R14 (New York City Subway car)


The R14 was a New York City Subway car model built by the American Car and Foundry Company in 1949. The cars were a "follow-up" or supplemental stock for the A Division's R12s and look exactly the same, differing only in floor patterns. A total of 150 cars were built, arranged as single units. Two versions were manufactured: Westinghouse -powered cars and General Electric -powered cars.
The first R14s entered service in September 1949; the fleet initially ran on the IRT Flushing Line until the R33 World's Fair and R36 World's Fair fleets were delivered in the 1960s. The R14s were replaced by the R62s in the 1980s, and the final train of R14s ran on December 10, 1984. One R14 car was saved for the New York Transit Museum, while another was saved for work service, and the rest were scrapped.

Description

The R14s were numbered 5803-5952. They were the last cars built with outside door operating apparatus or controls. The next subway car order, the R15, would have the conductors' door controls located inside the motorman's cabs instead.
While the R14s ran in solid consists on the Flushing line, the cars never did so on the mainlines; they were always intermixed in trains of newer cars and were never placed at the conductor's location, since newer cars, with their controls inside the cabs, made it safer for the conductor to control the doors.
There were two versions of the R14: General Electric-powered cars and Westinghouse Electric-powered cars.

History

Delivery of the cars began in August 1949. The first R14s entered service on the in September 1949. All 150 cars were delivered by January 1950.
The R14s ran on the Flushing Line until the arrival of the R33Ss and R36s in late 1963-early 1964. The R14s were then transferred to operate on other A-division routes before being retired and replaced by the R62s in the mid 1980s. The last R14 ran on December 10, 1984. All but two cars have since been taken off property to be scrapped; several cars lasted as training vehicles or work cars for many years. For example, eleven R14s were converted into R71 rider cars after retirement, but were ultimately replaced with R161s and subsequently reefed in 2009.
Two cars were saved for various purposes throughout the New York City Subway system, including: