Diesel locomotive 68050 of the National French Railways.
Update!
■ For the first time with PluX22 sound decoder and LED lighting
■ Original design with embossed trim lines and numbers
■ Finely-detailed fan grille
■ Light functions switchable in line with the French prototype in
digital mode
■ Sound version equipped with two loudspeakers
Between 1963 and 1968, 80 of the class A1A-A1A 68000 locomotives
were built for the French National Railways (SNCF) for heavy
services. They had many similarities with the lighter BB 67000
delivered at the same time, but due to the use of a more powerful,
heavier Sulzer LVA 24 diesel engine and its bigger generator, the
bogies were designed with three axles to be able to run on some
light tracks of ex Etat and PO Midi lines, with four motorised
axles and the two other ones to distribute the weight. A boiler and
water tanks for steam heating of passenger trains were also
installed, with the additional load allowed by the two non-powered
axles.
The six-axle, diesel-electric (DC transmission) locomotive had an
operating weight of 106 tonnes. With its 12-cylinder diesel engine
delivering 1,985 kW, and a power at the wheelrim of 1,660 kW, it
reached a top speed of 130 km/h.
In the original version, the locomotives had decorative lines
imagined by famous rail designer Paul Arzens that made the
locomotives unmistakable. They were used for heavy passenger and
freight transport. Their use in the western, northern, eastern and
central regions of France also took the locomotives to the railway
stations of Bantzenheim near the German border and Delle near the
Swiss border, and as well as to Basel in Switzerland.
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