RB48 – Heritage traction in Nordrhein-Westfalen

For observers of the German railway scene, the loss at the end of 2017 of “the Kufstein” took away a valued piece of variety.  Happily, something similar has now started elsewhere – although with less scope for such a diverse selection of traction!

The substitution of a Meridian commuter train diagram between Kufstein and München between May 2016 and December 2017 occurred as a result of a fatal collision between two of its EMUs in February 2016 which had written both off.  This “vice turn” continued until new-build replacement units entered traffic.

Sadly, history repeated itself somewhat on the evening of 5th December 2017 at Meerbusch-Osterath, near Krefeld, when a National Express Bombardier “Talent 2” EMU collided with a freight train, causing startling visual damage to the unit and most certainly breaking its back.  Some footage in the aftermath of the accident can be seen in a news report here.  Most importantly, this time there were no fatalities.  The cause is still under investigation by the EUB, but the point pertinent to this story is that National Express have consequently had one fewer unit in their fleet than previously.

Loco hauled solution

As a result, Monday 29th January 2018 saw the introduction of a modest loco-hauled operation for National Express, on the RB48 “Rhein-Wupper-Bahn” route which runs from Köln, through Solingen to Wuppertal.

This is not exactly a novel development, as National Express used locos and stock between February and May 2016 – in fact, from the same provider on exactly the same diagram…

 

The above is a link to a YouTube video uploaded by user leeseisenbahnen showing 110 469 in action on the last occasion (2016) that National Express hired in this combination of locomotive and carriages.

Diagram

The loco-hauled set will be in use from Mondays to Fridays, and there is not currently a scheduled end date for its use.  The diagram is as follows:-

RB32508 (RB20170) 06:08 Bonn Hbf – Wuppertal-Oberbarmen 07:45
RB32423 (RB20157) 08:13 Wuppertal-Oberbarmen – Köln Hbf 09:05
RB32428 (RB20158) 09:52 Köln Hbf – Wuppertal-Oberbarmen 10:45
RB32441 (RB20159) 11:13 Wuppertal-Oberbarmen – Köln Hbf 12:05
RB32446 (RB20160) 12:52 Köln Hbf – Wuppertal-Oberbarmen 13:45
RB32457 (RB20161) 14:13 Wuppertal-Oberbarmen – Köln Hbf 15:05
RB32458 (RB20162) 15:52 Köln Hbf – Wuppertal-Oberbarmen 16:45
RB32519 (RB20163) 17:13 Wuppertal-Oberbarmen – Bonn Hbf 18:44

To note: between 28th February and 9th March, and again between 19th and 25th March 2018, engineering works close the above the route, and therefore the set will work on the following diagram (also Mondays to Fridays only):-

RB62151 04:50 Köln Messe/Deutz – Remagen 05:49
RB62150 06:11 Remagen – Köln Messe/Deutz 07:09
RB62153 07:50 Köln Messe/Deutz – Remagen 08:49
RB62152 09:11 Remagen – Köln Messe/Deutz 10:09
RB62155 10:50 Köln Messe/Deutz – Remagen 11:49
RB62154 12:11 Remagen – Köln Messe/Deutz 13:09
RB62157 13:50 Köln Messe/Deutz – Remagen 14:49
RB62156 15:11 Remagen – Köln Messe/Deutz 16:09
RB62159 16:50 Köln Messe/Deutz – Remagen 17:49
RB62158 18:11 Remagen – Köln Messe/Deutz 19:09

It has been suggested that 183 500 might work on these turns, but so far (5th March) it has remained in the hands of the booked 110.

Traction

Traction for this will be class 110 electrics from TRI Train Rental working in push-pull mode with a rake “fresh air” carriages from the same provider.  The operation has kicked off with 110 469, a 51-year-old Henschel-built electric that is now in a pretty variation of the Stahlblau livery that it entered traffic in.

12th May 2018 – Two ex-DR V100s around Magdeburg

Saturday 12th May 2018 sees a particularly high-mileage railtour featuring an ex-Deutsche Reichsbahn V100 type diesel loco (ex-DB 202 – specific loco not currently known), departing Staßfurt at 06:45, picking up through Magdeburg to run approximately 200 miles north to the Baltic Sea coastal town of Warnemünde and back.  This is being promoted by Nostalgiezugreisen Lipsia (link).  The fare for the day is an astonishingly reasonable €49.

Staßfurt – a town of only 23,000 people and with just one hotel within 5 miles of the station listed on Trip Advisor – is not the easiest place in the world to get to for 06:45, however – the only train that comfortably “makes” it is the 05:44 DMU from Aschersleben, which is not exactly the centre of the universe itself.  If you are intending to cover this excursion to Warnemünde, I would strongly suggest that you stay in Magdeburg, the state capital of Sachsen-Anhalt.  The railtour picks up there at a currently projected time of 07:10.

However, if you do so, you may wish to investigate the possibility of heading south to intercept the train, to Schönebeck – its intermediate call on the way in from Staßfurt, at 07:00.  You can do this on the 06:36 RegionalExpress DMU from Magdeburg Hbf (which gives you a +10), or – on paper – you could precede that on the 06:30 special train departure – which is another V100!

The Eisenbahnfreunde Traditionsbahnbetriebswerk Staßfurt are also running a charter on that day (link), advertised to be hauled by 202 484, departing Magdeburg Hbf at 06:30, calling at Schönebeck at 06:43 (+17 onto the other tour), running south to Staßfurt where it is replaced by steam loco 44 1486 for a day out to Meiningen.

This 11-minute video uploaded to YouTube by user ecpaganini shows V100s at work in the former East Germany two decades ago.  Those days will be resurrected in a small way on 12th May 2018.  202 484 – one of the locos involved – is seen making a strong departure at 7m20s in the video.

Of course, you may wish to alight from the northbound charter back at Magdeburg where – if all had gone to plan – you will have been able to have had two V100s on two trains by 07:10.

An important note

I should note that I have not approached the operator of either railtour myself to see if they would entertain a “part fare” on this occasion, and I strongly suggest you do this if you are considering this move.  Although very common in the UK, German railtours in general do not have any kind of “part fare” culture, although I find that railtour organisers are – in the main – happy to negotiate a reasonable arrangement if they are expecting you.

In the unlikely event that the response is a “no”, please respect that.  We are lucky that British enthusiasts enjoy a good relationship with German railtour operators and this is not something that should be jeopardised.

Museumseisenbahn Küstenbahn Ostfriesland – Belgian and German diesel power

One heritage railway in Germany that uses exclusively heritage diesel locomotive haulage is the Museumseisenbahn Küstenbahn Ostfriesland (MKO), in the far north-west of the country.

The MKO (website here) runs trains on a 16.5 km (10.3 mile) stretch of line from a junction with the “big railway” at Norden to Dornum.  Services are operated on every Sunday throughout the Summer, supplemented by occasional extra days here and there – please refer to the Haulage Calendar on this website for further details.

Ostfriesland (tourist website here) is a mainly rural area characterised by its coastline, and is often overlooked by those who travel through it bound for either its beaches or the numerous islands lying off it.  This is a shame, as it is an interesting region with a character and beauty very much of its own.

The above is a link to a YouTube video uploaded by user djdose100 showing operations at the railway.

Traction

An unusual aspect of this railway is that its mainline passenger fleet consists of two very similar locomotives, but one was built in Belgium and operated by the SNCB, the other in Germany and operated by the Deutsche Bundesbahn.  Both are MTU (Maybach)-powered six-axle diesel shunters.

The first is an ex-SNCB Class 80, 8062, built by La Bruges et Nivelles (BN) in 1963.  This was withdrawn in Belgium at the end of 2002 and was sold to the MKO the following year.  It has been painted into an historic DB maroon livery with yellow lining and has been given the non-authentic “German-style” running number V60 062.

The second is a genuine ex-DB V60, later class 260 under the 1971 renumbering scheme and later still class 360.  Built by Krupp in Essen in 1960, V60 555 (later 260 555 / 360 555) joined the MKO fleet in Spring 2016.  It has been painted in a similar scheme to V60 062 and carries the number 260 555-8.

Each day of passenger service sees one of these machines used.  According to the railway, “both locomotives alternately cover our trains.  Since it is always decided at very short notice with which locomotive we operate, unfortunately we cannot provide any reliable information in advance.  The other locomotive can be visited on the day of the trip in the railway museum”.

Times and Fares

On each day that the railway operates a service, there are four round trips from Norden to Dornum – at 10:30, 12:30, 14:30 and 16:30.  A round trip is a very fair €8.

Getting There

Norden station is on the main line from Leer and Emden to Norddeich Mole – the coastal terminus that serves as a ferry port for sailings to the North Sea islands of Juist and Norderney.

Among the trains that operate through it are two-hourly loco-hauled Intercity services, some of which are IC2 sets powered by class 146.5 locomotives.  These provide a comfortable +22 onto the MKO services in both directions (as they pass at Norden), although it’s an unfortunate -7 off the MKO trains back onto an IC working.

The alternate hours’ services are RegionalExpress services hauled by DB class 146s – one of which, as a result of “Storm Sebastian”, on 13th September 2017, was actually rescued by V60 062 after being incapacitated due to OHLE damage!

 

May I convey my thanks to Thomas Thiess of the MKO for his help with the research of this article.

Saturday 25th August 2018 – V75 018 and T435 0145 to Chodová Planá

Saturday 25th August 2018 sees an unusual railtour operated from the former East Germany into the Czech Republic and return, featuring the sole surviving ex-Deutsche Reichsbahn class 107 diesel loco and a Czech sister machine.

With an urgent need to replace its fleet of 21 inherited class 80 steam locos, and without a proven home-grown diesel design, 1962 saw the East German Deutsche Reichsbahn procure a fleet of 20 type “V75” diesel-electric locos from the Czechoslovakian manufacturer CKD (Ceskomoravska Kolben Danèk).  These were identical to the type T435.0 “Hektor” design which had been successfully supplied by CKD to the Czechoslovakian state railway, ČSD.

These 750hp, six-cylinder Bo-Bos operated primarily in the Leipzig and Halle area, almost exclusively on local freight work.  Under the renumbering scheme of 1970, V75 001 to V75 020 became 107 001 to 107 020.

The 107s were largely ousted by class 106 in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and the majority were then scrapped.  However, two – 107 004 and 107 018 – passed into industrial use at the Karsdorf cement works, giving them a stay of execution that took them through German reunification, and they then passed to the KEG (Karsdorfer Eisenbahngesellschaft) in 1991, who used them on works trains on the main line.

107 004 was cut up in 2011, but 107 018 now belongs to Railsystems RP GmbH and spends most of its time on engineers trains across Germany.

The above is a link to a video uploaded to YouTube by the user LudmillaPOWER featuring scenes of a railtour hauled by 107 018 in 2015.

The railtour

Roughly once a year – usually in late summer – as befits its lack of train heating capability – 107 018 ventures out on railtour duty with the Eisenbahnmuseum Schwarzenberg.  Last August, it was partnered by one of its Czech cousins – T435 0145 (ČD 720 145) – some of Ian Ross’s excellent photos of the day can be found on his website here.  It will again be paired with T435 0145 on the 2018 tour.

Fittingly for a train hauled by DR and ČD locos, this one runs from the former East Germany into the Czech Republic.  Last year’s tour did similarly and headed for the small town of Chyše for a brewery visit, engineering works having necessitated a diversion from the originally intended destination of the beautiful spa town of Mariánské Lázně.

This year’s tour, therefore, is another effort to get to Mariánské Lázně, but the train also continues the short distance further to terminate at Chodová Planá, again ostensibly for a visit to a brewery.

Times and fares

Tickets are €88 (€82 if only travelling to Mariánské Lázně) and can be obtained by emailing fahrkarten@vse-eisenbahnmuseum-schwarzenberg.de.

The tour departs from Schwarzenberg at 07:25 (arrive back 21:19), calling at Antonsthal at 07:40 (21:00) and Johanngeorgenstadt at 08:02 (20:26), running over steeply-graded routes via Karlovy Vary to Mariánské Lázně (11:20/16:15) and ultimately Chodová Planá (11:35/15:50).

Getting to the tour

Schwarzenberg is a fairly large town, however its location in the Ore Mountains (Erzgebirge) is perhaps not the best to base yourself.  However, it is possible to access this tour from Zwickau, the fourth-biggest city in Saxony (via RB23857, the 06:09 ex-Zwickau which is a +30 onto the tour); equally there is a +40 off the tour onto RB23888, the 22:00 to Zwickau.

Zwickau is no longer on the Intercity network – in fact, it has no booked loco hauled services at all any more – but is easily accessible from Leipzig, Chemnitz and Dresden, as well as across the erstwhile Iron Curtain into Bavaria.

The destination(s)

Mariánské Lázně (website here) is an excellent place to spend a few hours and turns this tour into a viable family day out.

Chodová Planá (website here) is best known as the home of the Chodovar brewery (“the oldest in west Bohemia) and this is indeed where participants are encouraged to spend their time, with the fare to this destination including a tour of the brewery and a beer tasting session – although this is limited to 100 participants.

“Die Lückenfüller” – temporary Deutsche Reichsbahn timewarp

8th January 2018 to 2nd March 2018 saw an interesting temporary loco-hauled passenger diagram operate in the former East Germany.

Erfurter Bahnservice (EBS) stepped into the fray to provide a public service on the Pfefferminzbahn route, which lost a sizeable proportion of its (already limited) passenger services at the end of 2017 amidst great controversy, when the contract was re-let from DB Regio to the similarly-named Erfurter Bahn.  The decision to cut the number of services along the line was ostensibly based on low passenger utilisation, but a fightback from the locals – including a petition signed by over 4,000 people – gave rise to two additional services (one each way) each weekday under the semi-official title of the “Lückenfüller” (literally, “gap filler”).

The above is a link a to 23-minute video uploaded to YouTube by Stationsvorsteher Roßwein forming a nice souvenir of the final day’s operation (including the “control relief” to Naumburg).  A couple of good friends of mine – and possibly of other users of this site – can be seen and heard within it!!

The diagram

From 8th January 2018 to 2nd March 2018, EBS operated a Monday to Friday loco-hauled commuter service on the 22.5 km (14 mile) stretch between Buttstädt and Sömmerda as follows:-

DPE6600 07:43 Buttstädt – Sömmerda 08:16
DPE6601 16:45 Sömmerda – Buttstädt 17:19

Operation

The main enthusiast interest in this operation came from the variety of locomotives used, all of which came from EBS’s stable of ex-Deutsche Reichsbahn diesels.  Four such machines featured during the course of the diagram, from class 232class 202 and latterly class 228:-

Monday 8th January 2018 – Thursday 25th January 2018 – 232 690
Thursday 25th January 2018 – Tuesday 13th February 2018 – 232 334
Tuesday 13th February 2018 – Tuesday 27th February 2018 – 202 738
Tuesday 27th February 2018 – Friday 2nd March 2018 – 228 719

Travel in the service’s final week was free when a donation to the local food bank was made – as per a news article here.

Last day

The afternoon working on Friday 2nd March 2018, hauled by 228 719, was extended from Buttstädt to Großheringen and Naumburg as a “control relief”, upon which travel was free, departing at 17:30.  This was essentially the ECS move taking the carriage “home” to Karsdorf at the conclusion of the operation, and covered the route between Buttstädt and Großheringen which no longer sees a booked passenger service.  Upon arrival at Naumburg, 202 738 joined in the fun, coupling up to the rear to lead the formation empty up to Karsdorf.

Booked Austrian class 2091 haulage in East Germany to end

If you would like some Austrian class 2091 haulage on the narrow-gauge Döllnitzbahn in the former East Germany, best get your skates on.

They have acquired more modern ÖBB diesel traction in the form of 760mm diesel railcar 5090 015.  This is currently going through works at Ostritz, however will emerge as “137 515” and will be put to work on the diesel turns on the Döllnitzbahn with a trailer vehicle from Summer 2018.

Currently the regular diesel workings on this pleasant line, situated roughly midway between Leipzig and Dresden, and which connects into and out of the main line at Oschatz, are in the hands of two pre-war centre-cab 1-Bo-1 Austrian diesel-electric locos.  199 030 (ex-ÖBB 2091 010) and 199 031 (ex-ÖBB 2091 012) are two of the nine extant members of a once twelve-strong class, built between 1936 and 1938.

Currently, 199 030 is away for repairs to collision damage sustained on 6th November 2017 when it struck a badly parked lorry (link to news article here); consequently 199 031 is quite busy at the moment!

IMGP4477.JPG

199 030 (ex-ÖBB 2091 010) at Oschatz Südbahnhof, 27/05/13 (JW)

The Döllnitzbahn enjoys a daily service, with one loco and set of stock in use each day.  There are occasional days when the 2091s get a rest and a steam loco comes out to play instead, but these are clearly advertised, so planning a trip to take in the diesel traction is not difficult.  Timetable detail for 2018 can be found here.

The two 2091s are intended to be kept in reserve, however if you want to sample them in service, you really need to make plans to visit before the DMU arrives.

More detail on the new acquisition can be found here (in German):-

Temporary DMU replacement by 218s on the Westfrankenbahn

The December 2017 timetable change sees the commencement of a modest new operation involving top-and-tail class 218 “rabbit” diesel-hydraulics.

The route in question is the 23 mile (37 km) route from Aschaffenburg to Miltenberg – east of Frankfurt am Main – part of the “Westfrankenbahn” – and five days a week, top and tail 218s sandwiching 3 double deck carriages will make six round trips.

The nominated locos are ozeanblau-beige livered “celebrity” 218 460 – nicknamed “Conny” – and one loaned from the Südostbayernbahn at Mühldorf.  This is currently 218 430, although it may of course be subject to a swap during the course of the operation.  460 has a 4000-series MTU power unit, whereas 430 has a TB11.

Edit Dec 17: TB11-engined machines 218 443 and 218 496 (of Ulm and Kempten depots respectively) were moved to Aschaffenburg at various points in the month, ostensibly as cover while 218 460 returned to Bremen works for attention.  460 returned on Boxing Day, and although all four are now at Aschaffenburg, 430 and 460 will remain the “intended” pair.

DSC02398

Heritage-liveried 218 460 “Conny” at Kiel Hbf, 18/06/17 (JW)

430 and 460 are no strangers to operating together, however.  Both were built in 1978, both entered traffic at Lübeck depot and both remained allocated there until 2007, at which point they were transferred together to Kempten – although they went their separate ways soon afterwards.  430 then led something of a nomadic existence for several years (including being allocated to Chemnitz for DMU replacement work and snowplough duties on the Erzgebirgsbahn), before settling back into regular use at Mühldorf.

Most notably, however, both were in the pool of 12 Lübeck 218s that were renumbered into the 210.4 series in the mid-1990s and replated from 140km/h (87mph) to 160km/h (99mph) to work in pairs on Hamburg to Berlin expresses prior to the electrification of this former cross-border route.

Switzerland 07 273 (2).jpg

218 430 was something of a celebrity itself when this photo was taken, as it was the final remaining Pielstick-engined 218, which she lost in favour of a TB11 just two months later.  Here she is seen at Ahrensburg on a Bad Oldesloe to Hamburg local, 01/09/07 (JW)

There is currently no end date specified for this operation, but it is expected to last for at least a few months, and may well run until the December 2018 timetable at least.  The reason is that the Kurhessenbahn are borrowing 5 class 642 DMUs that are normally used on this route to cover for a rolling stock shortage, hence the 218s and double deck carriages are being drafted into the Westfrankenbahn to fill the gap.

For now, the diagram will be weekdays only from Monday 11th December 2017 until further notice*, and consists of:-

RB23304 04:42 Miltenberg – Aschaffenburg
RB23303 05:41 Aschaffenburg – Miltenberg
RB23310 06:40 Miltenberg – Aschaffenburg
RB23305 07:36 Aschaffenburg – Miltenberg
RB23316 10:37 Miltenberg – Aschaffenburg
RB23313 11:39 Aschaffenburg – Miltenberg
RB23320 12:45 Miltenberg – Aschaffenburg
RB23317 13:39 Aschaffenburg – Miltenberg
RB23324 14:37 Miltenberg – Aschaffenburg
RB23321 15:39 Aschaffenburg – Miltenberg
RB23328 16:27 Miltenberg – Aschaffenburg
RB23325 17:39 Aschaffenburg – Miltenberg

Additionally, Sunday 10th December 2017 sees a one-off “taster” diagram showing off the double deck stock in the new environment, powered by both 218s, and travel on these will be free!

RB23341 11:39 Aschaffenburg – Miltenberg
RB23356 13:37 Miltenberg – Aschaffenburg
RB23349 15:39 Aschaffenburg – Miltenberg
RB23362 17:37 Miltenberg – Aschaffenburg
*Footnote: diagram concluded on 10th April 2018, but retained on here for historical interest.  I am told that it may resume.

Saturday 24th February 2018: A railtour with a loco from the GDR Governmental Train

Saturday 24th February 2018 will see a fairly long-distance main line day tour across the width the former East Germany – from Löbau to Wernigerode and return – in the hands of class 228 diesel-hydraulic loco 228 552 (back carrying its pre-reunification number of 118 552).

The tour will then feature a steam-hauled run up the Brocken mountain on the world-famous Harz metre-gauge railway.

The train is now shown as sold out on the website of the promoter – the Ostsächsische Eisenbahnfreunde – but it may still be worth contacting them if you are interested.

Notably, this loco, as V180 052, along with sisters 048 and 050 were built for the Deutsche Reichsbahn as the dedicated fleet for the GDR governmental train.

Below is a link to a photo showing 052 along with 048 over the inner-German border in Bebra in May 1970, hooking off from that train which was conveying GDR Prime Minister Willi Stoph to Kassel to a landmark meeting with West German Chancellor Willy Brandt, an event that held the world’s attention in the midst of the Cold War. This loco will have doubtless carried out many more equally prestigious jobs in its time.

Nürnberg route S2

IMG_20171118_051855807

143 870 stands at Nürnberg Hbf, 18/11/17 (JW)

The German city of Nürnberg (Nuremberg) contains a loco-hauled operation that is garnering increasing amounts of interest among enthusiasts – particularly as the alternatives are rapidly disappearing.

The S2 route of the Nürnberg S-Bahn runs from Altdorf, 15 miles east of the city at the end of a branch line, through Nürnberg Hbf in the middle, out to Roth a further 15 miles to the south.

All of the trains on the route are booked for haulage by class 143 “Trabant” electric locos hauling rakes of push-pull x-Wagen.  Some of the latter are still in their original interior condition, complete with brown vinyl seats!  There are nine diagrams – which can be found on the gen group “European Rail Gen” (to which I encourage you to join and contribute) – although one of these tends to be worked by a class 442 “Hamster” plastic EMU on most days.  Stations are close together, with 23 of them in total, so the character of the running is very much of a “full power or full service” nature!

IMG_20171117_221446875

143 119 at Reichelsdorfer Keller, with the x-Wagen carriage behind the loco (50 80 20 33 234-4) showing off its “orange” interior, now quite a rare sight on DB.  17/11/17 (JW)

The city of Nürnberg is perhaps not one that lies on the tourist trail for those “doing Europe”, but is nonetheless worth a visit.  Unfortunately, it is probably only known to most Brits as the host city of certain rallies and trials over 70 years ago – but there is far more to it than that.  For a significantly-sized city, it probably comes closest to stereotypical quaint Germany with timber-framed buildings and a castle looming over it.

Its Christmas market is especially popular, and indeed a cursory glance at the haulage calendar on this very site will show that it draws charter trains from across Germany for this express purpose throughout each November and December.  In fact, you may say that for the enthusiast, a couple of spins on the S2 and then a few beers is an ideal way to spend the layover of such a tour!

The locos involved

At the time of writing, Nürnberg has a fleet of 15 class 143s: 143 045 / 119 / 215 / 247 / 259 / 298 / 336 / 358 / 628 / 632 / 855 / 870 / 905 / 914 / 970.  These locos were built behind the Iron Curtain, by LEW in Hennigsdorf – just outside East Berlin, in the then German Democratic Republic, as Deutsche Reichsbahn class 243.  This class are the final remaining locomotives in regular mainline passenger service in Germany that were built for the GDR.

The oldest of Nürnberg’s allocation, 143 045, entered traffic in May 1985, with the youngest – which perhaps not predictably, is 143 632 – following suit in August 1990, just 44 days before reunification.

143 970, in particular, has a notable history.  DR loco 243 051, which entered traffic at Halle (Saale) depot in August 1985, lasted just three years before it was seriously damaged in a collision and consequent derailment at Angermünde.  It required serious rebuilding work.  This was done to the same spec as the 243s which were by now rolling off the production line; to an evolved design featuring multiple working.  As a result, it was renumbered into the relevant number series for such machines (243 8xx/9xx) – claiming the next available number and re-entering traffic as “243 970” in December 1988.  In fact, so heavy duty was the rebuilding work required to its frame that it even gained a new works number upon leaving LEW for the second time.

The moves

As I said above, there are up to nine diagrams (seven at weekends), although not all of these work all day.  If you want to get as many in the book as possible, I would recommend being there (very) early or late in the day.  One of the diagrams in fact only comes out to play from about 20:00, although it replaces two others which retire to the shed.

As 25 of the 30 miles of the S2 route – the sections east of Fischbach and west of Nürnberg Hbf – runs on single-track alignments adjacent to the “big railway”, moves can be fairly straightforward, with the lack of passing loops protecting a number of tight “pluses” for the keen basher.

IMG_20171117_214840189

Nürnberg-Sandreuth station is fairly typical of S2 stations west/south of the city in being an unmanned single platform shack adjacent to a main line.  17/11/17.  (JW)

Trains pass in the station at Nürnberg Hbf, with the connection far more comfortable when making moves to the east of it (+10) than to the west (+3).  The trains run to a roughly 20 minute frequency for most of the day, although crafting moves is hampered at times by some services not running through the full length of the route – turning back short at Feucht or Schwabach, or terminating/starting at the Hbf.

My preferred (weekday) loco-scratching move in fact nets only 8 of the 9 machines (as it takes place early in the day), but allows for a combination of ease and leisurely connections, whilst not actually spending all that much time doing it.  Starting at the Hbf at 07:44, you can make five consecutive round trips to the first station to the east – Dürrenhof, 0.7 miles away, which benefits from an island platform – with nothing tighter than a +6 connection, and get back to the Hbf at 09:14 with eight different 143s (from ten moves) and the rest of the day ahead of you, and ample time to get to another part of the region now your Länder ticket is valid (see below).

Obviously I appreciate that an 07:44 kick-off will not be everyone’s cup of tea, and the same feat is possible at certain other times of the day.  If you are there in the evening, your moves will need to be far less uniform and will need to involve heading west of the city – Sandreuth and Steinbühl are two good stations to shuttle between on the S2 to make best use of the 20 minute frequency whilst involving no steps or dodgy connections!

Getting there

Nürnberg has an airport (NUE) which sees direct flights from Stansted and Manchester with Ryanair.  The airport is linked to a city by the very handy driverless U-Bahn underground route U2, whisking you to the Hbf (main station) in under 15 minutes.

Aside from that, it is accessible by rail from most cities in Germany within 5 hours.

Validity

I’m always hesitant at suggesting that you blow up a valuable day of a global Interrail (or equivalent) shuttling between two suburban stations within sight of one another – of course, you can do this, but there also local ticket options that are a bit more economical.

The DB “Bayern Ticket” is one of the series of Länder tickets available, essentially a regional rover for local trains and is currently €25 (or, if after 18:00, only €23).  Prices per person come down markedly if you purchase one of these covering several people, although you will need to stick together all day.  The one downside of using Länder is that they are not valid until 09:00 on weekdays – a bit like most day rovers in the UK, really.  Bayern is the largest Land in terms of area, so you will be covered for quite some distance (e.g. as far as Füssen or Lindau near to the Swiss/Austrian borders), so again 0.7-mile leaps may not be the best use of this!

At a very local level, there is the local transport authority day ticket.  At only €7.90, the “TagesTicket Solo” covers you for the S-Bahn (but not RE or RB services), the U-Bahn, the tram and local buses.  This is valid only between Katzwang and Fischbach, but for all purposes other than doing the track, this should be sufficient for you.  This carries none of the off-peak time restrictions of other tickets, which means that it can actually form a handy weekday morning bolt-on to a Länder ticket, and in fact if you buy your TagesTicket Solo on a Saturday you get Sunday travel for free too.

The above is a link to a video uploaded to YouTube by user BillyFlorian showing 143 905 arriving and departing Fischbach station on an S2 working.

What can you combine it with?

Nürnberg is home to the DB Museum (note: not open on Mondays), and indeed usually some historic locos can be glimpsed from an S2 window on the right-hand side of the train travelling between Nürnberg Hbf and Nürnberg-Steinbühl – currently, these are 110 002 and 103 224.  Entry to the museum is a very reasonable €6.  Tragically, some key parts of the museum’s collection were destroyed in a fire in 2005, which actually occurred not at this site, but at their roundhouse at Nürnberg-Gostenhof, which was being used as an “overspill” for the main museum.

Haulage-wise, sadly, the city is a shadow of its former self.  Until quite recently, the Hbf was somewhere I would gladly be overnight, as numerous diesel shunters (latterly class 203, then class 214) would be available for haulage remarshalling what seemed like a constant stream of lengthy overnight trains to destinations across the Continent, with activity aplenty.  Time moves on, however, and it’s no longer possible to put the number of a diesel loco in your haulage book in, out or around Nürnberg.  True overnights – as opposed to trains that simply happen to run overnight – are limited to two Nightjets in each direction, EN420/490 north and EN421/491 south – the small number of shunting movements being carried out by the train locos with no fanfare whatsoever.

Of note is that the December 2017 timetable change will see the introduction of a Nürnberg to Sonneberg RE service along the brand new high-speed line, hauled by a fleet of “Vectron” class 193 electrics – 193 801 to 806 are understood to be the locos earmarked for these duties.

This timetable change is also expected to see the introduction to passenger service of a brand new class to German railways.  The six locos of Škoda-built class 102, are expected to usurp the ubiquitous class 101s on “München-Nürnberg-Express duties”.  Running up to 200km/h and using the “new” high-speed line between Nürnberg and Ingolstadt, these are the fastest regional trains in Germany and at the time of writing are notable in giving opportunities to travel behind 101s on regional tickets.  The 101s also use on the similar “Allersberg-Express”, but 2018 will see EMUs replace them on this.

There is, of course, a limited amount of other loco haulage on offer in the area, and further articles about each facet of this will follow in due course.

Halle (Saale) route S7 – East German nostalgia

Loco haulage on this route finally ended on 11th April 2018, but I’ll keep the article on the website for posterity as it has been popular – even though the S7 is now worked solely by EMUs, you may still like to visit this interesting corner of the former DDR!

Ironically, “Ostalgia” is big business.  Nearly 30 years after German reunification, nostalgia for communist East Germany has never been more popular. 

It seems that, with almost as much haste as the traces of the former country were wiped away following the fall of the Berlin Wall, people are now scrambling to experience what life was like behind it.  You can drive a Trabant car in convoy around East Berlin on an innovative sightseeing tour, then stay at painstakingly-styled themed hotels.  You can purchase clothes, food and all manner of other items of “reborn” Communist brands, recreated by popular demand.  You can have your photo taken at Checkpoint Charlie in front of a replica border hut, with men dressed up as border guards.

Yet all of these experiences are in some way synthetic. This part of the world has experienced so many changes since the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, that it is nigh on impossible to recreate “everyday life” in any setting.  After all, this was a country where you could realistically expect your intercity train to be powered by steam right up until the late 1980s.  Today you can flash through the Sachsen-Anhalt countryside on some of the world’s most modern trains at speeds of up to 300 km/h.

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143 043 arrives at Halle Silberhöhe, 30/09/13 (JW)

A small, but nonetheless very interesting exception exists in the vicinity of Halle (Saale), approximately 20 miles west of the city of Leipzig.  Halle (Saale) is a city with a history visibly stretching back centuries, and there is plenty for the tourist to see there.

The area around Halle is known as big centre for the chemical industry, with both the famous Leuna and Buna plants a short distance away.  These two gained particular importance in the post-war period when they were expropriated, expanded as part of the 1958 “Chemieprogramm” and used to supply the Soviet Union, jointly employing up to 50,000 people between them (equating to 1 in 350 of all the citizens of East Germany).

The mushrooming of industry here, the need for people to work there and the poor quality of housing elsewhere (much of it badly damaged by war) led to a fascinating East German project – the conception of a completely new and thoroughly modern city, known initially as the “Chemiearbeiterstadt West” (“Chemical Workers’ City – West”).  Later refined to “Halle-Neustadt”, this was to be a short distance to the west of the existing city.  Construction began on 15th July 1964 under the watchful eye of the architect Richard Paulick who oversaw the project.

“The laying of the foundation stone of Neustadt in 1964 was also that of the Halle S-Bahn network” Ralf Jacob, Halle city archivist

In stark contrast to the 700-year-old buildings of Halle, Neustadt was a futuristic (for the time) settlement consisting largely of grey concrete tower blocks known as “Plattenbauten”, synonymous with East Germany, designed to home over 90,000 people in total in nine Wohnkomplexe (“living complexes”).  Perhaps bizarrely, none of Halle-Neustadt’s streets apart from the main drag (the “Magistrale”) had any names – each block was identified by a number only – although this is one thing that has since changed.  Each Wohnkomplexe was intended to be pretty self-sufficient, featuring shops, restaurants etc, but the city’s primary function of a dormitory for the chemical workers was very close to the surface.

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Basher’s eye view of 143 871 on the S7, 30/09/13 (JW)

Key to this was the creation of a public transport infrastructure to link the residential districts with each other, the chemical plants and also the original city of Halle.  The centrepiece of this was the S-Bahn, the first part of which opened in 1967.

Halle S-Bahn

It may perhaps be a little odd to the 2017 observer to consider that this S-Bahn – a term we now largely associate with rapid transit operated by electric multiple units – was initially operated with Deutsche Reichsbahn V180-type diesel-hydraulic locos (later class 118, and DB class 228 after reunification) with up to 12 double-decker carriages in push-pull formation.  These ran from the station now known as Halle Zscherbener Straße to Merseburg, Luna and Beuna and were supplemented by VT2.09 “pig taxis” to Halle (Saale) Hbf.

Electrification was soon to follow, along with new stations in the south of Halle-Neustadt as the city sprawled ever outwards and an extension through the Halle-Neustadt station (situated underground beneath the centre of the new city) through to Halle-Nietleben and Halle-Dölau.  This allowed an electric S-Bahn service to be operated in an inverted “S” shape through the adjacent cities, beginning at Halle-Trotha and ending at Halle-Dölau – a distance of 22.8 km by rail, but less than 7 km as the crow flies.  Traction for this was initially classes E11 and E42 (later DB class 109 and 142) electrics – as seen here in a rather impressive photo from after the fall of the Wall – and later the once-ubiquitous class 143 electric locos.

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143 871 at Halle (Saale) Hbf, 30/09/13 (JW)

Halle-Neustadt Today

Halle-Neustadt’s initial strength has also proved to be its downfall.  Conceived to home chemical workers, the plants are now shadows of their former selves, and this has had the predictable knock-on effect.

Home to 93,000 people at its peak, the turn of the century had seen Halle-Neustadt’s population reduce to 60,000, and now barely 40,000 live there.  A startlingly high ratio of those people are the old people who were the young target market of the project 50 years ago.  Many of the Plattenbauten lie empty, including those originally built for the families of the Soviet soldiers who built them.  Consequently, some have even been demolished.  Doubtless more will follow as the population gets older.  Some modernisation has occurred – including to Halle-Neustadt’s S-Bahn station which retained this dilapidated throwback as late as 2009 – but generally, its East German character can still be very clearly seen.

Neither the direct link from Halle-Neustadt to Merseburg (2007), nor the section of line beyond Halle-Nietleben to Halle-Dölau (2002) retain a train service – although part of the latter saw its first train in 15 years in April 2017 when the Freunde der Halle-Hattstedter Eisenbahn ran a track machine along it (see news article here).  For the meantime, though, the S7 route through Halle-Neustadt remains a little picture of a lost country.

The above is a link to a 9-minute YouTube video uploaded by user Berger Max neatly showing life on the S7 route in 2017.  The deplorable state of Neustadt station can clearly be seen.

Halle S7 today – loco-hauled

The S7 is the remainder of the Trotha to Dölau route, now cut back to serve only Halle (Saale) Hbf to Halle-Nietleben.  The section from the Hbf to Trotha has now been subsumed into an EMU-worked S-Bahn route from Leipzig.

Using East German traction (class 143) and East German-built double deck rolling stock, and running through as East German an environment as you are likely to find in 2018, this is probably as authentic as “Ostalgic” experience as any you could have.

Halle retains an allocation of five class 143s (143 034143 276, 143 810143 871 and 143 903) and the S7 represents 100% of their remaining booked work.  This is now an oasis in a desert of suburban loco haulage – modern class 442 “Talent” EMUs having recently replaced locos on all but this route – although January 2018 has seen a couple of impromptu vice-unit appearances by 143s on route S9.

Two sets are employed on the route, operating at 30-minute intervals (xx:20 and xx:50 from both ends).  If you simply wish to travel on both in the shortest time possible, then the “shack of choice” is Halle-Silberhöhe – you can depart from Hbf at xx:20, be at Silberhöhe from xx:28-33.  This +5 is guaranteed to “make”, as Silberhöhe is a single-platform station.  (It does, however, have the appearance of a former island platform – with a second platform face and ballast, but no track – this was never in fact laid, and was part of an uncompleted project to allow a 10-minute frequency along this route in the 1980s, such was the amount of usage that the line was getting).

This will get you back at the Hbf with both machines in your book by xx:41.  (To note, these trains now use the new platform 13a at the Hbf, which is a few minutes’ – signposted – walk from the main station).  However, if you have the time, I really would recommend a little wander into Halle-Neustadt.

Update 31/03/18 – From 18/04/18, the RE9 “Rhein-Sieg-Express” in the Köln area will have two class 442 “Hamster” EMUs replaced by two loco-hauled “Dosto” sets.  It is expected that these will be the two sets from Halle currently used on the S7.  This will mean that the 442s will move to Halle to work the S7, giving a common fleet in that area.  I would not expect the 143s to move with the stock, so if you want to ride behind them, best to move quickly…