Switzerland
Welcome to the Swiss railroads section of the FUNET Railway pictures archive
BLS - Bern-Lötschberg-Simplonbahn Group
BLS, or as their full name is, Berner Alpenbahn Gesellschaft Bern-Lötschberg-Simplon, is one of the "big" rail companies of
Switzerland. It is privately owned, but the state SBB has a minority stake in the company. It operates trains on
almost all normal gauge and normal electricity rail lines in the country, even visiting Germany close to Basel, but their
"home ground" is the Lötschbergbahn route from Bern to Thun and Spiez close to Interlaken, up the valley to Kandersteg and
then through the world famous Lötschberg line to Goppenstein, down to Visp and Brig in the next valley and further through
the Simplonpass to Italy, Domodossola, where it connects to the Italian line to Milano. The Lötschberg line was opened in
1913 and it was a world sensation. For example, trains make full turns inside a mountain and pass one and the same lake
three times at different elevations while climbing up the Lötschberg.
Key services of the BLS group are: 1) they run the majority of the local commuter train services ("S-Bahn") of the Bern area,
2) they run a successful cars-on-train ("Rollende Landstrasse") service every 15-30 minutes through the mountain between
Goppenstein and Kandersteg (and during the summer from Domodossola to Kandersteg) and 3) they run a big and lively cargo
business in co-operation with the German DB Cargo from Germany to Italy. Although the state SBB is a part owner and has
placed many of its own new locomotives in the BLS blue house colours and rolling the BLS services, BLS and SBB have also
been bitter rivals for years. Now in 2001-02 it looks like the dispute, where the bigger SBB always tried to swallow the
smaller but private BLS has silenced at least to a temporary truce: lately there was an announcement that BLS Lötschbergbahn
will stop operating express trains and express train coaches (e.g. between Basel and Brig or Italy) and will hand all their
long distance coaches over to SBB and SBB on the other hand will retract from the Bern area S-Bahn traffic and hand over that
business to BLS as a monopoly.

BN Re 4/4 I no. 180 in Bern, 19 September 1995
The Berne-Neuchâtel Railway is part of the "Bern-Lötschberg-Simplon" group.
Photo by Erik Hjelme (hjelme@datashopper.dk)
(5k)
Uploaded Nov 23, 1995

The BLS Lötschbergbahn Re 4/4 locomotive no. 179 doesn´t much resemble the looks of the later versions
of Re 4/4. While the SBB was first time experimenting with direct drive electric motors on the axels,
the BLS went on to thyristor technology and built 35 of these - that time - powerful locomotives in
three series for their steep Lötschberg ramps. In fact these locomotives are among some of the very
earliest to be based on modern thyristor steered AC technology, although their looks are almost directly
from the SBB´s Re 4/4 1. series of the fourties. In comparison, in the neighbouring Germany, even
the modern Baureihe 143 of 1980´s was still using old direct drive motors; these BLS engines were
really ahead of their time in the seventies. They were first designated Ae 4/4 II series, but were
later renamed Re 4/4, adding to the vast confusion of different locomotives with that same "name".
This no. 179 is of the last BLS series, built in 1972. It is 15,47 meters long, weighs 80 tons, generates
4 990 kW of power and has a maximum speed of 125 km/h. Here it is leading an SBB express train bound for
the BLS Lötschberg line and Italy. Usually it is mainly used with lighter passenger trains and car-on-train
"Rollende Landstrasse" services along the Lötschberg - Simplon axle.
In today´s new numbering scheme this engine is designated Re 425 no. 179. (In the old numbering Re means
rapid and electric and 4/4 means that all 4 axles out of 4 deliver power. In the new numbering the first
4 indicates it´s a 4/4 series locomotive, the 2 indicates it is from second generation [number 1 would be
the Re 4/4 1. series of SBB from 1948] and the last 5 indicates the owner, the BLS group).
Photo at Bern station in June 1999 by Ilkka Siissalo, ilkka.siissalo(at-sign)iki.fi
Uploaded June, 15th 2002

Extremely heavy cargo train led by two BLS Re 465 locomotives in full speed between Basel and Bern,
a fraction of a second before passing the photographer, on the way to the Simplon line and south to
Italy. The Re 465 is a modification of the Re 460, the so called "Lok 2000", the pride of Switzerland.
Re 465 is 18,5 metres long, weighs 84 tons and has a maximum speed of "only" 230 km/h. Difference
between the original Lok 2000 alias SBB`s Re 460 and the 465 is that the 465 has been adapted for use
on the extremely steep slopes of the Simplon mountain line; therefore it is slower but stronger. The
company BLS, Bern-Lötschberg-Simplonbahn, has 8 of its own of these blue beauties and in addition to
that the state SBB, part owner of BLS, bought 1996-97 a further ten (numbers 009-018; so this one we
see is actually an SBB locomotive) and painted them in the blue colours of the BLS. The original painting
of the Lok 2000 is bright red, as seen at the SBB Re 460s. Matter of taste, but I find the BLS blue more
attractive. The stylish design of the locomotive is from the famous Italian design company Pininfarina.
The picture actually shows a modern paradox: an SBB locomotive in "enemy colours" pulling a cargo train
for the competitor of SBB: namely the BLS entered recently into agreement with Germany´s DB Cargo and
these two are now together giving the state SBB a hard time by taking a large share of transit cargo
traffic between Italy and Germany. This is a typical train pulled from Germany with BLS engines all the
way through the Simplon pass. Photo at Herzogenbuchsee station Oct 1999 by Ilkka Siissalo, ilkka.siissalo(at-sign)iki.fi
(139k)
Uploaded May 21st, 2002

Re 465 no 9 of the BLS, Bern-Lötschberg-Simplonbahn at Zürich Hauptbahnhof station ready to take an SBB passenger train
across the Alps to Italy. The Re 465 is otherwise the same "Lok 2000" locomotive as the Swiss national railroad SBB´s famous
Re 460, except that it has been slightly modified for slower speed ("only" 230 km/h) and higher power (7000 kW vs. 6100 of the
SBB Re 460) for use at the Lötschberg mountain line. The first series, numbers 1 to 8, were built in 1994. This one no.
9, belongs to the second series, no. 9-18, built in 1996 and actually is not owned by the BLS but by the SBB, despite the BLS
paintings. SBB ordered these engines for the so called NEAT transito traffic along the Lötschberg - Simplon - Italy
mountain line, but lets BLS operate and maintain the engines. Picture in Zürich in June
1999 by Ilkka Siissalo, ilkka.siissalo(at-sign)iki.fi
Uploaded June 15th, 2002

Glistening from rain, the BLS Lötschbergbahn Re 465 locomotive "Simplon" has just led an SBB express train from the other side
of the Alps to the Bern station. Now it´s time for the state SBB to put their own locomotive once again in front of their train
while "Simplon" will lead another train back to the Lötschberg tunnels and - Simplon. The picture shows well the famous Italian
Pininfarina design of the "Lok 2000" engine. Basically the same engines have also been exported, most notably to Norway and to
Finland. German DB was highly interested, but opted instead to create a new design themselves because of "the astronomic costs
of the Swiss engine": about 3 times the cost of their Br 101, which made it "impossible to afford such luxury". Their cheaper
new design became the BR 101, which today is the main locomotive on long-haul IC and EC trains in Germany. Photo in Bern 1999
by Ilkka Siissalo, ilkka.siissalo(at-sign)iki.fi
Uploaded June 15th, 2002

This ABDe 4/8 number 751 of the BLS Lötschbergbahn is the first one built in 1964, in the third series of similar
trains. The first series was built in 1945 (see the pictures from Önsingen-Balsthal-Bahn OeBB ABDe 4/8),
the second in 1954 to -57. Ten years later BLS ordered a further four of almost exactly similar short distance
commuter trains. The trains were designed for S-Bahn local commuter traffic around the capital, Bern. This third
series from the sixties differs from the earlier ones by a "newer" front design which resembles the Re 4/4
locomotives of BLS of that time (see bls-re425-179.jpg). The electrical parts of these trains were modernised
in 1977, which allowed for a higher maximum speed of 125 km/h.
The two-coach unit is 46,8 metres long, weighs
102 tons (sic! - _thick_ iron!), but generates a modest 1180 kW of power. The original ABDe 4/8 pair was designed
in 1945. The idea was that these pairs could form trains which could be used for through-the-Alps traffic all
the way to Italy. This was however never realised and the trains have been in valley line traffic around Bern.
The very last trains of this kind were still in use on less-than-important local commuter routes like here between Reichenbach
and Thun in 1999. Photo at Reichenbach station June 1999 by Ilkka Siissalo, ilkka.siissalo(at-sign)iki.fi
Uploaded June, 6th 2002

Another view of the BLS Lötschbergbahn ABDe 4/8 no 751. This electric motor unit is a fixed two coach pair. The electric
systems of these trains were built in 1964 and renewed in 1977, raising the maximum speed to 125 km/h. From three different
series, there are 13 of these pairs, 10 of which were in 1999 still operating under the blue-white colours of the BLS.
Three pairs of the oldest series from 1945 were already in 1999 sold to two other private railroads, OeBB and RVT. Originally,
the trains were designed in the fourties to be retrofitted with a second drive system to accommodate also the differing voltage
in Italy in order to allow short-haul passenger trains of this type to pass through all the way through to Domodossola in Italy.
This plan was never realised, but it explains why there is plenty of empty space on the roof to accommodate a second aerial and
coolers. Photo at Reichenbach station June 1999 by Ilkka Siissalo, ilkka.siissalo(at-sign)iki.fi
Uploaded June, 6th 2002

The RBDe 4/4 (or with the new numbering scheme RBDe 565) was built in three series between 1982 and 1991. It is today responsible
for the majority of BLS´s short haul services, especially in the S-Bahn network around the capital Bern. It is very similar to
the RBDe 560 of the state SBB and in fact almost 1:1 identical with the prototype series of SBB´s trains, named NPZ or Neue
Pendelzug (new pendeling train). Similar or almost similar trains take care of the majority of traffic on other
private companies networks, such as EBT, GFM and RVT/Regionalverkehr Mittelland, SüdOstBahn, Bodensee-Toggenburgbahn,
MittelThurgauBahn and others. BLS has 22 of these units. Just like SBB also BLS later retrofitted old aluminium express train
coaches of the EW series ("Einheitswagen" - a similar coach used by the majority of Swiss companies) to be used as extra
coaches in the middle of the originally two-car units, but BLS and some other companies also later ordered middle coaches to
exactly fit into the look and feel of the NPZ trains. This picture shows one of those later "tailor-made" middle wagons. The
original two-coach unit is 25 metres long, weighs 69 tonnes, has a maximum speed of 125 km/h and generates 1700 kW of power.
Photo of the "S2" line S-Bahn of Bern close to Belp in June 1999 by Ilkka Siissalo, ilkka.siissalo(at-sign)iki.fi
Uploaded June, 15th 2002

Every major station has its own permanently stationed locomotive in Switzerland in reserve and for swithcing work - a luxury
which is standard practise here but almost nobody else can afford. This means that the country is full of very small, most
often electric locomotives, most of which are officially classified as rail tractors. This example, Tm 215 of the BLS
Lötschbergbahn is a rarity - BLS only has this one - but almost exactly similar new locomotives were still built in the
beginning of the 1990s for other companies. For example the state SBB has over 200 of the Tm II series engines which look
very similar to this one. The BLS Te 215 from 1925 (modernised 1956) is 8,13 m long, weighs 36 tons and has a maximum speed
of 50 km/h. Photo in 1999 at Herzogenbuchsee by Ilkka Siissalo, ilkka.siissalo(at-sign)iki.fi
Uploaded June, 15th 2002

Two "rail tractors" or small helper locomotives of the type Tm 235 of the BLS Bern-Lötschberg-Simplonbahn. The
one in the middle, number 70, shows the original painting from years 1962-75, whereas the one on the right,
number 68, has undergone a total revision during 1993-95 and is now painted bright red. These small ones weigh
9,1 tons, they are 5,24 m long and they can pull a couple of coaches at speeds up to 45 km/h with their tiny
diesel engines. Photo on 15.10.2001 at Bern-Weissenbühl station by Ilkka Siissalo, ilkka.siissalo(at-sign)iki.fi
Uploaded June, 6th 2002

Closeup of the Tm alias Tm 235 (according to new numbering scheme) of the BLS, in the original state of the
sixties, having undergone no revision. In Switzerland it is the habit that almost every station, no matter
how small, has at least one small locomotive or "rail tractor" - as the smallest are usually called - always
present, just in case. They are rarely used and then when they are, it is just a matter of moving or switching
a wagon or two. The state railroad SBB usually has a bit bigger electric locomotives for this purpose, whereas
private companies such as the BLS have settled for something as small as one can get. Few other countries can
afford keeping tens of locomotives on every station just standing still, for just-in-case. Photo on 15.10.2001
at Bern-Weissenbühl station by Ilkka Siissalo, ilkka.siissalo(at-sign)iki.fi
Uploaded June, 6th 2002