Tatra T3

Tatra T3
T3 in Prague
Interior of T3D
Manufacturer Czech Republic ČKD Tatra
Constructed 1960–89, 1998–99 (T3RF)
Number built 14,113
Capacity 23 seats
87 standing
Specifications
Train length 14,000 mm (45 ft 11 in)
Width 2,500 mm (8 ft 2 in)
Height 3,050 mm (10 ft 0 in)
Doors 3
Bogies 2
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in), 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 38 in), 1,524 mm (5 ft)

The T3 is a famous type of tramcar produced by ČKD Tatra. During its period of production, between 1960 and 1999, 13,991 powered units and 122 unpowered trailers were sold worldwide, mostly in Central and Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. Well-maintained tramcars of this type are very reliable, and a late-2000s study conducted on the Prague tram system has shown 98.9% reliability, the best of the Prague tram system fleet.[1]

Types

T3

T3 tram car in Plzeň

The design of the T3 had to meet difficult specifications. The cars needed to have the same capacity as its predecessor (the Tatra T2), but be easier to build. Some of the things that were done in order to meet this goal were making the walls thinner, and fitting the cars with laminate seats instead of cushioned leatherette seats such as the T2 used. The T3 was delivered to all tramway companies in the former Czechoslovakia. It was most numerous in Prague, where over 1,000 vehicles were delivered. The T3 still forms (mostly in various modernised versions) the backbone of the Czech tram fleet.

T3SU

T3SU tram car in Kyiv
T3SU tram on the "Rapid Tram" line in Volgograd

(SU for Soviet Union)

As with the T2SU, the first T3SU was delivered with the modification of removing the middle door and replacing it with seats. Later cars, however, were delivered with the third door in place. Again, the vehicles had a closed operator's compartment and were adapted for the harsh climate. Altogether 11,368 T3SU were delivered, making it the largest production of a single type of streetcar worldwide. But because so many of one type were made, their replacement by more modern cars was slow.

The T3SU was delivered from 1963, first to Moscow and later to 33 further Soviet cities.

T3SUCS

Tatra T3SU trams in Odessa, Ukraine
Inside T3SUCS manufactured after 1983
The ceiling of the Tatra-T3 tram, manufactured before 1983

(SUCS for Soviet Union-modified Czechoslovakia)

Originally, the production of the T3 was stopped in 1976 and focus shifted to newer vehicles. The Slovak city Košice, however, ordered two motor coaches as an exception. The production of the replacement type KT8D5 was slated to begin in 1985, but this model was by then obsolete. Further production of the T3 would have been too expensive, so instead vehicles of the type T3SU were re-imported and adapted. The closed operator's cab was maintained, the vehicles had all three doors in place, and differed from the original T3 only in a few details.

T3SU Evolution

Over time, the T3SU has had minor changes in both exterior appearance and interior design.

Exterior details:

  • <1966: Narrow passenger windows disappeared
  • ~1969: Narrow window route designators
  • 1980s: Illuminated route indicator on top
  • ~1985: Oval turn indicator at the front became two rectangular lights. The same lamps began to be fitted to the rear
  • 1983 onwards: Small grid in the forward section of the tram on the left side
  • ~1985: Two small red lamps near the tramcar-to-tramcar "control circuit port", both front and rear
  • Additional red horizontal lamps from behind

Interior:

  • Early 1960s to early 1970s: Sofa-style seats
  • Early 1970s to mid-1980s: "Toilet"-like seats
  • 1977-1978: Cream-coloured saloon (repainted yellow/dark-blue)

T3D

Modernized T3D tram in Chemnitz

(D for Deutschland)

In East Germany the first three T3D cars started operation in 1964 and the city of Dresden got its first delivery in 1965. The cars were used in part due to their width of 2.50 m (8 ft 2 in). They operated as single cars or as multiple units (motor+motor, motor+motor+trailer) and/or as mini trams (motor+trailer). The use of trailer cars was due to the use of original Czech T3 electrical equipment, which had enough power to support trailer cars. However, due to reduced available power, the maximum speed of the streetcar reached only 55 km/h instead of the usual 65 km/h (40 mph).

Only German and Yugoslav networks had trailer cars. The car was designated as B3D and had the same body as the T3D. Today, only Chemnitz uses T3s in full service as the T3D-M (modified).

T3YU

T3YU in Osijek (before modernization)

(YU for Yugoslavia)

From 1967 onwards, vehicles supplied to Yugoslavia differed from the standard type T3 by having different pantographs and trucks. In addition, trailer cars were used, as in East Germany. Uncommonly, the network used narrow-profile vehicles, two of which could be found in Czechoslovakia and one in the Soviet Union.

T3R

(R for Romania)

At the end of the 1960s, Romania ordered RA cars as part of an agreement in the Comecon. The first vehicles came in 1970 to the city of Galaţi and had different electrical equipment from the Czechoslovak vehicles, to use the network's 750 V DC voltage. Since the car boxes were built too wide for use elsewhere, they remain in Galaţi. Only 50 units were delivered.

A few more of the same type were manufactured in 1997.

T3RF

Four Tatra T3RF were the very last T3 trams built. They were made for Samara and Izhevsk, but only Samara bought them. In 2002 the two others were sold to Brno and modernized.

Modernized Tatra-T3 trams

Washing machine based on Tatra T3.
Tram modernized from T3SUCS to T3P in Bratislava (Slovakia) Hlavná stanica (Main Railway Station) terminate stop
Tram modernized from T3SU to MTTD on the historic Boulevard Ring tram line in Moscow

In most Czech cities and in some others such as Bratislava, Moscow, Riga, and Odessa, Tatra-T3 trams became very common. As a result, service and maintenance workers became very experienced at servicing them. This was one reason for modifying existing trams rather than replacing them with newer stock (the other being cost).

Modernization normally includes:

  • Restoration of the car body
  • Digital/Electronic destination sign installation
  • Audio information system
  • Installation of new traction motors
  • Thyristor-controlled motor traction system
  • Refurbishing of the interior, which varies by city and transport authority
  • Pantograph replacement (depending on the transport authority)

More radical modernization includes insertion of a low-floor section.

Production

14,113 trams were produced and delivered to:[2]

City Year T3 T3SUCS T3SU T3D B3D T3YU B3YU T3R Total
Russia Barnaul 1967–85 - - 444 - - - - - 444
Slovakia Bratislava 1964–89 58 130 - - - - - - 188
Czech Republic Brno 1963–89, 2002 (Tatra T3RF trams built in 1998–99 for Russia) 109 53 - - - - - - 162
Germany Karl-Marx-Stadt (today Chemnitz) 1966–88 - - - 132 62 - - - 194
Ukraine Dnipropetrovsk 1968–87 - - 370 - - - - - 370
Ukraine Dniprodzerzhynsk 1972–86 - - 183 - - - - - 183
Ukraine Donetsk 1967–87 - - 251 - - - - - 251
Romania Galați 1971–74 - - - - - - - 50 50
Russia Grozny 1981–86 - - 70 - - - - - 70
Russia Irkutsk 1967–68 - - 30 - - - - - 30
Russia Izhevsk 1966–86, 1998–99 - - 270 - - - - - 270
Ukraine Kharkiv 1967–87 - 3[3] 735 - - - - - 735
Ukraine Kyiv 1964–87 - - 923 - - - - - 923
Slovakia Košice 1963–89 97 89 - - - - - - 184
Ukraine Kramatorsk 1967 - - 2 - - - - - 2
Russia Krasnodar 1980–86 - - 115 - - - - - 115
Ukraine Kryvyi Rih 1986–87 - - 50 - - - - - 50
Russia Kursk 1966–87 - 10[4] 278 - - - - - 288
Czech Republic Liberec 1965–87 20 34 - - - - - - 54
Ukraine Mariupol 1967–75 - - 32 - - - - - 32
Russia Moscow 1963–87 - - 2,069 - - - - - 2,069
Czech Republic Most 1967–87 9 67 - - - - - - 76
Russia Nizhny Novgorod 1978–86 - - 220 - - - - - 220
Russia Novokuznetsk 1967–86 - - 215 - - - - - 215
Ukraine Odesa 1966–87 - - 484 - - - - - 484
Czech Republic Olomouc 1966–87 30 39 - - - - - - 69
Russia Oryol 1976–85 - - 85 - - - - - 85
Croatia Osijek 1966–82 - - - - - 26 4 - 30
Czech Republic Ostrava 1965–87 97 127 - - - - - - 224
Czech Republic Pilsen 1964–89 48 80 - - - - - - 128
Czech Republic Prague 1960–89 901 272 20 - - - - - 1,193
Russia Pyatigorsk 1967–87 - - 117 - - - - - 117
Latvia Riga 1974–87 - - 243 - - - - - 243
Russia Rostov-on-Don 1967–87 - - 405 - - - - - 405
Russia Samara 1964–86 - - 619 - - - - - 619
Bosnia-Herzegovina Sarajevo 1967–69 - - - - - 20 - - 20
Germany Schwerin 1973–88 - - - 115 56 - - - 171
Uzbekistan Tashkent 1983–85 - - 18 - - - - - 18
Russia Ufa 1966–87 - - 360 - - - - - 360
Russia Ulyanovsk 1966–86 - - 401 - - - - - 401
Russia Tula 1965–86 - - 401 - - - - - 401
Russia Tver 1967–86 - - 306 - - - - - 306
Russia Vladikavkaz 1972–87 - - 129 - - - - - 129
Russia Volgograd 1967–87 - - 425 - - - - - 425
Russia Volzhsky 1967–80 - - 75 - - - - - 75
Russia Voronezh 1977–86 - - 209 - - - - - 209
Russia Yekaterinburg 1964–86 - - 530 - - - - - 530
Ukraine Zaporizhia 1966–87 - - 304 - - - - - 304
Total 1,369 911 11,368 247 118 46 4 50 14,113

Note: This is the list of first owners. Stock may have later been resold to other cities not on this list.

References

  1. IHNED.cz - Nový model tramvají Porsche je nejporuchovější ze všech. Každá sedmá stojí
  2. "Tatra T3 deliveries". Strassenbahnen-Online. Retrieved 2007-12-09.
  3. Transfer from Prague during 2011-2012
  4. Yransfer from Prague in 2012
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