The Sr1 is a class of electric locomotives built for VR of Finland. These 25 kV locomotives were built in the Soviet Union at the Novocherkassk Electric Locomotive Factory between 1973 and 1985. Two additional locomotives of this class were built at the VR Hyvinkää Machine Workshop in 1993 and 1995, number 3111 from spare parts and number 3112 from the original prototype locomotive (number 3000) that was never used by the VR.[1] The official classification given by the manufacturer is VL70 or ES40.
The nicknames for these locomotives are "Siperian susi" (Wolf of Siberia; in Finnishslang "susi" can also mean a poorly manufactured object, compare English "dog" or "lemon"),[1] "Kaalihäkki" (Cabbage Cage)[1] and "Sähköryssä" (Electric Russkie).
History
In 1970, Valtionrautatiet ordered 27 electric locomotives from Energomachexport, which were delivered between September 1973 and the end of the year 1975.[2] 82 additional locomotives were ordered and delivered between 1973 and 1985.[2] The first prototype locomotive, number 3000, was bought from the constructor in 1994 by VR, which rebuilt it into number 3112.[2]
The trains have been used in passenger and cargo transport on Finland's electrified rail network.[3]
A list of overall locomotives made is shown below:
Year
Number of units delivered
Unit numbers
Notes
1971
1
3000
Prototype locomotive. Kept by NEVZ up till the mid 1990s.
1973
4
3001–3004
First batch, introduced the same year.
1974
2
3005–3006
First batch.
1975
21
3007–3027
First batch.
1976
12
3028–3039
1977
12
3040–3051
1978
12
3052–3063
1979
12
3064–3075
1980
10
3076–3085
1981
7
3086–3092
1982
6
3093–3098
1983
6
3099–3104
1984
5
3105–3109
1985
1
3110
1993
1
3111
Built at Hyvinkää in Finland from spare parts.
1995
1
3112
Rebuilt at Hyvinkää in Finland from unit 3000.
Livery
The locomotives originally carried a dark red livery, with light yellow stripes around and below the cab windows. The stripes were later replaced with yellow warning panels (resembling stylised wings) below the cab windows. From the early 1990s onwards this livery was replaced by an off-white livery with red stripes. Nowadays the locomotives are refitted with a white-green livery to go with the current company colours.
Sr1 3036 in its first livery at NEVZ Novocherkassk, freshly outshopped, circa 1976.
Sr1 3046 in its second livery at Oulu, 14 June 1986
A Sr1 hauling a freight train in its second livery in 1987
Sr1 3069 in a white-red VR livery
Sr1 3084 in a white-green VR livery
Sr1 3093, spotting a "transitional livery" with green headlight front stripe
Technical information
Electrical equipment for the locomotives was supplied by the Finnish company Oy Strömberg (later part of ABB).[2]
Locomotives number 3098–3110 were rebuilt with new bogies allowing a higher maximum speed (160 km/h)[4] in the 1990s (3111 and 3112 were originally built for this speed), but since 2003 they have been restored back to the original top speed due to the speed being raised at the expense of tractive effort (possibly the delivery of the faster Sr2 class also had an effect). The last Sr1 to be equipped with bogies allowing 160 km/h was number 3107.
Two Sr1 locomotives operating in multiple-unit train control
Pantograph of Sr1
Driving cab of Sr1
Incidents and accidents
Three Sr1 class locomotives have been damaged beyond repair and withdrawn from service: number 3048 in Jokela in 1996, number 3089 in Jyväskylä in 1998 and number 3101 in Siuro in 2011. Five other locomotives have also been involved in accidents, but have been rebuilt or repaired afterwards.[5]
Withdrawal and replacement
In December 2013 VR announced an order for 80 new electric locomotives to replace the Sr1 Class. The new Sr3 class locomotives, of the Siemens Vectron design, were built in Germany by Siemens.[6] The new locomotives are scheduled to be delivered between 2017 and 2026, resulting in the withdrawal of the Sr1 class.[7]