R36 (New York City Subway car)
R36 | |
---|---|
An R36 ML train covered in graffiti on the service at 125th Street in September 1973 | |
Cars 9333 (R33 World's Fair) and 9533 (R36) are visible on the platform at Hunts Point Avenue in 2002, shortly before their retirement | |
Manufacturer | St. Louis Car Company |
Built at | St. Louis, Missouri, United States |
Constructed | 1964 |
Entered service | 1964 |
Refurbishment | 1985 |
Scrapped | 2001-2003 |
Number built | 34 |
Number preserved | 2 |
Number scrapped | 32 |
Formation | Married Pairs |
Fleet numbers | 9524-9557 |
Capacity | 44 (seated) |
Operator(s) | New York City Subway |
Specifications | |
Car body construction | LAHT (Low Alloy High Tensile) steel |
Car length | 51.04 feet (15.56 m) |
Width | 8.75 feet (2,667 mm) |
Height | 11.86 feet (3,615 mm) |
Doors | 6 |
Weight |
69,400 lb (31,500 kg) (pre-rebuild) |
Traction system | Westinghouse XCA248 with Westinghouse 1447C motors (4/car, 100 hp or 75 kW) |
Acceleration | ~1.5mph/s |
Auxiliaries | Converter |
Electric system(s) | 600 V DC Third rail |
Current collection method | Contact shoe |
Braking system(s) | WABCO, "SMEE" (electrodynamic) |
Safety system(s) | emergency brakes |
Track gauge | 4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge |
The R36 (or R36 ML) was a class of New York City Subway cars built in 1964 by the St. Louis Car Company, St. Louis, Missouri for the IRT division (also known as the A Division).[1] These cars are referred as R36 ML (or Main Line) or formerly known as the "Red R36s" to distinguish them from the blue R36 World's Fair cars which were built for service on the IRT Flushing Line (7 <7> trains). The R36s comprised fleet numbers #9524-9557.
History
The first set of R36s was placed in service on the 4 train on July 24, 1964.
The R36 ML was a 34-car follow-up order to the 500-car R33 model. Both R33 ML and R36 ML were similar with drop-sash side windows differentiating them from the large picture windows of the World's Fair cars. These cars ran for many years on the IRT main lines (Broadway – Seventh Avenue and Lexington Avenue). Prior to overhaul in 1984/5, they mainly ran on the 1 and 3 trains. Upon returning from overhaul the R36s ran on the 7 from 1984 to 1988, and transferred to the 6 from 1988 to 2001, and again retransferred back to the 7 when they began to be replaced by the R142A cars. Some also provided occasional service on the 4 route which sometimes uses equipment borrowed from the 6.
By 1982, all cars in this series received air conditioning as part of a retrofitting program.
Retirements, scrapping and preservation
In 1998, the New York City Transit Authority (NYCTA) announced that it would begin phasing out the Redbird cars — R26 / 28 / 29 / 33 / 36 with the R142 and R142A cars. From 2001 to 2003, Redbird cars were reefed, scrapped, sold, put into work service, or stored out of service.
All but one pair of R36 MLs were reefed. With the arrival of the R142As on the 6, the R36 MLs were transferred over to the 7. The last pair, numbers #9542-9543, ran on the 7 until August 2003. They went to the New York Transit Museum in 2004. The current state of these cars is unknown, as they have not been seen since. One source, however, suggests that these cars are stored on the NYTM connector tracks near Hoyt-Schermerhorn Streets.[2]
See also
- R29 (New York City Subway car) & R33 (New York City Subway car) - very similar earlier models also built by St. Louis Car Company.
References
- ↑ "www.nycsubway.org". www.nycsubway.org.
- ↑ "Two Questions about the R36 ML... - New York City Subway". NYC Transit Forums. Retrieved 2016-11-23.
- Media related to R36 (New York City Subway car) at Wikimedia Commons
- Media related to Redbirds at Wikimedia Commons