Template:Short description {{ safesubst:#invoke:Unsubst||date=__DATE__ |$B= Template:Ambox }} Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Infobox train

The British Rail Class 170 Turbostar is a British diesel-hydraulic multiple unit passenger train designed and built by Adtranz, and later by Bombardier Transportation, at Derby Litchurch Lane Works.

The Class 170 was derived from the Template:Brc and Template:Brc DMUs, known as the Networker Turbos, of the 1990s. The first units were introduced to service in 1999, shortly after the privatisation of British Rail; they have been commonly used to operate regional as well as long-distance services, and to a lesser extent suburban services. A total of 139 units were built, but some were later converted to Template:Brc and Template:Brc units. These trains are currently in use with CrossCountry, East Midlands Railway, Northern Trains and ScotRail.

DesignEdit

The Class 170 diesel multiple unit (DMU) is a development of the design used in the Template:Brc and Template:Brc DMUs known as the Networker Turbos and built by British Rail Engineering Limited and later ABB Transportation before that company became part of Bombardier.

Notable features shared are the aluminium alloy frame and Voith transmission as well as the general body shape (the cab ends are similar to those of the Template:Brc, but not Class 165/166), interior design and door fittings. The final drive is sourced from ZF instead of Gmeinder and the diesel-engine supplier is MTU.<ref name="Bombardier_170" />

The engine and transmission are located under the body. One bogie per coach is powered. All coaches in the set are powered when in use (there are no unpowered trailers). The units can work in multiple with trains in the 15X series, i.e. Sprinters and 14X Pacers (the latter empty only), and with other units of the same class. They are unable to operate in multiple with units in the 16X series due to different wiring arrangements.<ref name="tubra">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Seating arrangements are of both 2+1 (first class) and 2+2 (standard class) formation, and give a seated passenger capacity of between ~100 and ~200 per three-car set (depending on the specifications of the operator).<ref name="Bombardier_170"/> Two-car sets are also operated.

SubclassesEdit

Class 170 units have been categorised into six (originally seven) sub-classes; the basic specifications remain the same (engine, length, transmission, etc.), the differences being the seating arrangements specified by the different operators. Because of the different interior fittings the sub-classes differ in weight from one another by a small amount, up to around 2Template:Nbsptonnes.<ref name="tubra"/>

All the sub-classes were built at Derby works either under Adtranz or Bombardier Transportation ownership.<ref name="tubra"/> The change of ownership occurred in 2001, but early Bombardier units (such as the 2002 two-car 170/2 Phase 2 units) still display ADtranz branding, such as on the window glazing, due to use of backstocked parts.

Current operationsEdit

Template:More citations needed section Most units are owned by Porterbrook, although units 170416–424 are owned by Eversholt Rail Group.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> They are leased to the train operating companies.

ScotRailEdit

ScotRail was at one point the largest operator of the Class 170, with a fleet that formerly comprised 59 three-car sets but has since been reduced to 34 sets. All units are allocated to Edinburgh Haymarket depot.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The first Class 170s in Scotland were 24 units built for ScotRail (National Express) between 1999 and 2001 (170401–170424), which had first-class accommodation for use on ScotRail Express services (i.e. the Edinburgh–Glasgow Queen Street shuttle) and Aberdeen/Inverness–Glasgow/Edinburgh services. A further ten similar units (170425–170434) were built in 2003Template:Ndash2004 to complete the conversion of ScotRail Express services from Class 158 to Class 170 operation. By the time the second batch entered service the franchise had passed to First ScotRail.

Two standard-class only units were provided for Strathclyde Partnership for Transport (SPT) services from Glasgow Queen Street in 2001 (170470–170471), followed in 2004Template:Ndash2005 by seven more units for SPT (170472–170478) and 12 similar units for Edinburgh commuter services (170450–170461). In December 2008, six of the standard-class-only units (170450–170455) were fitted with first-class sections, and two more (170456 and 170457) were fitted with first class in December 2011.

A further four three-car sets (170393–170396) with first class accommodation and 'mini-buffets', were obtained from Hull Trains in 2005, bringing the First ScotRail Class 170 fleet up to a peak of 59 three-car sets. The former Hull Trains units were initially used on ScotRail Express services to Inverness, but by 2012 the buffets were out of use and all four units were converted to standard class only.Template:Citation needed

The nine units built for SPT services were delivered in SPT livery, whereas the rest of the fleet carried First ScotRail livery (170401–170424 having originally worn the National Express ScotRail 'swoosh' livery). In September 2008, the Scottish Government's agency Transport Scotland announced that all ScotRail trains (including from the Strathclyde Partnership for Transport) would eventually be repainted in a new blue livery with white Saltire markings on the carriage ends.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In April 2015, the ScotRail franchise passed from First to Abellio, and nine units owned by Eversholt went off-lease. Five of these units (170416–170420) remained in Scotland on short-term lease to Abellio ScotRail (albeit with ScotRail branding removed) until their transfer to East Midlands Railway in 2020, whilst the other four units (170421–170424) were converted into Class 171s for their new operator Southern.<ref name=Rail772>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

As a result of the electrification of the Edinburgh to Glasgow Queen Street line in 2018 and the conversion of ScotRail Express services to Aberdeen and Inverness to HSTs in 2018Template:Ndash2019, the Class 170s are being displaced from ScotRail Express routes. Additionally, electrification of most of the Glasgow Queen Street (High Level) commuter lines and of the Edinburgh to Dunblane route will see Class 170s displaced from these services once the Template:Brc EMU fleet is fully operational. Some of the surplus Class 170s will be cascaded to other ScotRail services replacing older Template:Brc and Template:Brc units, but 16 units were transferred to Arriva Rail North (170453–170461 and 170472–170478). The first four of these units moved to Northern in March 2018, followed by a further four in August 2018.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

CrossCountryEdit

File:170111 near Great Shelford.jpg
CrossCountry Class 170 (first livery and refurbishment) at Great Shelford in December 2010

CrossCountry currently operates 29 Class 170 Turbostars (seven two-car and 22 three-car) on services between Cardiff Central and Nottingham, and between Birmingham, Leicester, and Stansted Airport. After having been acquired from Central Trains in 2007 (as 13 two-car and 16 three-car units, but since reconfigured - see below), these units were refurbished in 2008, with the then-three-car units repainted at Marcroft Engineering, Stoke-on-Trent, the then-two-car units at EWS' Toton depot and the interiors done by Transys Projects, Clacton-on-Sea including the fitting of first-class seating to the Class 170/5s and 170/6s.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref><ref>Template:Cite press release</ref>

In 2021, the centre cars from the six formerly three-car ex-West Midlands Railway (WMR) 170s were transferred to CrossCountry and inserted into six of its formerly two-car units, turning them into three-car units while retaining the CrossCountry driving vehicles' first class, due to the ex-WMR driving vehicles being standard class-only (East Midlands Railway had leased the aforementioned ex-WMR units, but only required two-car units from that batch, therefore CrossCountry was able to utilise the surplus centre cars).<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> This resulted in a reconfiguration of CrossCountry's 29 170s from their previous 13 two-car and 16 three-car units, to their current seven two-car and 22 three-car units. The extra centre cars were re-liveried and internally refurbished to match the units they were inserted into.

File:170101 BHM 2025.jpg
CrossCountry Class 170 (newest livery and mid-life refurbishment) at Template:Rws in March 2025

In February 2025, 170101, the first CrossCountry 170 to receive the operator's second, mid-life refurbishment, re-entered service. This refurbishment includes an exterior repaint in a new livery, an interior repaint and new seats (including the replacement of the former first class 2+1 seating - declassified since late 2024 - with 2+2 seating, which also makes up for the wheelchair and bicycle spaces now being separate rather than shared). It also includes new tables and carpets, full-length installation of 3-pin AC power sockets and USB DC power sockets of types A and C, new interior passenger information screens and new CCTV and passenger counting, as well as 'refreshed' toilets.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Northern TrainsEdit

Arriva Rail North began operating the Class 170 in 2018, with a total of 16 three-car units (170453-170461 and 170472-170478) received from Abellio ScotRail by January 2019. These can now be seen operating services between Sheffield and Scarborough via Hull and have diagrams around the Harrogate Loop, on which they share duties with Class 158 DMUs. The units are maintained at Neville Hill TMD and Botanic Gardens TMD, and receive light maintenance at Sheffield.

On 1 March 2020, these units transferred to new operator Northern Trains.

East Midlands RailwayEdit

East Midlands Railway currently operates the largest fleet of 170s, which consists of 43 total two-car and three-car sets, even though it has only been a 170 operator since 2020.

From 23 March 2020, East Midlands Railway received its first two Class 170 units in the form of three-car 170416 and 170417, when they moved from Abellio ScotRail. The former was seen in EMR livery on 30 April 2020.<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Unit 170417, named The Key Worker, was the first unit to enter service, doing so on 2 November 2020 on the Robin Hood line, as part of EMR's soft launch of the class.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

Alongside units 170418–170420 (also from ScotRail), as EMR had planned to become the largest operator of the Class 170, a further 23 units arrived from West Midlands Trains as well as 12 from Transport for Wales Rail. The 170s have replaced units of classes Template:Brc and Template:Brc.<ref name=":0"/>

In September 2022, three Template:Brc, having been reformed to three-car formations and renumbered to 170422–170424, transferred from Southern to East Midlands Railway. They were then renumbered with 1709xx unit numbers before entering service, in order to emphasise the difference between them and the rest of the fleet, as they had Dellner couplers rather than BSI couplers, so they were not compatible with the rest of the fleet.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite magazine</ref> They regained their identities as 170/4s when BSI couplers were fitted in May 2023 and they can now work with the rest of the fleet instead of being on self contained diagrams.<ref name=":4">Template:Cite tweet</ref>

A refurbishment program for the East Midlands units are ongoing, with the first unit completed its refurbishment and re-entered service.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Former operationsEdit

Template:More citations needed section

Midland MainlineEdit

File:170110 and 170117 at Derby.JPG
A pair of Midland Mainline Class 170/1s at Template:Rws in September 2003

Midland Mainline (MML) was the first operator to order Turbostars, the first being delivered in November 1998 and entering service in May 1999.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> The Class 170/1 units were built immediately after the Template:Brc units were built for Chiltern Railways. MML ordered a fleet of 17 two-car Class 170 units, although the first ten were subsequently made up of three cars each instead. These were numbered 170101–117. The units were introduced on stopping services from Template:Rws to Template:Rws, Template:Rws and Template:Rws. They were also used on summer Saturday services from London to Template:Rws, which later became a year-round service with summer extension to Template:Stnlink. Class 170s were also used on direct services between London St Pancras and Template:Rws, these services ended upon the replacement of the Class 170s with new Template:Brc Meridian units due to weight restrictions on the Derwent Valley line to Matlock.

In 2004, Midland Mainline introduced new Class 222 Meridian units, which started to replace the Turbostars. As a result, the fleet was transferred to sister company Central Trains. Ten units (170101–170110) are three-car units, and the remaining seven units (170111–170117) are two-car units. As with the three spot-hire units from Porterbrook, these 17 units had first-class accommodation, which was declassified.

Govia Thameslink RailwayEdit

Southern obtained six two-car Class 170/7 units, along with six four-car Template:Brc units, in 2003 to replace its slam-door Template:Brc and Template:Brc units on services on the Marshlink Line and Oxted Line to Template:Rws.

Southern laterTemplate:When fitted these units with the Dellner type coupler used on its Class 171s, reclassifying its two-car units as Template:Brc, replacing the standard BSI coupler fitted to Class 170s. This was done to allow them to couple to Template:Brc in an emergency.

Southern laterTemplate:When acquired 170392 from South West Trains, which became its tenth four-car, 171730. This unit had already carried Southern livery, being ordered as an add-on to a Southern order to save costs, and was delivered accordingly in Southern livery as 170727. It was renumbered and reliveried at Ashford Chart Leacon Works before entering traffic.

At the end of the First ScotRail franchise in March 2015, 170416 to 170424 were returned to Eversholt Rail Group. The first five units then remained on hire to Abellio ScotRail via a sublease arrangement until March 2020, while 170421 to 170424 moved to Wolverton Works in April 2015. They were overhauled and converted to Class 171s intended for Southern. Following issues with the conversion and reliability issues, the remaining units were then handed back to Eversholt Rail Group where they were then re-leased to East Midlands Railway.<ref name="Rail772" /><ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Two became two-car 171/2s and two four-car Class 171/4s.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> All four were returned to Eversholt in 2022 and leased to East Midlands Railway. Having been reformed back into their original three-carriage formations, the first three were transferred in September 2022. They will be converted back to Class 170s and resume their original identities, while the fourth will remain on sublease to Govia Thameslink Railway.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

Hull TrainsEdit

Template:No sources section

File:Hull Trains 170.jpg
A Class 170 operated by Hull Trains

Hull Trains began its Template:Rws to Hull services in September 2000 using Turbostars, initially with four sets on short-term lease from Anglia Railways. In 2004, it received four of its own three-car Class 170/3 units, and returned the original units to Anglia.

In 2005, following its acquisition by FirstGroup, Hull Trains received four new Template:Brc Pioneer units and transferred the Turbostars to its sister company First ScotRail.

South West TrainsEdit

Template:No sources section

South West Trains (SWT) acquired a fleet of eight two-car Class 170/3 units in 2000 (later to nine units supplemented by ex-Southern 170392), to supplement its existing Template:Brc fleet. Units operated on Template:Rws to Template:Rws, Template:Rws to Template:Rws, Southampton local services, and occasionally on services to Template:Rws, though this was not a regular route for these units, as they do not feature end gangways, making it difficult to provide trolley services, and they lacked selective door opening for the short platforms at stations on the route west of Salisbury. All but one of these units were transferred to First TransPennine Express at the end of 2006, in exchange for some Template:Brc Express Sprinters. Unit 170392 was transferred back to its original intended operator Southern and has since been reclassified and renumbered from 170392 to 171730.

Central TrainsEdit

Template:No sources section

Central Trains operated a fleet of 53 Class 170 units from various subclasses. In 1999, Central received its first batch of twenty-three two-car Class 170/5 and ten three-car Class 170/6 units. These were used to replace Template:Brc units on various longer-distance services.

From late 2004, Central also took three Class 170/3 on lease from Porterbrook. Units 170397–8 are three-car units and 170399 is a two-car unit. All three of these units contained first-class accommodation, which was declassified (allowing standard-class use throughout the train), as first class travel was not provided on Central Trains services. The two three-car units' interiors were of Central Trains style, except the MML-style first class, and the two-car unit had a South West Trains interior. After the Central Trains franchise ended, the two three-car units (170397 and 170398) remained with the new operator, CrossCountry. The one two-car unit was returned to Porterbrook, which subsequently leased it to First TransPennine Express who renumbered the unit to 170309.

File:170 399 at Stafford 6149022183.jpg
Central Trains Class 170 at Template:Rws in August 2003

All Class 170 units in service with Central were used on a variety of services (mostly long-distance) including Template:RwsTemplate:Rws, Template:RwsTemplate:Rws and Birmingham–Template:Rws. Class 170 units have been replaced by Template:Brc Desiro units on Birmingham New Street to Template:Rws services.

When Central Trains lost its franchise in 2007, 23 of Central Trains' units (17 two-coach and six three-coach) were transferred to London Midland, which took over the West Midlands franchise and continued to use Class 170s for services on the Chase Line, Birmingham to Hereford via Bromsgrove Line and Shrewsbury services. 29 out of the remaining 30 units (including the ex-Midland Mainline units and two out of the three spot hire units) were transferred to CrossCountry, which took over the Cardiff-Birmingham-Nottingham and Birmingham-Leicester-Stansted Airport services.

One of Central Trains' 170s (170399) went to First TransPennine Express and was subsequently renumbered 170309; East Midlands Trains did not receive any, despite taking over the previously Class-170-operated Liverpool-to-Norwich route. This route is now operated by refurbished Template:Brc units.

First TransPennine ExpressEdit

From late 2006 to 2016, First TransPennine Express operated nine Class 170s, used on the Template:Rws to Template:Rws route. Originally, Template:Brc were set to operate the route, but a combination of weight-restriction problems on the Selby to Hull Line, chronic overcrowding on several of the company's services and the government reducing the amount of money available to First TransPennine Express for new trains resulted in Class 170s coming into service.

First TransPennine Express received eight Turbostars from South West Trains, 170301–308 at the end of 2006 and the start of 2007, as well as 170399 from Central Trains in November 2007, which was renumbered 170309.

From September 2009, two Class 170s were used Sundays to Thursdays on the Cleethorpes–Manchester Airport service.

The units were maintained by Bombardier Crofton. The 170s have since been fully refurbished to include CCTV, power sockets throughout, replacement carpets and seat covers and the removal / declassification of one of the two first-class sections, providing more seats. The work was carried out by Transys at Clacton-on-Sea.

However, in March 2014 it was revealed that the nine Turbostars would move to Chiltern Railways.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> MP Stephen Hammond revealed on 12 March 2014 that all the Class 170/3s would remain with First TransPennine Express until the May 2015 timetable change, when Chiltern would take five of the 170s with the remaining four remaining with First TransPennine Express until the end of the franchise in March 2016 later changed to 8 July 2016. Upon delivery, the Class 170s were modified in Brush Traction to allow them to be used with Chiltern's existing Template:Brc units, and were subsequently reclassified as Class 168/3s.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Today, the unit numbers are 168321–168329.Template:Cn

However, it was confirmed in November 2018 that TransPennine Express would be hiring one Class 170 per day from Northern to run services on the Manchester/Leeds and Huddersfield local services, to allow more Class 185s to be used on other busier services until the new Nova Fleets arrive in 2019. This arrangement ended in May 2019, when Northern's subleased Class 185 units returned to TPE.

Greater Anglia and predecessorsEdit

Template:No sources section

Anglia Railways ordered two batches of Turbostars. The first batch of eight three-car Class 170/2 units were built between 1999 and 2000 for Template:Rws to Template:Rws, Template:Rws, Template:Rws and Template:Rws services. These supplemented the existing Template:Brc locomotive-hauled trains from London to Norwich. Four of these units were later hired to Hull Trains from 2002–2004, before that company acquired its own Turbostars.

Other units, including the spot-hire set 170399, were used on Anglia's short-lived Norwich to Template:Rws 'London Crosslink' service. In 2002, Anglia introduced a new Template:Rws to Norwich direct service, and acquired four two-car units dedicated to working these services.

In 2004, the Greater Anglia franchise was won by National Express subsidiary One, rebranded as National Express East Anglia in 2008, and passed onto Abellio Greater Anglia in 2012. Since then, two-car Turbostars have been used for the Cambridge to Norwich route, and also on new through services including Cambridge (via Ipswich), Bury St Edmunds (via Ipswich), Template:Rws (via Ipswich) and Lowestoft (via Ipswich and East Suffolk Line or Ipswich and Norwich) - Template:Rws via Ipswich, although with a new timetable all Class 170 London services ended in December 2010, in favour of connecting branch line trains with GEML expresses.

The three-car trains used to include a buffet and larger first-class area, but because more seating was needed, the buffet area has been removed and the number of first-class seats reduced.

In late 2019, these units were displaced by Template:Brc and transferred to Transport for Wales by February 2020.

West Midlands Railway/London MidlandEdit

West Midlands Trains (WMT) operated twenty-three Class 170 Turbostars, which they had inherited from their predecessor London Midland in 2017, on services on the Birmingham to Hereford via Bromsgrove Line, and Birmingham - Shrewsbury via Telford Central services.

WMT replaced all of its 170s with 26 new Template:Brc Civity units from late 2022. However, these 170s had already started moving to East Midlands Railway (EMR) in 2021, with the first moving in February 2021.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> The final four ex-WMT 170s joined EMR in May 2023.<ref name=":5">Template:Cite magazine</ref>

For the vast majority of the duration that these 23 170s were operated on the West Midlands franchise, they were formed as 17 two-car 170/5s and six three-car 170/6s. However, in 2021, before they had all transferred to EMR, the centre cars of what were WMT's six Class 170/6s moved to CrossCountry, to enable it to strengthen some of its previously-two-car units, meaning that EMR received the ex-WMT 170s as 23 two-car 170/5s, as they only leased the driving cars (with CrossCountry's lengthened units changing subclass from 170/5 to 170/6).<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

Transport for WalesEdit

In September 2019, Transport for Wales received three Class 170/2s (one three-car unit and two two-car units) from Greater Anglia, with driver training following.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In November 2019, three more units (two three-car and one two-car) transferred depots from Norwich Crown Point to Cardiff Canton, with a further four three-car units delivered in December 2019, the last three-car unit delivered in January 2020 and the last two-car unit delivered in February 2020. This meant that Transport for Wales Rail leased the entire 12-strong 170/2 subclass of eight three-car units and four two-car units.

These were the first Class 170s on the Wales & Borders franchise and they were used on services between Cardiff / Bridgend and Ebbw Vale, and services between Maesteg and Cheltenham/Gloucester.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> On 12 December 2019, three-car unit 170202 worked TfW Rail's first Class 170 passenger services (between Bridgend and Ebbw Vale Town via Cardiff Central) and the units started to enter service in multiple quantities on 16 December 2019, with 5 units (three three-car and two two-car) running in passenger service on that day. All units had entered service by April 2020 when three-car unit 170206 was the last to enter service.

These were originally due to stay with TfW for the duration of the franchise (albeit working different services once their brand new trains were in service), however, following a revision of TfW's long-term rolling stock strategy, it was later announced all were to transfer to East Midlands Railway.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> The two-car units transferred first, followed by the three-car units. 170208 was the last to leave, on 29 January 2024.Template:Citation needed

Fleet detailsEdit

Class Operator Qty. Built Cars per unit Unit numbers Notes
170/1 CrossCountry 10 1998–1999 3 170101–170110<ref name="DfT-RVAR">Template:Cite magazine</ref>
7 2 170111–170117<ref name="DfT-RVAR"/>
170/2 East Midlands Railway 8 1999 3 170201–170208<ref name="Rail1009"/>
4
{{safesubst:#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=|preview=Page using Template:Center with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | style }}
2002 2 170270–170273<ref name="Rail1009"/>
170/3 Converted to Template:Brc 9 2000 170301–170309
Converted to Template:Brc 1 170392
ScotRail 4 2004 3 170393–170396<ref name="DfT-RVAR"/>
CrossCountry 2 2002 170397–170398<ref name="Rail1009"/><ref name="DfT-RVAR"/>
170/4 ScotRail 17 1999–2001 170401–170415, 170470–170471<ref name="DfT-RVAR"/>
East Midlands Railway 8 170416–170420, 170422–170424 Units numbered 170422–170424 were formerly Southern Template:Brc
Converted to Template:Brc 1 170421 To remain with GTR as Template:Brc<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
ScotRail 10 2003–2004 170425–170434
3 2004–2005 170450–170452<ref name="DfT-RVAR"/>
Northern Trains 16 170453–170461, 170472–170478<ref name="DfT-RVAR"/>
170/5 East Midlands Railway 23 1999–2000 2 170501–170517, 170530–170535<ref name=":5"/><ref name="DfT-RVAR"/> Units numbered 170530–170535 were formerly three-car units numbered 170630–170635 until 2020–2021Template:Citation needed
170/6 CrossCountry 10 3 170618–170623, 170636–170639<ref name="Rail1009"/><ref name="DfT-RVAR"/> Units numbered 170618–170623 were formerly two-car units numbered 170518–170523 until 2020–2021Template:Citation needed
170/7 Converted to Template:Brc 6 2003-2004 2 170721–170726

Named unitsEdit

A number of units have been named:

Accidents and incidentsEdit

  • On 13 November 2005, unit 170207 collided with a car at a level crossing in Swainsthorpe, Norfolk, on the Great Eastern Main Line. The car driver was killed. The front of the train was damaged by the consequent fire from the wrecked car.<ref name=Swainsthorpe>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • On 26 November 2005, unit 170431 hit a landslide near Moy on the Highland Line. The front of the train was derailed and damaged by the debris, the other two coaches remained railed. Six passengers, the driver and conductor were injured.<ref name=Moy>Template:Cite book</ref>
  • On 12 September 2006, unit 170206 was derailed as it crossed the level crossing at Croxton, Norfolk, on the Breckland Line. A panel that formed part of the level crossing had become dislodged and fouled both railway and road.<ref name=Croxton>Template:Cite book</ref>
  • On 27 July 2011, unit 170393 derailed after crossing over a set of faulty points at Princes Street Gardens on the approach to Edinburgh. The train was occupied only by two members of crew - neither of whom was injured.Template:Citation needed
  • On 14 July 2013, unit 170272 collided with a car towing a trailer on a level crossing at Woodbridge, Suffolk, on the East Suffolk Line.<ref name=Woodbridge>Template:Cite book</ref>
  • On 10 April 2016, unit 170204 collided with an agricultural tractor on a level crossing at Roudham, on the Breckland line. The tractor driver was seriously injured; the train driver and some passengers sustained minor injuries.<ref name=EDP4489243>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}Template:Dead link</ref><ref name=Anglia100416>Template:Cite news</ref> An investigation revealed that the tractor driver had obtained permission to cross the line.<ref name=Roudham>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • On 15 October 2017, unit 170272 collided with a car on a level crossing at Template:Rws, on the East Suffolk Line. The car driver was airlifted to hospital.<ref name=EADT5237195>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • On 10 October 2018, unit 170402 derailed at Stonehaven, from Aberdeen to Dundee.<ref name="Stonehaven">Template:Cite news</ref>
  • On 3 March 2019, unit 170520 collided with a fallen tree on the line running from Lydney to Gloucester and derailed. The front cab was severely damaged.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
  • On 23 March 2020, unit 170107 collided with locomotive 66057, which had run through a buffer stop at the end of a siding at Template:Rws and ended up foul of the running line. None of the two crew and four passengers on board were injured.<ref name="RAIBBromsgrove">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> The driver of the locomotive was subsequently convicted of an offence contrary to the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974. He was sentenced to 8 months' imprisonment, suspended for 18 months.<ref name="ORR100123">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

Further readingEdit

Template:Sister project

Template:Bombardier Turbostar, Electrostar and Alstom Aventra families {{#invoke:Navbox|navbox}}