Q-type Queens car (New York City Subway car)

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Q-type Queens car
NYCS BMT Q.jpg
BMT Q-type car #1612C on display at the New York Transit Museum
Q-type 1612C interior.jpg
Interior view of Q-type car 1612C
In service1938–1969
ManufacturerOsgood Bradley Car Company
J. G. Brill Company
Laconia Car Company
Jewett Car Company
Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation
Constructed1938
Number built114 cars assembled into 42 operating units
Number preserved2
Number scrapped112
FormationThree-car sets (Q) or two-car sets (QX)
Fleet numbers1600–1629 A-B-C (Q)
1630–1642 A-B (QX)
Capacity50 seats (A and C cars), 52 seats (B car)(Q) / 50 seats (A and B cars)(QX)
Operator(s)Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation
NYC Board of Transportation
New York City Transit Authority
Specifications
Car body constructionWood with steel frames and ends
Train length137 feet (41.8 m) over the extreme ends of each unit
Car length49 feet 3 inches (15.01 m)
Width8 feet 8 inches (2.64 m)
Height12 feet (3.66 m)
Weight57,000 lb (26,000 kg)
Traction systemWH 225113 (Q)
WH 225112 (QX)
GE 259, WH 336 (Q, 1 per motor truck)
WH 300 (QX, 2 per motor truck)
Power output120 hp (89 kW) per motor (Q)
200 hp (150 kW) per motor (QX)
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) (standard gauge)

The Q-type and QX were a New York City Subway car class originally built by the Osgood-Bradley, Brill, Laconia, and Jewett car companies, and rebuilt in 1938 by the Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation (BMT) from former BU cars.

History[]

The Q-types were built for elevated railway service to the 1939 New York World's Fair, though used in both Flushing and Astoria service. They were rebuilt from BU cars in the 1200 and 1400 series, elevated rolling stock originally built in 1903 and 1907. There were 30 three-car Q sets numbered 1600–1629 A-B-C, and 13 two-car QX sets numbered 1630–1642 A-B. The Q sets were arranged in three-car sets with the center car as a trailer, while the QX sets were arranged as married pairs with a motor car and a control trailer.[1] Involved in this conversion were all remaining 1400 series cars that had not been rebuilt to the 1923 C-type conversion, saved for 2 cars that had been independently rebuilt following an accident in 1910. The remaining cars used were 1200 series cars. 22 1200 series cars were left over after completion of the Q-type conversion, 1 of which was converted to a trailer shortly after the city takeover. All trailer cars in these units had originally been of the 1200 series. [2]

After BMT service on the joint IRT-BMT Flushing Line and Astoria Line ended in 1949, the QX-types were all removed from service and placed in work service. The Q-types were refitted for operation on the IRT Third Avenue Line in Manhattan. After the latter line closed in 1955, the Q-types were refitted again to operate on the BMT Myrtle Avenue Line in 1958 to replace the last elevated BU gate cars in passenger service. A year before, a few trains of these freshly rehabilitated units did a one-day test in service on the Franklin Ave. Shuttle on October 10, 1957. Service on Myrtle Ave. finally got underway in July 1958. By September, all of the old convertible gate cars had been retired. The Q-types then spent the next 11 years in service on Myrtle Ave. until the lower part of the line closed on October 4, 1969, when they were finally retired.[3][4] The oldest of the cars were in revenue service for 66 years, currently the longest such service life in New York City rapid transit operations.

Preservation[]

  • Car 1602A (ex-BU 1410) is preserved at the Trolley Museum of New York.[5] It is awaiting restoration.
  • Car 1612C (ex-BU 1417) is preserved at the New York Transit Museum. This car was previously used as a work car before it was restored to its original condition for the museum collection in 1979. It was painted in its original blue and orange paint scheme (the colors of the New York City flag), which it wore during the 1939 World's Fair.

Q-type set 1622 A-B-C, was previously preserved by the New York Transit Museum, but the set was converted back into BU gate cars 1407, 1273, and 1404 (their original numbers prior to conversion) in 1979. However, the cars are still unitized as Q units and thus retain their 1957 lowered roofs, 1950 lightweight trucks and motors, and modified marker light positions on the ends of the units.[6][7] Car 1612C was subsequently restored to replace 1622 A-B-C.

References[]

Media related to Q-type Queens car (New York City Subway car) at Wikimedia Commons

  1. ^ "nycsubway.org: The BMT Fleet (Elevated, Subway, Experimental)".
  2. ^ "BMT ELEVATED CARS". www.thejoekorner.com.
  3. ^ NYC Subway Experimental Cars
  4. ^ "nycsubway.org: Chapter 1, The Elevated Lines".
  5. ^ BRT Subway Q Car Number 1602A (Kingston, New York Trolley Museum)
  6. ^ "nycsubway.org: Chapter 1, The Elevated Lines".
  7. ^ "The Road to the Transit Museum Page 7". Archived from the original on 2012-02-05.
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