*** Welcome to piglix ***

R1 (New York City Subway car)

R1
NYC Subway R1 100.jpg
R1 car 100 in special holiday service at 23rd Street on the IND Sixth Avenue Line
In service 1931-1977
Manufacturer American Car and Foundry Company
Built at Berwick, Pennsylvania
Constructed 1930–1931
Scrapped 1969-1977
Number built 300
Number preserved 4
Number scrapped 296
Formation motorized single units (Half-width operator's cab at each end; conductor controls on exterior)
Fleet numbers 100–399
Capacity 56 seats
Operator(s) Independent Subway System
New York City Transit Authority
Specifications
Car body construction Riveted steel
Car length 60 ft 6 in (18.44 m)
Width 10 ft 0 in (3.05 m)
Height 12 ft 1.9375 in (3.71 m)
Floor height 3 ft 1.875 in (0.96 m)
Doors 8
Maximum speed 55 mph (89 km/h)
Weight 84,081 lb (38,139 kg)
Traction system Westinghouse ABF type UP143B switch group, with XM-29 master controller using Westinghouse 570 D-5 traction motors (190 hp each). Two motors per car (both on motor truck, trailer truck not motorized).
Power output 190 hp (142 kW) per traction motor
Acceleration 1.75 mph/s (2.82 km/(h·s))
Deceleration ~ 3 mph/s
Electric system(s) 600 V DC Third rail
Current collection method Contact shoe (Top running)
Braking system(s)

WABCO Schedule AMUE with UE-5 universal valve, ME-23 brake stand, and simplex clasp brake rigging.

(Air Compressor: WABCO D-3-F)
Coupling system WABCO H2A
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)

WABCO Schedule AMUE with UE-5 universal valve, ME-23 brake stand, and simplex clasp brake rigging.

The R1 was the first New York City Subway car type built for the IND. 300 cars were manufactured between 1930 and 1931 by the American Car and Foundry Company, numbered 100 through 399. Future passenger stock orders – including contracts R4, R6, R7, R7A, and R9 – were virtually identical, with minor mechanical and cosmetic variations. Therefore, these car classes are frequently referred to collectively as Arnines, or R1-9s.

The R1s were also specifically sometimes referred to as City Cars.

They introduced several improvements to subway car design that greatly sped up the flow of passengers in and out of trains.

The first R1 cars to see passenger service were twenty individual cars to serve for two 8 car trains plus spares that were placed in revenue service on the BMT Sea Beach Line from July 8 to November, 1931 for testing and then returned to the IND the same year.The BMT was to have been paid by the City of New York for the testing but since they were fairly extensively used in service (made up as two 8-car trains), the BMT and City called it even.

The cars were ordered so that the new Eighth Avenue Line subway could be operated.

In 1949 when all of the R10 cars were delivered and placed in service on the A line, approximately 224 of these R1 cars were transferred to the 36th Street Yard of the BMT Southern Division to relieve a car shortage on the BMT Lines, and used for service on the BMT 2 (now R) Broadway 4th Avenue Local service, which was extended from Queensboro Plaza to the Astoria-Ditmars Blvd. Station of this former IRT line, which also happened in 1949 which required more cars for operating this new extended BMT service until 1961 when new R27/30's cars were delivered to the New York City Transit System's BMT Lines, which in turn replaced and released these loaned R1 cars to be sent back to the IND Division.


...
Wikipedia

...