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Talgo AVRIL

High-speed train From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Talgo AVRIL
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Talgo Avril is a push-pull high-speed train made by Talgo. It stands for "Alta Velocidad Rueda Independiente Ligero" (roughly translated as "Light High-Speed Independent Wheel").[2]

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Design

The train is intended to have a top speed of 330 km/h (210 mph)[3] or 380 km/h (240 mph).[2] It has front and rear power cars containing under-floor/over-roof equipment and 12 trailer cars in between the power cars, giving a total seating capacity comparable to those of an electric multiple unit rather than a locomotive-hauled train.[2] The trailer cars have an unusually short length of 13 m (42 ft 8 in).[2]

Other details:[4]

  • The train is 3.2 metres (10 ft) wide, allowing for a standard 3+2 seating arrangement that gives a passenger capacity of up to 600.
  • Versions for fixed gauge (1,435 mm, 1,520 mm or 1,668 mm) and variable gauge are planned.
  • The traction system is compatible with four voltages25 kV/50 Hz; 15 kV/16.7 Hz; 3 kV DC; 1.5 kV DC.
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History

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Talgo presented the Avril concept at the InnoTrans fair in Berlin in September 2010.[5] After several years of development and testing, the first order for Avril trains was placed in November 2016, when Spanish operator Renfe Operadora signed a €786.5 million contract for 15 train sets and 30 years of maintenance.[6] In May 2017, Renfe Operadora ordered 15 more train sets, with the Avril's entry into service expected in 2020,[7] delayed to March 2024.[8]

In 2023, French operator Le Train signed a €300 million contract for 10 train sets and 30 years of maintenance.[9]

From 21 May 2024, Renfe schedules new AVE services to the Spanish regions of Asturias and Galicia, operated by variable gauge Talgo Avril trains under the class name S-106. Those AVE services are replacing the previously Alvia services Madrid Chamartín-Gijón and Castellón de la Plana/Vinaros-Gijón via Oviedo in Asturias and the Alvia services Madrid-A Coruña and Madrid-Vigo via Santiago de Compostela, Vilagarcía de Arousa and Pontevedra in Galicia.[10] In addition Talgo Avril will replace S-112 trains for the Avlo Madrid–Barcelona, Madrid–Valencia, Madrid–Alicante and Murcia–Madrid–Valladolid services.[11]

A Talgo Avril train reached 360 km/h top-speed on the Ourense-Santiago de Compostela high-speed line on Iberian gauge as part of homologation testing. [12]

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See also

Notes

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