping Brighton, Hallett Cove, Hallett Cove Beach then all stations |
X | Express from Adelaide to Noarlunga Centre and (or) back |
Belair/Bridgewater Lines | |
---|---|
A | Stopping all stations |
B | Stopping Mitcham, Eden Hills then all stations |
D | Express to Goodwood then stopping all stations |
E | Stopping Blackwood, Belair then all stations |
It should be noted that during the time destination codes were in use, STA Working Timetables showed both the number and letter while the relevant Public Timetables only showed the number. In theory, both the relevant number and letter codes were meant to be displayed but in practice the letter code displayed was almost always A regardless of the stopping pattern.
2000/2100-class Railcars | ||
---|---|---|
2000-class | 2100-class | |
Type: | Diesel Hydraulic | Trailer |
Track Gauge: |
Broad Gauge 1600mm (5 ft 3in) |
Broad Gauge 1600mm (5 ft 3in) |
Transmission: | Voith T420r | N/A – Trailer |
Power Plant: | Two turbocharged Cummins 6-cylinder 390 kW (525 hp) underfloor diesel engines [These replaced the original 505 hp (377 kW) MAN D3650 turbocharged engines in the early 1990s], plus two torque converters and 175 kVA alternator | N/A – Trailer |
Maximum Speed: | 140 km/h (conservative) but limited to 90 km/h in service | Same |
Number in class: | 11* (originally 12) | 18 |
Unit numbers: | 2001–2012 | 2101–2118 |
Introduced: | 1980 | 1980 |
Built by: | Comeng | Comeng |
Passenger Seating Capacity: | 64 | 98 (90 in 2103, 2112 & 2116) |
Weight: | 68 tonnes | 40 to 42 tonnes |
"2000 Class Railcars", Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin, March 1988, pp. 49–69.
Category:Transport in Adelaide
Category:Diesel multiple units of Australia