The British Rail Class 156 "Super-Sprinter" is a diesel multiple unit. 114 of these units were built from 1987-89 by Metro-Cammell (now owned by Alstom) at their Washwood Heath Works in Birmingham. They were built to replace elderly 'heritage' DMUs and locomotive-hauled passenger trains.
The units are powered by 6-cylinder Cummins NTA855R5 diesel engine through Voith automatic transmissions. As with the Class 150 the bodyshell is based on the Mark 3 loco-hauled coaching stock design, but with a single leaf sliding door at either end of each coach - this feature reflected the anticipated longer journeys (with fewer stops) that the Class 156 was supposed to operate.
The first 100 units were all ordered by the Provinicial sector of British Rail, and therefore carried Provicial livery. Twenty units, nos. 156401-419/422, all based at Tyseley depot, were later repainted into Express Regional Railways livery.
The last fourteen units, nos. 156501-514 were ordered by Strathclyde PTE, and carried a distintive orange black livery. This was later replaced by an attractive carmine and cream livery, remeniscent of the 1950s livery carried by Mk.1 coaching stock.
The first units to be transferred to One had already been refurbished and were therefore painted in either Central Trains's green livery or white undercoat. However, the later units were repainted into the distinctive 'one' "rainbow" livery as they passed through works for refurbishment. It is expected that 'one' will eventually have a fleet of between seven and ten units. The first unit to be transferred to Norwich was white 156402 in return for 150235
However, from 1999, Central Trains introduced new Class 170 "Turbostar" units, which took over most long-distance trains. Therefore, the Class 156 fleet were mostly displaced onto shorter journeys, such as Worcester to Nottingham, Birmingham to Leicester and Crewe to Skegness. Another new development was the introduction of the new Central Trains green livery.
In 2003, Central Trains proposed to swap its Class 156 fleet with ScotRail Class 158 units, which would be better suited to longer distance trains. However, this deal fell through, although one unit, no. 156402, was repainted in ScotRail livery without brandings. Since then, Central Trains have refurbished their fleet at Doncaster Works.
In early 2005, a number of Central Trains Class 156 units were transferred to 'one' Anglia, in exchange for Class 150 units.
Northern Rail has so far introduced three new liveries. The first, carried by no. 156451 is mainly purple, but with white bands. The second livery, as carried by nos. 156425/460/464 is the inverse of the first livery. The final livery, first applied to no. 156461, is similar to the second livery, but the white replaced by blue.
| Operator | No. of units | Unit nos. |
|---|---|---|
| Central Trains | 11 | 156401/403-406/408/410/411/413-415 |
| First ScotRail | 48 | 156430-437/439/442/445-447/449/450/453/456-458/462/465/467/474/476-478/485/492-496/499-514 |
| Northern Rail | 46 | 156420/421/423-429/438/440/441/443/444/448/451/452/454/455/459-461/463/464/466/468-473/475/479-484/486-491/497/498 |
| One Railway | 9 | 156402/407/409/412/416-419/422 |
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