Flashback Friday
Remembering the Plastic Pigs
This week we learned that South Western Railway have
taken the decision to withdraw their allocation of Class 442 EMUs. It seems the
thirty year old units (despite being the subject of an extensive, and expensive, ongoing refurb and upgrade) have
reached the end of the road thanks in part to the reduced demand for passenger
travel caused by Covid 19. See story at https://economyclassandbeyond.boardingarea.com/2021/04/05/south-west-railway-bids-farewell-to-the-class-442-wessex-electrics/
I won’t try to tell the history of the ‘Plastic Pigs’ here, there are far better online resources for that at https://www.bloodandcustard.com/BR-5WES-442.html and http://extra.southernelectric.org.uk/features/rolling-stock/442/index.html for example.
The news has made me dig out a couple of images of the class from what was arguably their heyday in the early 1990s.
Introduced from 1988 for use on the Southern Region’s Waterloo to Weymouth route which had recently seen the third rail extended west from Bournemouth. The new Class 442/5WES units were based on the BR Mk 3 carriage design and incorporated electrical equipment from the Class 432/4REP units which had provided the front tline motive power on this route since the end of steam in 1967. While they weren’t everybody’s cup of tea, replacing as they did the popular REPs and bringing to an end the practice of operating Weymouth bound trains with push-pull fitted Class 33/1s beyond Bournemouth, they gained popularity over the years that followed as they provided comfortable and efficient travel in modern, air-conditioned, surroundings.
Although built for the Waterloo-Weymouth route they also appeared on Portsmouth line workings as well, again proving a big
contrast to the 4CIG and 4BEP units that normally operated fast services over
the hilly route. It was on these services that I had the majority of my early
experiences with the 442s. They provided a reliable service for BR’s Network
South East sector until the onset of rail privatisation, after which they continued to work for
South West Trains in the new era. Withdrawal from SWT services came as the
24 units were not compatible with the new generation of Siemans built Class 444 and 450 units. Amazingly they went on to find a new lease of life on the
Brighton line, operating the Gatwick Express Service for several years, before
the plan to return some units to their old haunts on the Portsmouth Direct Line
with the new South Western Railway franchise were announced. There was also a
proposal to use some on a new open access service from Waterloo to Southampton.
It seems time has finally run out for the Plastic Pigs.
Their non-standard equipment combined with the current down turn in passenger figures
has finally sealed their fate. Perhaps it won’t be long before overcrowded
trains on the routes from Waterloo will return and make those in authority
regret this decision. Time will tell.
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