R30 (New York City Subway car)


The R30 was a New York City Subway car model built by St. Louis Car Company from 1961 to 1962. The cars were a "follow-up" or supplemental stock for the B Division's R27s and closely resembled them. A total of 320 cars were built, arranged in married pairs. Three versions were manufactured: Westinghouse -powered cars, General Electric -powered cars, and R30As.
The first R30s entered service in 1961. Various modifications were made over the years to the R30 fleet, and most of the fleet was refurbished in 1985-1989 with a "Redbird" paint scheme. The WH-powered cars were not rebuilt, being replaced by the R68A fleet, and the last train of WH-powered cars ran in passenger service on December 14, 1990. The overhauled R30s and the R30As were planned to run until 1997, but the cars were prematurely phased out starting in 1992 due to the difficulty of installing air-conditioning; the last overhauled R30s ran in passenger service on June 25, 1993. Some R30 cars were saved for various purposes, but most were scrapped.

Description

The R30s were numbered 8250-8567.
The R30s were coupled together as pairs. These cars, along with their identical R27 sister cars, replaced the oldest BMT Standards, the ME-1s purchased, and transferred from the SIRT, the MS Multi-section cars, and the IRT Lo-Vs that were modified to be used on B-division shuttles. The cars also permitted all borrowed IND equipment such as the R1/9's used on the #2 Fourth Avenue Local's extension to Astoria-Ditmars Blvd, and the R10 cars used on the #15 Jamaica Line to be returned to their respective lines on the IND division, and also helped to stabilized the BMT division to a certain extent until the R32 cars were delivered to the BMT lines in 1965.
There were three versions of the R30: Westinghouse XCA248-powered equipped cars, General Electric MCM-powered cars, and R30As, which were equipped with newer solid-state GE SCM controllers instead.

History

The R30s were primarily BMT Eastern Division cars, although they would appear in the northern and southern divisions from time to time.
Like the R27s, the R30s wore several paint schemes over the course of their career. The cars were delivered in a dark olive green paint scheme, and many were repainted bright red in the late 1960s before receiving the MTA corporate silver and blue scheme in 1970.
The rebuilt R30s were finished in a fox red color and were called the BMT Redbirds. The unrebuilt R30s, which were Westinghouse cars numbered 8412-8569, were also painted red in the mid-1980s.
From 1985 until 1989, all GE-powered R30s and R30As were rebuilt and painted in the fox red paint scheme, similar to 27 select R27s and other Redbird trains in the subway system, as part of the Clean Car Program.

Retirement

The WH-powered R30s, which were not rebuilt, were replaced by the R68As and the rebuilt R30s, which were transferred from the BMT Eastern Division. The last unrebuilt train ran on December 14, 1990.
The overhauled R30s and the R30As were planned to run until 1997. However, the cars were prematurely phased out starting in 1992 as the Transit Authority deemed them too difficult to upgrade with air-conditioning; installation would have been costly and would have added too much weight to the cars. Additionally, at the time, ridership was declining on the subway, which created an excessively large surplus of subway cars. On May 30, 1993, the Electric Railroaders Association sponsored a Farewell to the R30 fan trip. The last of the overhauled R30s were retired from passenger service on June 25, 1993 on the train.
After retirement, most cars were sent to what is now Sims Metal Management's Newark facility to be scrapped and processed. Some cars were retained as movie props, but many were ultimately scrapped as well. The new parts used for the rebuilding of the cars were salvaged and re-installed on GE-powered R36s cars 9558-9769 between 1992-1993 to improve their reliability.
Some R30 cars were saved for various purposes throughout the New York City Subway system. The full list includes:
Other R30s that had been retained or preserved before February 2019 included: