Angel Trains to scrap 200 Mk 3s/20 HST power cars
NEARLY 200 High Speed Train Mk 3s and more than 20 Class 43 power cars look set to be scrapped in the coming weeks and months.
Angel Trains confirmed to RAIL that a decision on the future of its redundant vehicles is to be made soon, with some having already been out of use for more than a year. A spokesman told RAIL on March 16: “It is increasingly likely that they are to be scrapped.”
Sources at the rolling stock leasing company have previously told RAIL that other than two power cars for CrossCountry and two for component recovery by ScotRail, there had been little interest in the HSTs.
Some 158 Mk 3s and 16 power cars are former Great Western Railway vehicles, while 37 Mk 3s and six ‘43s’ were in service with ex-London North Eastern Railway. There are also two former Grand Central restaurant vehicles.
The introduction by GWR and LNER of new Hitachi Class 80x series trains caused the withdrawal of the HSTs, with the final long-distance GWR sets running on May 18 last year
( RAIL 880), and the final 2+4 sets last December. LNER finished its use of HSTs on December 15 last year, other than for a four-day charity farewell tour ( RAIL 895).
None of the redundant vehicles has dispensation to operate on the national network, as they do not meet accessibility regulations which came into force from January 1.
The majority of Angel Trains’ Mk 3s and ‘43s’ are stored at Potter Group, Ely, although some remain at GWR depots. They began arriving at the Cambridgeshire site last March.
This move follows another rolling stock company’s decision to scrap HST vehicles. While Porterbrook has resold some to Locomotive Services Limited and donated others to preservation groups, it has been sending former GWR Mk 3s stored at
Long Marston to Sim’s Metals at Newport Docks for disposal. So far, 24 have been scrapped as well as seven ex-LNER Mk 3s.
Porterbrook told RAIL recently that it too will likely send its stored HSTs for scrap. It has 49 former GWR and five ex-LNER Mk 3s stored, as well as four ex-GWR Class 43s at Laira, 13 former
GWR ‘43s’ at Long Marston (two are destined for the University of Birmingham), two former LNER power cars at Tyne Yard, and a written-off ‘43’ at Neville Hill.
The market will be further flooded with HSTs next year, once East Midlands Railway has returned its existing fleet, followed by those transferred from LNER. That will mean an additional 173 Mk 3s and 53 power cars by the end of 2020.