British Rail Class 142


The British Rail Class 142 is a class of Pacer diesel multiple-unit passenger trains used in England and Wales. 96 units were built by British Rail Engineering Limited's Derby Litchurch Lane Works between 1985 and 1987. They were a development of the earlier Class 141, which were introduced in 1984. The first batch was delivered in 1985, with the remaining units being delivered between 1986 and 1987.

Description

The unit's body is based on that of the original Leyland National bus; many fixtures and fittings of the bus can be found on the units. Each unit has a seating capacity of any number between 102 and 121 passengers per two-car set. In theory there should be 106 or 121 seats per unit. However, many units have had seats removed to provide additional space for wheelchair access. The same engines and mechanical transmissions were used as on Class 141, as also the same double-folding external doors. Each car has a fuel capacity of 125 gallons.

Rail squeal

Excessive flange squeal on tight curves has been a problem on many routes operated by 142s, caused by the long wheelbase and lack of bogies. The rough ride which can result has led to the units being nicknamed Nodding Donkey.
The 142s that were allocated to Cornwall in the mid-1980s were officially known as "Skippers". They were transferred to the north when the Cornish branch lines proved unsuitable for the Class 142; the tight bends caused excessive screeching and caused the wheels to become damaged. All Skippers left the West Country in the late 1980s.

Upgrades and refurbishments

The class was mechanically upgraded starting in the early 1990s, as the original parts were already starting to fail by then. All units carry a more powerful Cummins L10 series engine – 230 bhp per car, which equals 460 bhp per twin-car unit – and Voith T211r two-stage hydraulic transmission, starting with a torque converter which switches to fluid coupling drive once the unit is up to. All units were fitted with new Voith transmission by late 1991 and Cummins engines were fitted between 1993 and 1996 to improve reliability. This has proven successful, although incidents have occurred, such as when a Northern Rail unit derailed en route from Blackpool to Liverpool in June 2009, due to a cardan shaft failure. During the period of conversion, the fleet were renumbered into either the 142 2xx series or the 142 5xx series, before reverting to their original numbers. The original bi-folding doors fitted on the Class 142 were replaced in the 1990s due to reliability issues.

Operations

British Rail Provincial/Regional Railways

From new, some units were painted according to the region they operated in. For example, the first 14 Greater Manchester Passenger Transport Executive sponsored units received GMPTE orange and brown, then the next 13 West Country based units were painted in a Great Western Railway inspired chocolate and cream livery and marketed as 'Skippers'.

Post privatisation

Northern England

Upon the privatisation of British Rail, the Class 142 Fleet was divided between North Western Trains in the North West and Northern Spirit in the North East.
Northern Spirit started its operations in 1997 and continued until 2000. At this point, parent company MTL ran into difficulties and the company was sold to Arriva, who renamed it as Arriva Trains Northern.
In 1998 ATN swapped seven Class 142s for seven Class 150/2 units from Valley Lines. In October–December 2002 these were swapped for unrefurbished units 142072-77 and 080–3, as 142086-091 had only recently been refurbished by Northern Spirit and Valley Lines wished to start their refurbishment from scratch.
In 2004 First North Western and Arriva Trains Northern was merged into the Northern rail franchise, which inherited a combined fleet of 79 Class 142s.
All 79 Class 142s are now painted in Northern Rail livery. Due to rising passenger numbers in the north of England, some units have been replaced by Sprinter trains.
Five Class 142 Pacers, in service with First Great Western, were returned to Northern Rail in December 2008; the rest returned to Northern Rail by November 2011, much later than originally planned.
Despite being built for branch-line stopping services, the Class 142s are mainly used on urban commuter services in and out of cities like Liverpool, Manchester, Sheffield, Leeds and Newcastle and can be seen on longer-distance services of up to three hours including the 1632 Middlesbrough-Carlisle service ; they had also been used on services between Blackpool North and Chester via Stockport, which ceased to operate in December 2008. All 79 passed with the Northern franchise to Arriva Rail North in April 2016, and any remaining units transferred to the government-owned operator Northern Trains on 1 March 2020.
In June 2020, it was announced that 13 Class 142s would be allowed to re-enter service if necessary, the units being 142004, 018, 023, 058, 065, 068, 070, 071, 078, 087, 090, 094 and 095, which they did on the 6th July 2020 following the introduction of a new timetable, due to a need for extra capacity for social distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic, coupled to Class 150s so as to avoid being non-PRM modified.

Merseyside

A total of seventeen Class 142 units based at Newton Heath TMD were refurbished for use on Merseyside Passenger Transport Executive's City Line on services around the Liverpool and Greater Manchester areas. The refurbishment included dot-matrix route indicators, a new design of individual low-backed seating and the units were repainted into Merseyrail's livery. Upon privatisation, these units passed to First North Western in March 1997. All of these sets transferred to Northern in 2016, however remained in the livery of previous operator Northern Rail.

Wales

acquired its Class 142s by swapping Class 150/2 units with Arriva Trains Northern. The Class 142s were initially painted in Valley Lines livery.
Transport for Wales uses its Class 142 Pacer trains on the commuter lines around Cardiff, Barry and Penarth known as the Valley lines. All of its Class 142 Pacer fleet now bear the turquoise and cream house colours of Arriva Trains Wales.
The Class 142s are frequently used for the Cardiff to Penarth service calling at Grangetown, Dingle Road, and Penarth.
The Class 142 units are also primarily used on South Wales Valley line routes and routes through the Vale of Glamorgan. On Valley and Vale of Glamorgan services, Class 142s are often coupled together with Class 143 or Class 150 units to cope with demand on the busy Valley Lines network. The Class 142s have received minor refurbishments with retrimmed seats in new moquette, plus the installation of ceiling-mounted CCTV cameras.

South West England

Twelve Class 142 Pacers were received by First Great Western in 2007, and started operations in December 2007. These were loaned from Northern, in part to cover for the refurbishment of FGW's Sprinter fleets but also to allow the Class 158s to be reformed as three-coach sets.
The 142s were based at Exeter TMD, working alongside the similar on services in Devon and Cornwall, including the Avocet Line, Riviera Line and Tarka Line.
Five 142s were returned to Northern Rail in the autumn of 2008, following the completion of the refresh of Class 150 Sprinter units. The remaining seven units were returned to Northern Rail in November 2011 after being replaced by class 150 units cascaded from London Overground and London Midland.

Withdrawal

All 94 Class 142s will be withdrawn by mid-2020, as they do not comply with the Persons with Reduced Mobility Technical Specification for Interoperability.
Bidders for the Northern franchise that commenced in April 2016 were required to order new DMUs and take on Sprinters and Turbostars released by other franchises as replacement. The Long Term Passenger Rolling Stock Strategy for the Rail Industry indicates up to 500 non-electric carriages will need to be built in the short term. Northern withdrawals were scheduled to commence in November 2018 with the last to be removed from traffic in October 2019. This has been slightly delayed until the first Class 195s enter service.
Wales & Borders franchise holder KeolisAmey Wales will replace all of its Class 142s by mid-2020.
In August 2019, Northern retired seven and placed them in store at Heaton TMD. Scrapping commenced in December 2019 with 142005 taken to CF Booth, Rotherham. In December 2019, three withdrawn Northern units were transferred to Transport for Wales for spare parts.
In December 2019, both Northern and Transport for Wales were issued derogations to allow use into 2020. Northern Trains are permitted to the use the units until the 31 May 2020, but only whilst coupled to a compliant unit, whilst Transport for Wales are permitted to use the units until 31 July 2020 and can be operated alone.

Preservation

Seventeen class 142 units have so far been saved/earmarked for preservation. The majority all being ex-Northern operated units. Unit no 142001 is part of the National Collection and preserved at the National Railway Museum Shildon. Additionally, three further units are to be preserved. Unit 142003 is to be purchased by a private individual, two further units 142023 and 142036 are to also be preserved following withdrawal from service in May 2020. 142023 will be based at the Plym Valley Railway and 142036 at the East Kent Railway.
A further few units are also preserved on the Chasewater Railway, the Wensleydale Railway and Whitrope Heritage Centre each.

Operational

142027 was purchased as a spares donor for the Chasewater Railway's two operational Class 142 units.

Non-railway use

Alongside the operational preserved class 142s, one has already been acquired by South Wales Police.

Liveries

Fleet details

ClassOperatorNumbersBuiltCars per SetUnit nos.
Class 142Transport for Wales151985–872142002, 142006, 142010, 142069, 142072-077, 142080-083, 142085
Class 142Northern Trains71985–872142004, 142058, 142065, 142068, 142071, 142087, 142090
Class 142Stored251985–872NT: 142003, 142007, 142011, 142013-014, 142018, 142023, 142032, 142035, 142041, 142043, 142045, 142047, 142051, 142056, 142061, 142070, 142078, 142089, 142094-095
TFW: 142012, 142079, 142086
Class 142Scrapped351985–872142005, 142008-009, 142015-016, 142021-022, 142024-026, 142031, 142034, 142037, 142039-040, 142042, 142044, 142046, 142048-050, 142052-054, 142057, 142059, 142062-064, 142066-067, 142088, 142092-093, 142096
Class 142Preserved151985–872142001, 142017, 142019-020, 142027, 142028-030, 142033, 142036, 142038, 142055, 142060, 142084, 142091

Named units

Select units have previously carried names.
YearQuantity in
service at
start of year
Quantity
withdrawn
NumbersNotes
1991961142059
2000951142008
20199444142001/03/05/07/09/12/15-17/19-22/25-27/29-31/33-34/37-39/42/44/46/48-50/52-53/57/60/64/66/79/84/86/88/91-93/96142001, 003, 017, 019, 020, 029, 030, 033, 038, 060, 084 & 091 preserved
20206029142002/04/06/10-11/13-14/18/23-24/28/32/35-36/40-41/43/45/47/51/54-56/58/61-63/65/67-78/80-83/85/87/89-90/94-95142001, 011, 013, 017, 019, 020, 027-030, 033-041, 055-056, 060, 084 & 091 preserved. 142005, 009, 015, 016, 021, 022, 024-026, 031, 034, 039, 040, 042, 044-046, 048-054, 057, 062-064, 067, 068, 088 & 092 have been scrapped.

Accidents

John Pugh, the then Liberal Democrat MP for Southport, described the 142 trains as "unsafe". However the UK Government's Transport Secretary at the time Geoff Hoon denied this claim saying, "I would not accept that any of that rolling stock is unsafe", and that they constantly upgrade them.

Models

In 1987, Hornby Railways launched its first version of the BR Class 142 railbus in OO gauge.
In 2020, Realtrack Models announced that it intended to produce a model of the class 142 in several liveries.

Citations