Rail News Home Passenger Rail May 2017 Rail News: Passenger Rail Alstom’s iLint multiple unit is the world’s first train to run on a hydrogen powered cell, the company says.Photo – Alstom/Michael Wittwer By
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., Associate EditorSuppliers often face uncertainty in the passenger-rail locomotive market as public support ebbs and flows for transit projects. Elected officials, too, offer varying levels of support for passenger-rail plans.Even so, several manufacturers believe the global demand for passenger locomotives and multiple units will remain steady, and perhaps even grow."We're hopeful that the market will be buoyant in the future," said
Siemens Rolling Stock President Michael Cahill. "There's a long pipeline of needs across the United States from various commuter railroads and transit systems, but how they get funding, of course, is the key question."Funding concerns notwithstanding, other train builders characterize the overall passenger locomotive market as stable. And while they continue taking orders for their tried-and-true offerings, they're also piloting new technologies.Over the past couple years, Siemens has been busy filling orders for its Charger locomotives. The company
in March 2014 obtained a $225 million contract to build 32 of those units for departments of transportation in Illinois, California, Michigan, Washington and Missouri.That order, which was coordinated by the
Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) on behalf of the other states, included options for 225 additional locomotives. California, Illinois and Maryland
in November 2015 opted to purchase 34 more Chargers.Taking chargeFourteen of those units were set aside for the Pacific Surfliner
Amtrak route in California; the remaining locomotives were divided between IDOT and the
Maryland Transit Administration. The locomotives, which can operate at speeds up to 125 mph, meet the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Tier 4 emissions standards. The units also feature a 4,400 horsepower Cummins QSK95 diesel engine.As part of a separate order, Siemens also is building locomotives for
Brightline, All Aboard Florida's privately funded passenger-rail line between Miami and West Palm Beach, Fla. Those units have many of the same underlying features as the Chargers in the IDOT order, said Cahill."But there are some variations in the end product based on customer demands," he added.For example, Brightline locomotives feature what Cahill described as Siemens' "high-speed train look" — that is, a closed front-end with a sleek nose to provide better aerodynamics.In addition, there are some differences in the locomotives’ signaling systems. The units also have been designed to work with various positive train control (PTC) systems, Cahill said.Six of the new Chargers
last month began revenue testing on Amtrak's Capitol Corridor route in California. IDOT also tested the locomotives on the Chicago-Milwaukee, Chicago-Carbondale and Chicago-Quincy routes in April.Siemens’ Charger locomotives can operate up to 125 mph.Siemens
IDOT has ordered a total of 33 Chargers, which are slated to enter full-time service later this spring.
Outside of the Charger orders, Siemens is building 13 electric locomotives for the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority. While the company hasn't had much activity in terms of new sales over the past six months or so, Siemens continues to work through a large backlog of projects, Cahill said.