Hector Rail

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A Hector Rail Class 941 hauled lumber train on the Solør Line in Norway

Hector Rail is a Swedish-based independent train haulage provider operating in the European rail transport market, operating 50 locomotives. The company provides locomotives and drivers to freight customers who need to have whole unit trains hauled between two places with a regular timetable.

From start, the majority of the shareholders were the Høegh family from Norway, through Höegh Capital Partners.[1] In September 2014, the company was sold to EQT Infrastructure II.

History[]

Hector Rail ran its first train on 12 December 2004, and now operates around 5 million train-km a year in Sweden and Norway. It began operating in Denmark and running trains from Sweden to Germany during January 2008.[1] In 2009 Hector rail started to haul a passenger train, for Veolia. During 2016 Hector Rail took ownership of GB Railfreight after GBRF was purchased by EQT Partners.[citation needed] In May 2021 Hector Rail began operating the trains for FlixTrain when they launched their services in Sweden.

Locomotives[]

Hector Rail Class 441, the EuroSprinter

The company operates diesel and electrically powered locomotives:[2]

  • 3 Class 141, ex prototype locomotives
  • 11 Class 142, ex locomotives
  • 8 Class 143, ex SJ Rc3 locomotives
  • 6 Class 161, ex NSB El 15 locomotives
  • 12 Class 241, Bombardier TRAXX locomotives
  • 7 Class 242, Siemens' ES64U2 EuroSprinter locomotives
  • 2 Class 441, Siemens' ES64F4 EuroSprinter locomotives
  • 3 Class 921, diesel shunting locomotives ex SJ Z70
  • 2 Class 941, Vossloh G 2000 BB diesel locomotives
  • 4 Class 841, Nohab diesel locomotives ex SJ T43
  • 2 Class 942, MaK 1205 diesel locomotives

The first digit indicates the number of different electrical voltages supported, but 8 for diesel-electric and 9 for diesel-hydraulic. The second digit is the number of axles, hinting the tractive effort.

In Media[]

The railway was featured in a 2018 episode of Mighty Trains, showing newly-acquired Vectron locomotives hauling lumber [3] from northern Sweden to the Ostrand pulp mill in Timrå, Sweden. [4]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Mats Nyblom (October 2007). "Hector Rail's growth strategy". Railway Gazette International.
  2. ^ "fleet". www.hectorrail.com. Archived from the original on 2007-11-23. Retrieved 2007-11-12.
  3. ^ "Hector Rail". Mighty Trains. Season 2. Episode 3. November 2018. 60 minutes in. Discovery Canada. Retrieved December 9, 2018. on imdb.org
  4. ^ "Mighty Trains". Might Trains. Season 2. Episode 3. November 18, 2018. 60 minutes in. Discovery Canada.

External links[]

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