
The logo of the TGV.

TGV Duplex in Paris,
Gare de
Lyon.
The
TGV (Train à
Grande Vitesse, French for 'high-speed train') is France
's high-speed rail service, currently operated
by VFE, the long-distance rail branch
of SNCF, the French national rail
operator. It was
developed during the 1970s by GEC-Alsthom (now Alstom) and SNCF, and is now
operated primarily by SNCF.
Although originally designed to be powered
by gas turbines, the TGV prototypes evolved into electric
trains. Following the
inaugural TGV service between Paris
and Lyon
in 1981, the
TGV network, centered on Paris, has expanded to connect cities
across France and in adjacent
countries.
A TGV test train piloted by Eric Pieczak
set the record
for the fastest wheeled train, reaching 574.8 km/h (357 mph) on 3 April 2007, and a TGV service holds
the record for the fastest scheduled rail journey with a start to
stop average speed of .
The success of the first line led to an expansion of the network,
with new lines built in the south, west, north and east of the
country.
Eager to emulate the success of the French
network, neighbouring countries such as Belgium
, Italy
, Spain
and Germany
built their
own high-speed lines. TGVs link with Switzerland
through the French network, with Belgium
, Germany
and the
Netherlands
through the Thalys network,
and the Eurostar network links France and
Belgium with the United
Kingdom
. Several lines are planned, including
extensions within France and to surrounding countries.
Towns such as Tours
have become
a part of a "TGV commuter
belt".
History
The idea of the TGV was first proposed in the 1960s, after Japan
had begun construction of the
Shinkansen
in 1959.
At the time the French government favoured new
technologies, exploring the production of hovercraft and maglev
trains such as Aérotrain
. Simultaneously, SNCF began researching high
speed trains that would operate on conventional track.
Development
It was originally planned that the TGV, then standing for
très
grande vitesse (very high speed) or
turbine grande
vitesse (high speed turbine), would be propelled by
gas turbine-electric
locomotives.
Gas turbines were
selected for their small size, good
power-to-weight ratio and ability to
deliver high power over an extended period. The first prototype,
TGV 001, was the only TGV constructed with
this engine: following the increase in the price of
oil during the
1973
energy crisis, gas turbines were deemed uneconomic and the
project turned to
electricity from
overhead lines. The electricity was
to be generated by France's new
nuclear power station.
TGV 001 was not a wasted prototype: its gas-turbine powerplant was
only one of many technologies for high-speed rail travel. It also
tested high speed brakes, needed to dissipate the large amount of
kinetic energy of a train at high
speed, high-speed aerodynamics, and signalling. It was articulated,
i.e. two adjacent carriages shared a
bogie,
allowing free yet controlled motion with respect to one another. It
reached 318 km/h (198 mph), which remains the world speed
record for a non-electric train. Its interior and exterior were
styled by British-born designer Jack Cooper, whose work formed the
basis of early TGV designs, including the distinctive nose shape of
the first power cars.
Changing the TGV to electric traction required a significant design
overhaul. The first electric prototype, nicknamed Zébulon, was
completed in 1974, testing features such as innovative body
mounting of motors,
pantograph,
suspension and
braking. Body mounting of motors allowed over
3 tonnes to be eliminated from the power cars and greatly
reduced the
unsprung weight. The
prototype travelled almost 1,000,000 km (621,000 miles)
during testing.
In 1976 the
French government
funded the TGV project, and construction of the
LGV Sud-Est, the first high-speed line
(
ligne à g
rande
v
itesse), began shortly afterwards.
The line was given the designation
LN1, Ligne Nouvelle 1 (New Line
1).
After two pre-production trainsets (nicknamed
Patrick and
Sophie) had been tested and substantially modified, the
first production version was delivered on 25 April 1980.
Service history
The TGV
opened to the public between Paris
and Lyon
on 27
September 1981. Contrary to its earlier fast services, SNCF
intended the TGV service for all types of passengers, with the same
ticket price as for trains running on the parallel conventional
line. To counteract the popular misconception that the TGV would be
another premium service for business travellers, SNCF started a
major publicity campaign focusing on the speed, frequency,
reservation policy, normal price, and broad accessibility of the
service. This commitment to a democratised TGV service was further
enhanced in the
Mitterrand
era with the promotional slogan "Progress means nothing unless it
is shared by all". The TGV was considerably faster than normal
trains,
cars, or
aeroplanes. The trains became widely
popular, the public welcoming fast and practical travel.
Further
LGVs have opened: the LGV Atlantique
(LN2) to Tours
/Le Mans
(construction begun 1985, in operation 1989); the LGV Nord-Europe (LN3) to Calais
and the
Belgian border (construction begun 1989, in operation 1993); the
LGV Rhône-Alpes (LN4),
extending the LGV Sud-Est to Valence
(construction begun 1990, in operation 1992); and
the LGV Méditerranée
(LN5) to Marseille
(construction begun 1996, in operation
2001). The LGV Est from Paris
to Strasbourg
was inaugurated on 15 March 2007, and opened to the
public in the summer of 2007. In its first month of
operation, more than 1,000,000 passengers traveled on the line.
High
speed lines based on LGV technology connecting with the French
network have been built in Belgium
, the
Netherlands
and the United Kingdom
.
The
Eurostar service began operation in 1994,
connecting continental Europe to
London via the Channel
Tunnel
with a version of the TGV designed for use in the
tunnel and in the United Kingdom. The line used the LGV
Nord-Europe from the outset. The first phase of the British
High Speed 1 line, or Channel Tunnel
Rail Link, was completed in 2003, and the second phase was
completed on Wednesday 14 November 2007. The fastest trains take
2 hours 15 minutes on the London-Paris and 1 hour
51 minutes on the London-Brussels routes.
Milestones
The TGV
was the world's third commercial high speed train service, after
Japan's Shinkansen, which first connected
Tokyo
and Osaka on 1 October 1964,
and Britain's Intercity 125, intended
for the UK's main lines such as the East Coast Mainline and which entered
service in 1976. The TGV currently holds
the
world speed
record for conventional, wheel/rail trains. On 3 April 2007 a
modified TGV POS train reached
574.8 km/h (357.2 mph)
under test conditions on the
LGV Est.
TGV, Record runs
The voltage on the test track between Paris and Strasbourg was
boosted to 31 kV and extra ballast was tamped onto the
right-of-way. It beat the 1990
world speed record of
515.3 km/h (320.2 mph), set by a similarly shortened
train (two power cars and three passenger cars), along with
unofficial records set during weeks preceding the official record
run. The test was part of an extensive research programme by
Alstom.
The TGV is in 2007 the
world's fastest
conventional scheduled train: one journey's average
start-to-stop speed from Lorraine-TGV to Champagne-Ardenne-TGV is
.
A
Eurostar train broke the
record for the longest non-stop high speed journey in the
world on 17 May 2006 carrying the cast and filmmakers of
The Da Vinci Code
from London
to Cannes
for the
Cannes Film
Festival
. The 1421 km (883.0 miles) journey
took 7 hours 25 minutes (191.6 km/h or
119 mph).
The
record for the fastest long distance run was set by a
TGV Réseau train travelling
from Calais
-Frethun to
Marseille
(1067.2 km, 663 mi) in 3 hours
29 minutes (306 km/h or 190 mph) for the
inauguration of the LGV
Méditerranée on 26 May 2001.
In August 2007, Dutch students Hildebrand van Kuyeren and Mart
Hopman used the TGV, mainly the Paris-Marseille line, to set the
world record for train traveling within one week at .
Ridership
On 28 November 2003 the TGV network carried its one-billionth
passenger, second only to the Shinkansen's five billionth passenger
in 2000. The two-billion mark is expected to be reached in
2010.
Excluding international traffic, the TGV system had carried 98
million passengers during 2008, an increase of 8 million (9.1%) on
the previous year.
| Decade |
Passengers (in millions) |
| 1980s |
1980 |
1981 |
1982 |
1983 |
1984 |
1985 |
1986 |
1987 |
1988 |
1989 |
|
1.26 |
6.08 |
9.20 |
13.77 |
15.38 |
15.57 |
16.97 |
18.10 |
19.16 |
1990s
|
1990 |
1991 |
1992 |
1993 |
1994 |
1995 |
1996 |
1997 |
1998 |
1999 |
| 29.93 |
37.00 |
39.30 |
40.12 |
43.91 |
46.59 |
55.73 |
62.60 |
71.00 |
74.00 |
| 2000s |
2000 |
2001 |
2002 |
2003 |
2004 |
2005 |
2006 |
2007 |
2008 |
2009 |
| 79.70 |
83.50 |
87.90 |
86.70 |
90.80 |
94.00 |
97.00 |
120 |
128 |
|
Tracks
The newest high-speed lines allow speeds of up to in normal
operation. Originally, LGVs were defined as lines permitting speeds
greater than ; this guideline was subsequently revised to . TGVs
also run on conventional track (
lignes classiques), at the
normal maximum safe speed for those lines, up to a maximum of .
This is
an advantage that the TGV has over, for example, magnetic levitation trains, as
TGVs can serve many more destinations and can use city-centre
stations (as in Paris
, Lyon
, and
Dijon
). They now serve around 200 destinations in
France and abroad.
Track design
LGV construction is similar to that
of normal railway lines, but with a few key differences. The
radii of curves are larger so that trains can
traverse them at higher speeds without increasing the
centripetal acceleration felt by
passengers. The radii of LGV curves have historically been greater
than 4
km (2.5
miles). New lines have minimum radii of 7 km
(4 miles) to allow for future increases in speed.
Lines used only for high-speed traffic can incorporate steeper
grades than normal. This facilitates
the planning of LGVs and reduces their cost of construction. The
high power/weight and adhesive weight/total weight ratios of TGVs
allow them to climb much steeper grades than conventional trains.
The considerable momentum at high speeds also helps to climb these
slopes very fast without greatly increasing their energy
consumption.
The Paris-Sud-Est LGV has grades of up to
3.5% (on the German NBS high-speed line between Cologne and Frankfurt
they reach 4%). On a line reserved for
high-speed trains it is possible to have greater
superelevation (tilt), since all trains are
travelling at the same (high) speed and a train stopping on a curve
because of a stop signal is a very rare event. Curve radii in
high-speed lines have to be large, but increasing the
superelevation allows for tighter curves while supporting the same
train speed. Allowance for tighter curves can reduce construction
costs by reducing the number and/or length of tunnels or viaducts
and the volume of earthworks.
Track alignment is more precise than on normal railway lines, and
ballast is in a deeper-than-normal
profile, resulting in
increased load-bearing capacity and track stability. LGV track is
anchored by more
sleeper (railroad
ties) per kilometre than normal, and all are made of concrete,
either mono- or bi-bloc, the latter consisting of two separate
blocks of concrete joined by a steel bar. Heavy rail (
UIC 60) is used and the
rails themselves are more upright, with an inclination of 1 in 40
as opposed to 1 in 20 on normal lines. Use of continuously welded
rails in place of shorter, jointed rails yields a comfortable ride
at high speed, without the "clickety-clack" vibrations induced by
rail joints.
The diameter of tunnels is greater than normally required by the
size of the trains, especially at entrances. This limits the
effects of air pressure changes, which could be problematic at TGV
speeds.
Traffic limitations
LGVs are reserved primarily for TGVs. One reason for this is that
capacity is sharply reduced when trains of differing speeds are
mixed. Passing freight and passenger trains also constitute a
safety risk, as cargo on freight cars can be destabilised by the
air turbulence caused by the TGV.
The steep gradients common on LGVs would limit the weight of slow
freight trains. Slower trains would also mean that the maximum
track cant (banking on curves) would be limited, so for the same
maximum speed, a mixed-traffic LGV would need to be built with
curves of even larger radius. Such track would be much more
expensive to build and maintain.
Some stretches of less-used LGV are
routinely mixed-traffic, such as the Tours
branch of
the LGV Atlantique, and the planned Nîmes
/Montpellier
branch of the LGV Mediterranée. The British High Speed 1 from the Channel Tunnel
to London has been built with passing loops to
support freight use, but this facility has not been
used.
Maintenance on LGVs is carried out at night, when no TGVs are
running.
Outside France, LGV-type lines often carry non-TGV intercity
traffic, often as a requirement of the initial funding commitments.
The Belgian LGV from Brussels to Liège carries 200 km/h
loco-hauled trains, with both the Dutch
HSL-Zuid and British
High
Speed 1 planned to carry 200 km/h domestic intercity
services.
The Channel Tunnel
is not an LGV, but it uses LGV-type TVM signalling
for mixed freight, shuttle and Eurostar traffic at between
100 km/h and 160 km/h. The "
Standard Pathway" for path allocation purposes is
the time taken by one of Eurotunnel's own Shuttle trains (maximum
speed 140 km/h) to traverse the Tunnel. A single Eurostar
running at 160 km/h occupies 2.67 standard paths; a second
Eurostar running at minimum distance (3 minutes) behind the
first train only "costs" a single additional path, so Eurostar
services are often flighted 3 minutes apart throughout from
London to Lille and back. A freight train running at 120 km/h
occupies 1.33 paths. A freight running at 100 km/h occupies 3
paths. This illustrates the problem of mixed traffic at different
speeds.
| Train Class |
Speed |
Paths |
|
| Eurostar |
160 km/h |
2⅔ |
"catches up" with earlier trains |
| Eurostar (average for two) |
160 km/h |
1⅚ |
consecutive "flighted pair" at same speed |
| Eurotunnel Shuttle |
140 km/h |
1 |
optimal usage, all trains at same speed |
| Multi-modal freight |
120 km/h |
1⅓ |
"holds up" train behind it |
Power supply
LGVs are all
electrified at
25 kV 50 Hz AC.
Catenary wires are kept at a greater
mechanical tension than normal lines because the
pantograph causes
oscillations in the wire, and the
wave must travel faster than the train to avoid
producing
standing waves that would
cause the wires to break. This was a problem when rail speed record
attempts were made in 1990; power wire tension had to be increased
further still to accommodate train speeds of over 500 km/h
(310 mph). On LGVs, only the rear pantograph is raised,
avoiding amplification of the oscillations created by the front
pantograph. The front power car is supplied by a cable running
along the roof of the train. Eurostar trains are long enough that
oscillations are
damped sufficiently between
the front and rear power cars (British designers were wary of
running a high-power line through passenger carriages, explaining
the centrally-located locomotive in their ill-fated
Advanced Passenger Train), so both
pantographs can be raised - there is no interconnecting
high-voltage cable along the 400 m length of the train. On
lignes classiques slower maximum speeds prevent
oscillation problems, and on DC lines both pantographs must be
raised.
Separation
LGVs are fenced along their entire length to prevent trespassing by
animals and people.
Level crossings
are not permitted and bridges over the line have sensors to detect
objects that fall onto the track.
All LGV junctions are
grade-separated, with tracks crossing each
other using
flyovers or
tunnels, eliminating crossing other tracks on the
level.
Signalling
Because TGVs on LGVs travel too fast for their drivers to see and
react to traditional lineside
signals, an automated system called TVM
(
Transmission Voie-Machine, or
track-to-train
transmission) is used for signalling. Information is
transmitted to trains via electrical pulses sent through the rails,
providing speed, target speed, and stop/go indications directly to
the driver via dashboard-mounted instruments. This high degree of
automation does not eliminate driver control, though there are
safeguards that can safely stop the train in the event of driver
error.

The boundaries of signalling block
sections are marked by distinctive boards.
The line is divided into signal blocks of about 1500
m (≈1
mile), with the
boundaries marked by blue boards with a yellow triangle. Dashboard
instruments show the maximum permitted speed for the train's
current block and a target speed based on the profile of the line
ahead. The maximum permitted speed is based on factors such as the
proximity of trains ahead (with steadily decreasing speeds
permitted in blocks closer to the rear of the next train),
junction placement, speed restrictions, the
top speed of the train and distance from the end of the LGV. As
trains cannot usually stop within one signal block, which can range
in length from a few hundred metres to a few kilometres, drivers
are alerted to slow gradually several blocks before a required
stop.
Two versions of TVM signalling, TVM-430 and TVM-300, are in use on
LGV.
TVM-430, a newer system, was first installed
on the LGV Nord to the Channel Tunnel
and Belgium, and supplies trains with more
information than TVM-300. Among other benefits, TVM-430
allows a train's on-board computer system to generate a continuous
speed control curve in the event of an emergency brake activation,
effectively forcing the driver to reduce speed safely without
releasing the brake.
The signalling system is normally permissive: the driver of a train
is permitted to proceed into an occupied block section without
first obtaining authorisation. Speed is limited to 30 km/h
(19 mph) and if speed exceeds 35 km/h (22 mph) the
emergency brake is applied. If the board marking the entrance to
the block section is accompanied by a sign marked Nf, for
non-franchissable, the block section is not permissive,
and the driver must obtain authorisation from the
Poste
d'Aiguillage et de Régulation (PAR - Signalling and Control
Centre) before entering. Once a route is set or the PAR has
provided authorisation, a white lamp above the board is lit to
inform the driver. The driver acknowledges the authorisation using
a button on the control panel. This disables the emergency braking,
which would otherwise occur when passing over the ground loop
adjacent to the non-permissive board.
When trains enter or leave LGVs from
lignes classiques,
they pass over a ground loop that automatically switches the
driver's dashboard indicators to the appropriate signalling system.
For example, a train leaving the LGV for a
ligne classique
has its TVM system deactivated and its traditional KVB
(
Contrôle Vitesse par Balise, or
beacon speed
control) system enabled.
Stations

The trainshed at Paris Gare de
Lyon.

Avignon TGV station.
One of the main advantages of TGV over other fast rail technologies
such as
magnetic
levitation is that TGVs can take advantage of existing
infrastructure.
This makes connecting city centres (such as
Paris-Gare de Lyon to Lyon-Perrache
) by TGV a simple and inexpensive
proposition. TGVs often use intra-city tracks and stations
built for lower speed trains.
However, LGV route designers have tended to build new intermediate
stations in suburban areas or in the open countryside several
kilometers away from cities. This allows TGVs to stop without
incurring too great a time penalty, since more time is spent on
high speed track; in addition, many cities' stations are stub-ends,
while LGV tracks frequently bypass cities. In some cases, stations
have been built halfway between two communities.
The station serving
Montceau-les-Mines
and Le
Creusot
is an example, and a more controversial example is
Haute
Picardie
station, between Amiens
and Saint-Quentin
. The press and local authorities criticised
Haute Picardie as being too far from either town to be convenient,
and too far from connecting railway lines to be useful for
travellers. The station was nicknamed
la gare des
betteraves, or 'beet station', as it was surrounded by
sugar beet fields during construction.
This nickname is now applied to similar stations away from town and
city centres, whether in the vicinity of beet fields or not.
New railway stations have been built for TGV services, some of
which are major architectural achievements in their own right.
Avignon
TGV station, opened in 2001, has been praised as
one of the most remarkable stations on the network, with a
spectacular 340 m (1,115 ft)-long glazed roof that has
been compared to that of a cathedral.
Rolling stock
TGVs are semi-permanently coupled
articulated un-powered
coaches, with
Jacobs
bogies between the coaches, supporting both of them.
Power cars at each end of the trains have their
own bogies. Trains can be lengthened by coupling two TGVs together,
using couplers hidden in the noses of the power cars.
The articulated design is advantageous during a derailment, as the
passenger carriages are more likely to stay upright and in line
with the track. Normal trains, by contrast, may split at
coupling and jack-knife.
A disadvantage of this carriage design is that it is difficult to
split sets of carriages. While TGV power cars can be removed from
trains via standard uncoupling procedures, specialised depot
equipment is needed to split carriages, by lifting the entire train
at once. Once uncoupled, one of the carriage ends is left without a
bogie at the split, so a bogie frame is required to support
it.
SNCF operates a fleet of about 400 TGVs. Seven types of TGV or TGV
derivative currently operate on the French network; these are:
There have also been several prototype variants on the TGV design
which have broken several records, such as the
V150 and
TGV 001. V150
was a specially modified five-car trainset
reached
574.8 km/h (357 mph) under controlled conditions on a
test run. The double decker TGV narrowly missed beating the overall
world train speed record of 581 km/h (360.8 mph).
[9037] The record-breaking speed is impractical
for commercial trains due to motor overcharging, empty train
weight, rail and engine wear issues, elimination of all but three
coaches, excessive vibration, noise and lack of
emergency stopping methods.
Normal TGV trainsets travel at up to 320
km/h (200
mph) in commercial use. All TGVs are at least
bi-current, which means that they can operate at
25 kV, 50 Hz AC on newer lines (including LGVs) and
at 1.5 kV DC on older lines (such as the 1.5 kV
lignes classiques that are common around Paris).
Trains
crossing the border into Germany
, Switzerland
, Belgium
, the
Netherlands
and the United Kingdom
must accommodate other voltages, requiring
tri-current and quadri-current TGVs. TGVs
have two pairs of pantographs, two for AC use and two for DC use.
When passing between areas of different supply voltage, marker
boards remind the driver to turn off power to the
traction motors, lower the pantograph(s),
adjust a switch to select the appropriate system, and raise the
pantograph(s). Pantographs and pantograph height control are
selected automatically based on the voltage system chosen by the
driver. Once the train detects the correct supply, a dashboard
indicator illuminates and the driver can switch on the traction
motors. The train coasts across the boundary between sections.
| Equipment type |
Top speed |
Seating capacity |
Overall length |
Width |
Weight(Empty) |
Weight(Fully loaded) |
Power
(under 25 kV) |
Power-to-weight(Empty) |
First built |
| TGV Sud-Est |
270 km/h
(168 mph) as built
300 km/h (186 mph) rebuilt |
345 |
200.19 m (657 ft) |
2.81 m (9.2 ft) |
385 t |
418 t |
6,450 kW |
16.7 W/kg |
1978 |
| *TGV Atlantique |
300 km/h (186 mph) |
485, 459 (after refurbishment) |
237.5 m (780 ft) |
2.90 m (9.5 ft) |
444 t |
484 t |
8,800 kW |
19.8 W/kg |
1988 |
| TGV Réseau |
320 km/h (199 mph) |
377, 361 (after refurbishment) |
200.19 m (657 ft) |
2.90 m (9.5 ft) |
383 t |
415 t |
8,800 kW |
23.0 W/kg |
1992 |
| TGV TMST Three
Capitals |
300 km/h (186 mph) |
750 |
393.7 m (1,293 ft) |
2.81 m (9.2 ft) |
752 t |
816 t |
12,240 kW |
16.3 W/kg |
1993 |
| TGV TMST North of
London |
300 km/h (186 mph) |
596 |
318.9 m (1,033 ft) |
2.81 m (9.2 ft) |
665 t |
|
12,240 kW |
18.4 W/kg |
1993 |
| TGV Duplex |
320 km/h (199 mph) |
512 |
200.19 m (657 ft) |
2.90 m (9.5 ft) |
380 t |
424 t |
8,800 kW |
23.2 W/kg |
1994 |
| Thalys PBKA |
300 km/h (186 mph) |
377, 374 (after refurbishment) |
200.19 m (657 ft) |
2.90 m (9.5 ft) |
385 t |
415 t |
8,800 kW |
22.9 W/kg |
1997 |
| TGV POS |
320 km/h (199 mph) |
361 |
200.19 m (657 ft) |
2.90 m (9.5 ft) |
383 t |
415 t |
9,280 kW |
24.2 W/kg |
2005 |
TGV Sud-Est
A TGV Atlantique on an enhanced ordinary track.
A TGV Réseau second-generation train at Marseille St-Charles.
The Sud-Est fleet was built between 1978 and 1988 and operated the
first TGV service, from Paris to Lyon in 1981. There are 107
passenger sets operating, of which nine are tri-current (including
15 kV, 16⅔ Hz AC for use in Switzerland) and the
rest bi-current. There are also seven bi-current half-sets without
seats that carry mail for
La Poste
between Paris, Lyon and
Provence, in a
distinctive yellow livery.
Each set is made up of two power cars and eight carriages (capacity
345 seats), including a powered bogie in each of the carriages
adjacent to the power cars. They are 200 m (656 ft) long
and 2.81 m (9.2 ft) wide. They weigh 385 tonnes with
a power output of 6,450 kW under 25 kV.
Originally the sets were built to run at 270 km/h
(168 mph) but most were upgraded to 300 km/h
(186 mph) during mid-life refurbishment in preparation for the
opening of the LGV Méditerranée. The few sets that still have a
maximum speed of 270 km/h operate on those routes that include
a comparatively short distance on LGV, such as to Switzerland via
Dijon. SNCF did not consider it financially worthwhile to upgrade
their speed for a marginal reduction in journey time.
TGV Atlantique
The Atlantique fleet was built between 1988 and 1992. 105
bi-current sets were built for the opening of the LGV Atlantique
and entry into service began in 1989. They are 237.5 m
(780 ft) long and 2.9 m (9.5 ft) wide. They weigh
444 tonnes, and are made up of two power cars and ten carriages
with a capacity of 485 seats. They were built with a maximum speed
of 300 km/h (186 mph) and 8,800 kW of power under
25 kV. The efficiency of the Atlantique with all seats filled
has been calculated at 767
PMPG, though with a typical
occupancy of 60% it is about 460 PMPG (a Toyota Prius with three
passengers is 144 PMPG).
Modified unit 325
set the world
speed record in 1990 on the new LGV before its opening. Various
modifications, such as improved
aerodynamics, larger wheels and improved
braking, were made to enable speeds of over 500 km/h
(310 mph). The set was reduced to two power cars and three
carriages to improve the power-to-weight ratio, weighing 250
tonnes. Three carriages, including the bar carriage in the centre,
is the minimum possible configuration because of the
articulation.
TGV Réseau
The first Réseau (Network) sets entered service in 1993. Fifty
bi-current sets were ordered in 1990, supplemented by an order for
40 tri-current sets in 1992/1993. Ten of the tri-current sets carry
the
Thalys livery and are known as Thalys PBA
(Paris-Brussels-Amsterdam) sets.
As well as using standard French
voltages, the tri-current sets can operate under the Netherlands
' 1.5 kV and Italian
and Belgian
3 kV DC
supplies.
They are formed of two power cars (8,800 kW under 25 kV -
as TGV Atlantique) and eight carriages, giving a capacity of 377
seats. They have a top speed of 300 km/h. They are 200 m
(656 ft) long and are 2.90 m (9.5 ft) wide. The
bi-current sets weigh 383 tonnes: owing to axle-load restrictions
in Belgium the tri-current sets have a series of modifications,
such as the replacement of
steel with
aluminium and hollow axles, to reduce the weight
to under 17 tonnes per axle.
Owing to early complaints of uncomfortable pressure changes when
entering tunnels at high speed on the LGV Atlantique, the Réseau
sets are now pressure-sealed. They can be also coupled to a Duplex
set.
Eurostar
The
Eurostar train is essentially a long TGV, modified for use in the
United Kingdom and in the Channel Tunnel
. Differences include a smaller cross section
to fit within the constrictive British
loading gauge, British-designed
asynchronous traction motors, and extensive
fireproofing.
In the UK they are called class 373. In the planning stages they
were called TransManche Super Train (Cross-channel Super Train).
They were
built by GEC-Alsthom (now Alstom) in La Rochelle
(France), Belfort
(France) and Washwood Heath
(England), entering service in 1993.
Two types were built: the Three Capitals sets, consisting of two
power cars and 18 carriages, including two with one powered bogie
each, and the North of London sets, consisting of two power cars
and 14 carriages, again with two with one powered bogie each. Full
sets of both types consist of two identical half-sets which are not
articulated in the middle, so that in case of emergency in the
Channel Tunnel one half can be uncoupled and leave the tunnel. Each
half-set is numbered separately.
Thirty-eight full sets, plus one spare power car, were ordered: 16
by SNCF, four by
NMBS/SNCB, and 18 by
British Rail, of which seven were North
of London sets. Upon privatisation of
British Rail by the UK Government, the BR sets
were bought by
London
and Continental Railways, whose subsidiary
Eurostar Ltd. is managed by a
consortium of the
National
Express Group (40%), SNCF (35%), SNCB (15%) and
British Airways (10%).
The sets operate at a maximum speed of 300 km/h
(186 mph), with the power cars supplying 12,240 kW of
power. The Three Capitals sets are 394 m (1,293 ft) long
and have 766 seats, weighing a total of 752 tonnes. The North of
London sets have 558 seats. All are at least tri-current and are
able to operate on 25 kV, 50 Hz AC (on LGVs, including
High Speed 1, and on UK overhead
electrified lines), 3 kV DC on
lignes classiques in
Belgium and 750 V DC on the UK former Southern Region
third rail network. The third-rail system
became obsolete in 2007 when the second phase of High Speed 1 was
brought into use between London and the Channel Tunnel, as it uses
25 kV, 50 Hz AC exclusively. Five of the Three Capitals
sets owned by SNCF are quadri-current and are able to operate on
French
lignes classiques at 1500 V DC.
The TGV Duplex power cars use a more streamlined nose than previous
TGVs.

TGV Duplex power car in profile

TGV Duplex trains have bi-level
carriages.
Eurostar, Thalys and TGV PSE No 81 at Paris Gare du Nord
Three of the Three Capitals sets owned by SNCF are in French
domestic use and carry the silver and blue TGV livery.
The North of London
sets, intended to provide direct regional Eurostar services from
continental Europe to UK cities north of London, using the West Coast
Main Line
and the East Coast
Main Line, have never seen regular international use: budget
airlines in the UK offered lower fares. A few of the sets
were leased to
GNER for
use on its
White Rose service between London and Leeds,
with two of them carrying GNER's dark blue livery. The lease ended
in December 2005 and a year later the same sets found themselves
working services to Calais in France for SNCF, remaining in the
standard Eurostar livery, minus the logos.
The Chief Executive of Eurostar, Richard Brown, has suggested that
the trains could be replaced by double-decker trains similar to the
TGV Duplex when they are withdrawn. A double-deck fleet could carry
40 million passengers per year from England to
Continental Europe, equivalent to adding
an extra runway at a London airport.
Eurostar has higher security measures than other TGVs. Luggage is
screened and passengers are theoretically required to check in
30 minutes before departure, although this requirement is
seldom if ever enforced. Passengers entering or leaving the UK have
to pass customs and identity checks.
TGV Duplex
The Duplex was built to increase TGV capacity without increasing
train length or the number of trains. Each carriage has two levels,
with access doors at the lower level, taking advantage of low
French
platforms. A staircase gives
access to the upper level, where the gangway between carriages is
located. This layout provides 512 seats per set. On busy routes
such as Paris-Marseille they are operated in pairs, providing 1,024
seats in a train of two Duplex sets, 800 in a Duplex set plus a
Reseau set. Each set has a wheelchair accessible compartment.
After a lengthy development process starting in 1988 (during which
they were known as the TGV-2N), they were built in two batches: 30
between 1995 and 1998 and 34 between 2000 and 2004. They weigh 380
tonnes and are 200 m (656 ft) long, made up of two power
cars and eight
bi-level carriages.
Extensive use of aluminium means that they weigh not much more than
the TGV Réseau sets they supplement. The bi-current power cars
provide 8,800 kW, and they have a slightly increased speed of
320 km/h (199 mph).
Thalys PBKA
Unlike Thalys PBA sets, the PBKA (Paris-Brussels-Köln
(Cologne)-Amsterdam) sets were built exclusively for the Thalys
service. They are technologically similar to TGV Duplex sets, but
without bi-level carriages. They are quadri-current, operating
under 25 kV, 50 Hz AC (LGVs), 15 kV
16⅔ Hz AC (Germany, Switzerland), 3 kV DC
(Belgium) and 1.5 kV DC (the Netherlands and French
lignes classiques). Their top speed in service is
300 km/h (186 mph) under 25 kV, with two power cars
supplying 8,800 kW. When operating under 15 kV power
output drops to 3,680 kW, resulting in a very poor
power-to-weight-ratio on German high-speed lines. They have eight
carriages and are 200 m (656 ft) long, weighing a total
of 385 tonnes. They have 377 seats.
Seventeen trains were ordered, nine by SNCB, six by SNCF and two by
NS.
Deutsche Bahn contributed to financing two of
the SNCB sets.
TGV POS
TGV POS (Paris-Ostfrankreich-Süddeutschland or Paris-Eastern
France-Southern Germany) are used on the LGV Est.
They consist of two power cars with eight TGV Réseau type
carriages, with a total power output of 9,600 kW and a top
speed of 320 km/h (199 mph). Unlike TGV-A, TGV-R and
TGV-D, it has asynchronous motors, and isolation of an individual
motor in a powered bogie is possible in case of failure.
Network

Overview of French TGV lines.
France has around 1,700
km of
Lignes à
Grande Vitesse (LGV), with three lines under construction. The
current lines and those under construction can be grouped into four
routes radiating from Paris:
The
LGV Interconnexion Est
connects the LGV Sud-Est to the LGV Nord around Paris, and the
LGV Rhin-Rhône (under
construction) will connect Strasbourg and Lyon.
Existing lines
- LGV Sud-Est
(Paris
Gare de Lyon to
Lyon-Perrache
), the first LGV (opened 1981)
- LGV Atlantique
(Paris Gare
Montparnasse
to Tours
and Le Mans
) (opened 1990)
- LGV
Rhône-Alpes (Lyon to Valence
) (opened 1992)
- LGV Nord (Paris
Gare du
Nord
to Lille
and
Brussels
and on towards London
, Amsterdam
(HSL-Zuid) and Cologne) (opened 1993)
- LGV Interconnexion Est
(LGV Sud-Est to LGV Nord Europe, east of Paris) (opened 1994)
- LGV
Méditerranée (An extension of LGV Rhône-Alpes: Valence to
Marseille
Saint Charles
) (opened 2001)
- High Speed 1
(Channel
Tunnel
to London St Pancras
International
) (Phase 1 opened 2003, phase 2 opened 14 November
2007)
- LGV Est (Paris Gare
de l'Est-Strasbourg
) (opened 10 June 2007)
- HSL-Zuid (Amsterdam
-Breda
) (opened
September 7, 2009)
Lines under construction
- LGV Perpignan-Figueres
(Spain to France) (due to open 2009, TGV service 2012)
- LGV
Rhin-Rhône (Lyon
-Dijon
-Mulhouse
) (due to open 2011)
- HSL 4 (Breda
-Antwerp
) (to open in later 2009)
- Haut-Bugey line - reconstruction
of the Bellegarde - Bourg-en-Bresse line to reduce Paris-Geneva by
47 km and 20 minutes although it is not a high speed
line. Due to open in 2010.
Planned lines
- Lyon Turin
Ferroviaire (Lyon
-Chambéry
-Turin
),
connecting to the Italian TAV network.
- LGV Sud
Europe Atlantique (Tours
-Bordeaux
), extending the southern branch of the LGV Atlantique (also called LGV
Sud-Ouest).
- LGV
Bretagne-Pays de la Loire (Le Mans
-Rennes
), extending
the western branch of the LGV
Atlantique.
- Bordeaux
-Toulouse
-Narbonne
- Bordeaux
-Spanish border-Vitoria-Gasteiz
and Irun
- LGV
Poitiers
-Limoges
- LGV Picardie
(Paris
- Amiens
- Calais
), cutting
off the corner of the LGV Nord-Europe via Lille.
- LGV Provence
(Marseille
- Nice
), will
reduce Paris - Nice travel times from 5h25 to 3h50 by
2025.
- LGV Paris-Cherbourg will run
from Paris to Rouen, Le Havre, Caen and Cherbourg. The line would
have a stop in La Defense where it would meet with a proposed link
to LGV Nord and a proposed Eurostar service to terminate in La
Defense.
Amsterdam and Cologne are served by
Thalys
TGVs running on ordinary track, and these connections are being
upgraded to high-speed rail.
London is served by Eurostar trains running on High Speed 1 - Eurostar now runs on
fully-segregated line once in the United Kingdom
.
TGV technology outside France
TGV technology has been adopted in a number of other countries
separately from the French network:
Future TGVs
SNCF and Alstom are investigating new technology that could be used
for high-speed transport.

The new configuration scheme for TGV
trains would increase capacity by 10% by 2010.
The development of TGV trains is being pursued in the form of the
AGV,
'a
utomotrice à g
rande
v
itesse (high speed multiple unit).
The AGV design has motors under each
carriage. Investigations are being
carried out with the aim of producing trains at the same cost as
existing TGVs with the same safety standards.
AGVs of the same length as TGVs could have up to 450
seats. The target speed is
360 km/h. The prototype AGV was
unveiled by Alstom on February 5, 2008.
In the short term, plans are being considered to increase the
capacity of TGVs by 10% by replacing the central two power cars of
a double TGV with passenger carriages. These carriages would have
motorised bogies underneath them, as would the first and last
carriage of the train, to make up for the lost power.
Italian operator
NTV is
the first customer for the AGV, and intends to become the first
open access high speed rail operator in Europe, when it starts
operation of its AGVs in Italy in 2011.
Accidents
In more than two decades of high-speed operation, the TGV has not
recorded a single fatality due to accident while running at high
speed. There have been several accidents, including three
derailments at or above 270 km/h (168 mph), but in none
of these did any carriages overturn. This is credited in part to
the stiffness that the articulated design lends to the train. There
have been fatal accidents involving TGVs on
lignes
classiques, where the trains are exposed to the same dangers
as normal trains, such as
level
crossings.
On LGVs
- 14 December 1992: TGV 920 from Annecy to Paris, operated by set
56, derailed at 270 km/h (168 mph) at Mâcon-Loché TGV
station (Saône-et-Loire). A previous emergency stop had caused a
wheel flat; the bogie concerned derailed while crossing the
points at the entrance to the
station. No one on the train was injured, but 25 passengers waiting
on the platform for another TGV were slightly injured by ballast
that was thrown up from the trackbed.
- 21 December 1993: TGV 7150 from Valenciennes to Paris, operated
by set 511, derailed at 300 km/h (186 mph) at the site of
Haute Picardie TGV station, before it was built. Rain had caused a
hole to open up under the track; the hole dated from the First World War but had not been detected during
construction. The front power car and four carriages derailed but
remained aligned with the track. Of the 200 passengers, one was
slightly injured.
- 5
June 2000: Eurostar 9073 from Paris to London, operated by sets
3101/2 owned by NMBS/SNCB, derailed at
250 km/h (155 mph) in the Nord-Pas de Calais
region near Croisilles
. The transmission assembly on the rear
bogie of the front power car failed, with parts falling onto the
track. Four bogies out of 24 derailed. Out of 501 passengers, seven
were bruised and others treated for shock.
On lignes classiques
- 31 December 1983: A bomb allegedly planted by the terrorist
organisation of Carlos
the Jackal exploded on board a TGV from Marseille to Paris; two
people were killed.
- 28
September 1988: TGV 736, operated by set 70 "Melun", collided with
a lorry carrying an electric transformer weighing 100 tonnes that
had become stuck on a level crossing in Voiron
, Isère
. The vehicle had not been permitted to cross
by the French Direction départementale de l'équipement.
The weight of the lorry caused a very violent collision; the train
driver and a passenger died, and 25 passengers were slightly
injured.
- 4 January 1991: after a brake failure, TGV 360 ran away from
Châtillon depot. The train was directed onto an unoccupied track
and collided with the car loading ramp at Paris-Vaugirard station
at 60 km/h (37 mph). No one was injured. The leading
power car and the first two carriages were severely damaged, and
were rebuilt.
- 25
September 1997: TGV 7119 from Paris to Dunkerque
, operated by set 502, collided at 130 km/h
(81 mph) with a 70 tonne (77 short ton; 69 long ton) asphalt
paving machine on a level crossing at Bierne, near
Dunkerque. The power car spun round and fell down an
embankment. The front two carriages left the track and came to a
stop in woods beside the track. Seven people were injured.
- 31
October 2001: TGV 8515 from Paris to Irun derailed at 130 km/h
(81 mph) near Dax
in
southwest France. All ten carriages derailed and the rear
power unit fell over. The cause was a broken rail.
- 30 January 2003: a TGV from Dunkerque to Paris collided at
106 km/h (66 mph) with a heavy goods vehicle stuck on the
level crossing at Esquelbecq in northern France. The front power
car was severely damaged, but only one bogie derailed. Only the
driver was slightly injured.
- 19
December 2007: a TGV train from Paris to Geneva collided at about
100 km/h (62 mph) with a truck on a level crossing near
Tossiat
in eastern France, near the Swiss border.
The driver of the truck died; on the train, one was seriously
injured and 24 were slightly injured.
Following the number of accidents at level crossings, an effort has
been made to remove all level crossings on
lignes
classiques used by TGVs.
The ligne classique from Tours
to Bordeaux
at the end of the LGV Atlantique has no level
crossings as a result.
Protests against the TGV
The first environmental protests against the building of a
high-speed line in France occurred in May
1990
during the planning stages of the LGV Méditerranée. Protesters
blocked a railway viaduct to protest against the planned route,
arguing that it was unnecessary, and that trains could use existing
lines to reach Marseilles from Lyons.
Lyon Turin Ferroviaire (Lyon
-Chambéry
-Turin
), which
would connect the TGV to the Italian
TAV network, has been the subject
of demonstrations in Italy. While most Italian political
parties agree on the construction of this line, inhabitants of the
towns where construction would take place are vehemently opposing
it. The concerns of the protesters centre around storing dangerous
materials mined from mountain, like
asbestos and
uranium, in the
open air. This serious health danger could be avoided by using more
appropriate but expensive techniques for handling radioactive
materials. A six-month delay in the start of construction has been
decided in order to study solutions. In addition to the concerns of
the residents, RFB - a ten year old national movement - opposes the
development of Italy's
TAV
high-speed rail network as a
whole.
General complaints about the noise of TGVs passing near towns and
villages have led the SNCF to build acoustic fencing along large
sections of LGVs to reduce the disturbance to residents, but
protests still take place where SNCF has not addressed the
issue.
See also
Notes and references
Further reading
- Cinotti, Eric and Tréboul, Jean-Baptiste (2000) Les TGV
européens : Eurostar, Thalys, Paris : Presses universitaires
de France, ISBN 2-13-050565-1 (in French)
- Perren, Brian (2000) TGV handbook, 2nd ed., Harrow
Weald : Capital Transport, ISBN 1-85414-195-3
- Soulié, Claude and Tricoire, Jean (2002) Le grand livre du
TGV, Paris : La Vie du rail, ISBN 2-915034-01-X (in French)
External links