London Underground 1996 Stock


The London Underground 1996 stock is a type of rolling stock used on the Jubilee line of the London Underground. The trains were built by GEC Alsthom-Metro-Cammell and entered service in 1997. They are similar to the 1995 Stock used on the Northern line.
The original 59 trains were initially built as 6-car trains. In 2005 an additional trailer car was added to lengthen each train to 7-cars and four additional 7-car trains delivered, bringing the total to 63 7-car trains.

History

The 1996 stock was ordered for the opening of the Jubilee Line Extension from Green Park to Stratford. The original plan was to refurbish 1983 stock with the same exterior and interior as 1996 stock, even with double doors, but this proved too expensive and was abandoned. Delays in the construction of the JLE meant that the 1996 stock entered service on the existing Jubilee line, replacing the 1983 stock, well before the JLE was opened. The first train was delivered in July 1996, entering service on 24 December 1997, with the final train entering service on 31 July 2001.
The development of the 1995 stock and 1996 stock were conducted in parallel. Detailed design was done by Alstom at its Washwood Heath and Rugby facilities, and the first six train sets were manufactured at Alstom's Barcelona factory to the 1996 stock design. All type approvals were conducted on these early train sets. 1995 stock was produced in the Barcelona factory afterwards, and the balance of the 1996 stock followed. Final assembly and equipping was at Alstom's facility at Washwood Heath on adjacent production lines.

Overview

The 1996 Stock has an identical exterior car body to the 1995 Stock, but the two rolling stocks have different interiors, seating layouts and cabs, traction packages and train management systems, and slight differences in tripcock geometry. 1995 Stock uses LED body-side lights, 1996 Stock filament bulbs. The most apparent difference is the bogie: 1996 Stock uses an Alstom bogie with a rubber suspension, 1995 Stock has AdTranz bogies with air suspension to cope with the arduous track conditions of the underground portions of the Northern line. The main technical differences arose because 1996 Stock was designed for "cheapest first cost", while 1995 Stock was designed for "life cycle cost", as Alstom had won the contract to act as the service provider and maintainer of this stock. Alstom subsequently won the maintenance contract for 1996 Stock, to be carried out at the new Stratford Market Depot in East London.
The 1996 Stock was delivered as six-car trains, with two three-car units coupled together, each consisting of a Driving Motor car , a Trailer car and an Uncoupling Non-Driving Motor car . The standard train formation was. Twelve later trailer cars had de-icing equipment; these are referred to as De-Icing Trailer cars .
The cars are odd-numbered at one end of the train, even numbers at the other. Each number has five digits: the first two are the stock type ; the third refers to the car type: 0 or 1 for DM, 2 or 3 for T, 4 or 5 for UNDM, 6 or 7 for ST and 8 or 9 for DIT. Thus, for example, a six-car train set would be 96001, 96201, 96401, 96402, 96202, 96002.

Traction control

1995 and 1996 stock trains have the same body shell design, but they use different AC traction control systems. The 1995 stock system is more modern, since the 1996 stock design specification was 'frozen' in 1991.
1996 stock trains use three-phase induction motors fed from a single-source inverter using a GTO thyristor derived from those on Class 465 Networker trains, whereas the 1995 stock uses Alstom's "Onix" three-phase Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistor drive.
Earlier stock, like most electric trains manufactured before the 1990s, used DC motors. These are now regarded as inefficient, partly because they are traditionally controlled by resistors, and partly because a 3-phase AC induction motor can provide higher specific power and volumetric power density. The carbon brushes and commutator of a DC motor can easily wear down over time and need regular maintenance, whereas an induction machine does not.
In an AC motor supplied by a fixed-frequency supply, maximum torque can only be achieved when the resistance of the rotor windings is equal to their reactance. AC motors in an industrial setting are normally operated at approximately constant speed, so if a wound-rotor machine is employed large banks of resistors can be used on start-up to raise resistance and maintain torque. This would be inefficient in a small motor designed for stop-start operation.
Thus it was only the adoption of electronic control systems from the 1980s that made AC traction viable for trains. The motor can be supplied using an inverter, and by varying the inverter's output frequency it is possible to keep the frequency of the current in the rotor windings, and hence the reactance, constant.
The GTO thyristor achieves this by "chopping" the supply voltage in order to drive a sinusoidal current in the motor windings, creating the characteristic whine associated with the stock and with the Class 465 Networker trains that share its traction drive system. The sound changes as the pulse length changes. The noise is produced by the switching frequency current ripple and the resulting torque pulsation experienced by the rotor of the induction machine.
More modern AC traction, such as on 1995 stock, uses an IGBT, which can operate at much higher switching frequencies than the GTO. The whining sound is far less noticeable because of the higher switching frequency of IGBT drives.

Addition of seventh car

In early 2005, as part of a capacity upgrade to the Jubilee line, 87 additional carriages were ordered. A seventh car was to each of the existing 59 sets, and four new seven-carriage sets were built. The original factory on the Barcelona sea front had been closed, and the new stock was manufactured in Alstom's new factory at Santa Perpètua de Mogoda in the Barcelona suburbs. The four new trains were built as six-car trains and modified to seven-car configuration at Stratford Market Depot.
From 25 December 2005, the line was closed for completion of the conversion to seven cars, including signalling alterations and software modification to the platform-edge doors. The original plan was to hard-wire two cars together so that the onboard computer would "see" them as one car, but this proved unnecessary. Since the 1996 Stock had been future-proofed, being designed as six-car sets with the ability to add a seventh car, the platforms were already long enough for seven-car trains and the platform-edge doors at the 1999 extension stations had been built with space for a seventh car. The line was scheduled to close for five days, but the work was completed ahead of schedule and the line reopened two days early. The new car is a trailer car in the "odd" unit, with design designation "G". An example of a seven-car train set would be 96117, 96317, 96717, 96517, 96518, 96318, 96118
There were various differences between the new and old cars at the time of introduction:
Following refurbishment, many of these differences are no longer visible. The new cars are numbered 96601 to 96725. The step-plate on the new cars reads "Alstom 1996" for continuity reasons, but they feature the newer Alstom logo instead of the original GEC-Alsthom.

Upgrades and refurbishment

The trains were originally delivered with seats with a mauve and grey moquette. They formed the letter J for Jubilee. This was replaced in November 2005 with the new dark blue Tube Lines moquette with multi-coloured and multi-size hollow squares, introduced at the same time on the 1973 and 1995 stock. At the same time, the purple armrests were repainted blue to match the new seats.
From April 2012, all units received a refresh, with the new Barman moquette being introduced on all units, prior to the 2012 Olympics.
From 2014 onwards, the external LCD destination displays were replaced with LED units. The new units use orange text, instead of the original yellow.
Starting in 2017, the 1996 stock underwent refurbishment, some 20 years after first being introduced. New flooring was fitted, with contrasting colours and grooves in the doorways. All grab rails were repainted Jubilee line silver, and new wheelchair backboards were provided in some trailer cars. The interior turquoise blue panels were also repainted white. The external door open/close buttons were also plated over. The first refurbished train entered service on 23 February 2017, and the last one entered service in December 2019. All trains have now been refurbished.

Automatic train operation

It had been intended to open the Jubilee Line Extension with an Automatic train operation system, however delays and technical difficulties meant that a conventional signalling system was hastily installed, and until 2011 the trains were always driven manually by the driver using a dead man's handle, also known as the Traction-Brake controller.
Eventually, from 2009 a new signalling system was installed by Thales, called SelTrac. Also known as Transmission-based train control, it allows the trains to be operated automatically, with the driver only responsible for opening and closing the doors, and initiating departure. The system uses inductive track loops, placed between the running rails, to communicate with the train
In order to operate with the new signalling system, all 1996 stock underwent modification, which included the installation of two Vehicle On Board Controllers, and a new Train Operators Display in the cab.
From the beginning of January 2011, ATO was introduced on a gradual basis, and since 26 June 2011, the line has been operated entirely under ATO. As a result, the peak service frequency was increased to 27 trains per hour in July 2011, and it has since been increased further to 30 trains per hour.