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SNCF TGV "Sud-Est" | |
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In service | 1981–2020 |
Manufacturer | Alstom/Francorail-MTE |
Family name | TGV |
Scrapped | 2012–2021 |
Number built | 111 |
Number preserved | 4 |
Number scrapped | 107 |
Successor | TGV POS |
Formation | 2 power cars, 8 passenger cars |
Fleet numbers | 01–37, 39–69, 71–87, 89–102, 110–118 |
Capacity | 287–355 |
Operators | SNCF |
Specifications | |
Train length | 200 m (656 ft 2 in) |
Width | Motor car 2.81 m (9 ft 3 in) Trailer 2.904 m (9 ft 6.3 in) |
Maximum speed | 300 km/h (186 mph) (originally 260 km/h or 162 mph) |
Weight | 385 t (379 long tons; 424 short tons) (bi-current) |
Power output | 6,800 kW (9,119 hp) @ 25 kV AC 3,100 kW (4,157 hp) @ 1.5 kV DC |
Electric system(s) |
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Current collector(s) | Pantograph |
UIC classification | Bo′Bo′-Bo′+2′2′2′2′2′2′2′+Bo′-Bo′Bo′ |
Braking system(s) | Pneumatic and Regenerative |
Safety system(s) | TVM-300, KVB |
Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge |
The SNCF TGV Sud-Est was a French high speed TGV train built by Alstom and Francorail-MTE and operated by SNCF, the French national railway company. A total of 111 trainsets were built between 1978 and 1988 for the first TGV service in France between Paris and Lyon which opened in 1981. The trainsets were semi-permanently coupled, consisting of two power cars (locomotives) and eight articulated passenger carriages, ten in the case of the tri-voltage sets. The trains were named after the Ligne à Grande Vitesse Sud-Est (lit. 'Southeast high-speed line') that they first operated on. They were also referred to as TGV-PSE, an abbreviation of Paris Sud-Est.