Pullman n-Wagen, H0, BD4nf-59, control car, DB Ep. III, silver,
DC
NEW MODEL n-Wagen "Silberling"
Prototype
For use in local transport as well as to reinforce express trains,
the Deutsche Bundesbahn (DB) procured a total of more than 4,800
cars in three basic designs between 1959 and 1977:
Pure second class, first and second class, as well as control cars
with luggage and second class large compartments.
The family of cars was assigned the classification letter "n." A
prototype car already featured the unpainted exterior responsible
for the nickname "Silberlinge," with a brushed peacock eye pattern.
The omission of paint reduced the weight by about two tons.
With a total weight between 27 and 30 tons, for example, the
second-class cars were at least 5 tons lighter than the pre-war
express train cars of the 1936 design. The initially installed axle
generator type D62 limited the maximum speed to 120 km/h. The
technically permissible 140 km/h could be achieved with a different
axle generator design or by cars powered electrically from the
locomotive. In 1969, the DB procured a total of 180 units of the
Bnrzb724 design, which could be easily converted to ambulance cars
in case of emergencies.
A notable difference from the previously manufactured cars is the
nearly vertical roof termination ("steep roof"). The first control
cars had a transition possibility at the driver's cab end to the
next car, which is why the driver sat in a drafty small room
("rabbit box") on the right side of the aisle. From 1972, the DB
received control cars with a modern "Karlsruhe head." To make local
transport more attractive, the DB had several sets modernized
internally and painted externally in pebble gray-orange starting in
1984, deploying them with a matching 218 under the product name
City-Bahn.
The success of the product prompted the DB to modernize additional
cars starting in 1990 with newly upholstered seats, modified
luggage racks, and a new exterior paint scheme. A variety of
different variants of the types referred to as re-design cars were
created, initially painted in the then-current mint turquoise-light
gray. From 1993, the DB received control cars with a driver's cab
side reminiscent of the VT 628, known as the "Wittenberger
head."
In 2019, 60 years after the commissioning of the first Silberlinge,
cars are still in daily use.
• Scale H0 models of the n-Wagen Silberling
• Multicolored interior
• Separately inserted benches
• Control car with separately switchable front, driver's cab,
luggage compartment, and passenger compartment lighting. High beam
for the Wittenberger control car
• Spring-loaded bellows
• Freestanding grab bars
• Step plates at the ends of the cars and at the entrances as
perforated etched parts
• Replication of the wheel disc
• Multi-part bogies with replication of the block or disc brake
system
• Axle bearing plates and half axles for friction-free eight-point
current collection
• Hook coupling in a guide-controlled standard pocket
• Optional AC wheelset available under item number 41200
• Minimum radius = 360 mm
• Length over buffers = 303 mm
...the control cars are delivered with a multiprotocol (DCC/MM)
digital decoder along with a PowerPack to control all
prototype-accurate lighting functions. The control cars can, of
course, also be used on analog direct and alternating current
systems (alternating current without light change red/white) and
are suitable for three-rail and two-rail tracks – thanks to the
plug slider, the configuration can be quickly changed.
...