The Siemens Charger is a family of diesel-electric passenger locomotives designed and manufactured by Siemens Mobility for the North American market.
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Data refers to the following except where noted:[3][4] |
There are five variants of the Charger, tailored for different operators and types of service: ALC-42 for Amtrak long-distance service, ALC-42E dual mode for Amtrak inter-city and long-distance routes that serve the Northeast Corridor, SC-44 for Amtrak state-supported inter-city service or commuter rail operators, SCB-40 for Brightline inter-city service and SCV-42 for VIA Rail inter-city service.
The first production Charger, an SC-44, was unveiled on March 26, 2016, and entered revenue service on August 24, 2017. It was followed by the SCB-40, which inaugurated Brightline service on January 13, 2018. The first ALC-42 was delivered to Amtrak on June 17, 2021 and entered revenue service on February 8, 2022 on the Empire Builder.
The Charger is powered by a Cummins 16-cylinder QSK95 4-stroke high speed diesel engine, which meets EPA Tier IV emissions standards that took effect in 2015.[5] Power output varies by model: the SCB-40 produces 4,000 hp (3,000 kW),[6][7] the SC-44 produces 4,400 hp (3,300 kW), and both the SCV-42 and ALC-42 produce 4,200 hp (3,100 kW).[8][9] The maximum speed in service is 125 mph (201 km/h).[10]
The locomotive shares much of its overall design with the Siemens Vectron diesel and electric locomotives used in Europe and the Siemens ACS-64 electric locomotive built for Amtrak.
Four Insulated-gate bipolar transistor (IGBT) power inverters carry electric current to each of the four AC traction motors. A static inverter off of the main prime mover supplies head-end power (HEP). The locomotive also features dynamic braking with regenerative capability, allowing the locomotive to divert power generated by dynamic braking away from the resistor grids to HEP and onboard locomotive auxiliary power demands.[3]
In response to a 2013 Request for Information from Metro-North Railroad, Siemens said they would be capable of producing a dual-mode variant of the Charger with onboard energy storage for use by Metro-North and the Long Island Rail Road, as well as intercity service on Amtrak's Empire Corridor.[11]
California's SC-44s have aerodynamic "spoilers" on the rear of their roofs that match the height of bi-level California and Surfliner cars.[12]
The first production SC-44 unit was unveiled on March 26, 2016.[13] The first two Charger locomotives to leave Siemens' factory in Florin, California were transported to the Transportation Technology Center (TTC) in Pueblo, Colorado in June 2016 and underwent testing of performance metrics such as acceleration and braking.[14][15] The first Brightline SCB-40 locomotives were delivered in December 2016 to undergo testing in Florida.[16]
In February 2017, Amtrak and WSDOT began testing one of the Midwest-bound locomotives for federal certification along the Cascades corridor in the Pacific Northwest.[17][18] Test runs were conducted on the Midwest and Northern California routes in April and May.[19] Testing at up to 135 miles per hour (217 km/h) at TTCI, on the corridors, and on the Northeast Corridor in September 2016 resulted in a federal certification for 125-mile-per-hour (201 km/h) operations.[20]
Revenue testing on the Capitol Corridor and San Joaquins routes in Northern California began on May 25, 2017.[21] During these tests, the trains operated with a second locomotive in case of failure.[22] The Northern California units were formally accepted and approved for solo service on October 23, 2017.[23] The SC-44 entered revenue testing on the Midwest routes in July 2017, with solo revenue service beginning on a Hiawatha Service train on August 24, 2017.[20][24] Revenue service on the Cascades route began in November 2017.[25]
On December 18, 2017, Washington state SC-44 #1402 was wrecked in a derailment of a Cascades train on the Point Defiance Bypass.[26]
Brightline began revenue operations with its SCB-40 locomotives on January 13, 2018.[27] The first Chargers for MARC began testing that month, and revenue service began on April 5, 2018.[28][29] Pre-revenue testing began on the Pacific Surfliner in October 2018; revenue service began later that year.[30][31]
The first ALC-42 for Amtrak's long distance trains was put into service on the westbound Empire Builder on February 8, 2022 after extensive testing in the Midwest and on the Empire Builder route. Of the 2 units on the inaugural service, one was Amtrak's "Day One" heritage unit #301.[32]
Owner | Model | No. | Qty. | Notes |
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Altamont Corridor Express | SC-44 | 3110–3113 | 4 | |
Amtrak | ALC-42 | 300–424 | 125 | Additional 50 locomotives added to order on February 8, 2022[33] |
ALC-42E | TBD | 65 | For use on Northeast Corridor services Options to purchase 10 additional locomotives | |
Amtrak Midwest | SC-44 | 4601–4633 | 33 | |
Brightline | SCB-40 | 101–121 | 21 | 12 units in service, 9 on order |
California Department of Transportation | SC-44 | 2101–2124 | 24 | 2101–2108, 2123–2124 operate on Capitol Corridor and San Joaquins 2109–2122 operate on the Pacific Surfliner |
Coaster | SC-44 | 5001–5009 | 9 | 5 units in service, 4 on order to be delivered by 2023 |
Exo | TBD | TBD | 10 | |
MARC | SC-44 | 80–87 | 8 | |
Metro-North Railroad | TBD | TBD | 27 | Options to purchase 144 additional locomotives |
Via Rail | SCV-42 | 2200–2231 | 32 | For use on Corridor services |
Washington State Department of Transportation | SC-44 | 1400–1408 | 8 | 1400, 1401, 1403–1408 operate on Amtrak Cascades. 1402 wrecked. |
Total | 366 |
California regional commuter line Altamont Corridor Express ordered four SC-44 locomotives in April 2018, with deliveries beginning in December 2019.[34] They entered revenue service in 2020.[35]
On December 21, 2018, Amtrak ordered 75 ALC-42 locomotives with options for additional 100. The first locomotive was expected to enter service in 2021 with the last by 2024.[36]
Compared with the SC-44, changes were made to the ALC-42 to make it more suitable for long-distance service: additional positive train control systems for nationwide service, a larger 2,200-U.S.-gallon (8,300 L) diesel fuel tank (instead of 1,800 U.S. gal [6,800 L]), a larger diesel exhaust fluid tank, a larger sand tank, a more powerful 1,000-kilowatt head-end power generator (instead of 600 kw), an extended nose section with remodeled headlights for ease of repair in the event of minor front-end collision, and a prime mover de-rated to 4,200 horsepower (3,100 kW) to lengthen maintenance intervals.[37][38]
Assembly of the first ALC-42 began in March 2020.[39] On August 5, 2020, Amtrak announced that one of the first six locomotives will be painted in a replica of the "Day 1" livery to commemorate 50 years of Amtrak service, while the other five will feature a preliminary "Phase VI" paint scheme.[40] The remainder of the fleet will introduce a new "Phase VII" livery. By February 2021, 12 units had begun production, with the first locomotive, AMTK 300, delivered to Amtrak on June 17.[41] The first ALC-42 locomotives entered revenue service on the Empire Builder on February 8, 2022. On the same day, Amtrak announced that they had ordered an additional 50 ALC-42s, bringing the total number of locomotives ordered to 125.[42]
Amtrak plans to purchase at least 65 intercity trainsets with dual-mode ALC-42E locomotives from Siemens. The trainsets will be used primarily on routes that operate over both electrified and non-electrified track, which currently require costly and lengthy locomotive swaps when transitioning between electrified and non-electrified territory.[43][44]
In diesel mode, the ALC-42E will work like a typical diesel–electric locomotive, using its diesel engine to generate electricity for its motors. Each ALC-42E will be paired with a special trailer car that will have equipment to support electric mode on the end closest to the locomotive, and a passenger seating area on the other. There are two types of trailer cars:
The Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT), in conjunction with its counterparts in California, Michigan, Missouri and Washington, purchased 32 SC-44 locomotives for state-supported corridor services, operated by Amtrak under contract.
The $225 million order placed in March 2014 included options for an additional 75 corridor-configured locomotives[45][46] In 2015, IDOT ordered 12 additional units for use on the upgraded Lincoln Service corridor.[47] California ordered 14 additional units in November 2015 for use on the Pacific Surfliner beginning in 2018, plus two more units in 2016 for the Northern California services.[12][30] Washington state ordered an additional unit to replaced the one lost in the 2017 Point Defiant Bypass derailment.
A total of 64 locomotives (32 base and 32 options) were ordered for Amtrak state corridors in this contract: 22 for California, 9 for Washington state, and 33 for the Midwest states.[48][49] Another 8 options were exercised by MARC, bringing total contract orders to 72.[50]
In September 2014, Brightline purchased ten SCB-40 locomotives with options for an additional eleven.[51][52] The locomotives are used in pairs, bookending four passenger cars (expandable to seven) on Brightline's Miami–West Palm Beach service. The SCB-40s have a streamlined front end that conceals the front coupler behind a removable nose cone and produce a maximum of 4,000 hp (3,000 kW) instead of the 4,400 hp (3,300 kW) on the SC-44.[53][7] Brightline later ordered five additional trainsets and one extra locomotive (eleven locomotives total) for use on the extension to Orlando, with delivery between September 2021 and 2023.[54]
In June 2018, the North County Transit District Board of Directors approved the purchase of five SC-44s for its San Diego-area Coaster commuter rail service, replacing five older F40PH locomotives.[55] Deliveries began in August 2020 and are expected to conclude in the spring of 2021.[56] Two additional units were approved in June 2019, and another two in September. These additional locomotives will replace two existing F59PHI locomotives and allow increased service levels.[56][57] The first five locomotives entered revenue service on February 8, 2021.[58]
In January 2022, Montreal's Exo ordered 10 Siemens Chargers to update the fleet. They are planned to replace the aging F59PH locomotives.[59]
MARC announced in August 2015 that it was seeking $58 million to purchase eight locomotives to replace their aging electric powered AEM-7 units, with deliveries planned for late 2017.[60] The purchase was approved by the Maryland Board of Public Works on September 16, 2015.[61] The MARC order uses part of the Amtrak state-corridor options.[50] The first MARC Charger was shipped from the Siemens factory in early December 2017, and began testing in mid-January 2018.[62]
In December 2020, New York's Metropolitan Transportation Authority approved a Federal Transit Administration-funded $335 million contract for 27 dual-mode locomotives based on the Charger design. The new locomotives will replace the 27 existing GE Genesis locomotives used on the Metro-North Railroad's Hudson Line, Harlem Line, and Danbury Branch; they will use third rail electric power to enter Grand Central Terminal. The first 19 locomotives are scheduled to be completed in mid-2026. The contract has options for 144 additional locomotives: 32 for Metro-North, 66 for the Long Island Rail Road, 20 for the New York State Department of Transportation (for Amtrak Empire Service trains), and 25 for the Connecticut Department of Transportation.[63][64]
In December 2018, Via Rail ordered 32 bi-directional trainsets each powered by one SC-44 locomotive for use on the Québec City–Windsor Corridor.[65] The first of VIA Rail's trainsets were delivered on September 29, 2021 to VIA Rail in Montreal, crossing into Canada via Sarnia, Ontario.[66] When the locomotives' final paint scheme was unveiled by VIA Rail in May 2021, the locomotive was designated as an SC-44,[67] but when delivered the locomotives' designation had been changed to SCV-42.[66]
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See also: List of low-emissions locomotives |