- Intercapital Daylight
The "Intercapital Daylight" (often abbreviated to "ICD") was a named passenger train that operated between the cities of Melbourne and Sydney in
Australia , running during the daytime making intermediate stops between Sydney and Albury, but running express between Albury and Melbourne. The train entered service on the standard gauge onApril 17 ,1962 .cite journal
author = Julian Insall
year = 1992
month = October
title = A reflection on the Intercapital Daylight
journal = Newsrail
publisher =Australian Railway Historical Society (Victorian Division)
pages = pages 316–319 ]Previously, from March, 1956, there was a thrice-weekly service from Sydney to Albury, meeting there with a
broad-gauge connecting train to Melbourne. It operated in the opposite direction the following day. These trains were known as the Sydney-Melbourne [Melbourne-Sydney] Daylight Express. ["The Intercapital Daylight 1956-1991" Banger, Chris Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin, June;July, 2001 pp203-219;243-267]History
The "Intercapital Daylight" usually ran with New South Wales
RUB type carriage stock , with train lengths from 7 cars up to 12 or 13, withV/Line Z type carriage s also appearing by the late 1980s . The train usually consisted of a powervan, mail / luggage van, dining car, 3 or 3 economy class cars, and 2 or 3 first class carriages.Initial locomotives used to haul the train included the News South Wales 44 class and the Victorian S class, with X classes appearing from the 1970s. Locomotives were exchanged at Albury until the introduction of though running in 1982,cite web | title = ARHS Railway Museum: Victoria 1950 - Now | work = ARHS Railway Museum | url = http://www.railwaymuseum.org.au/history3.html | format = HTML | accessdate = 2008-02-05 ] with locomotives used including the
Australian National GM class , NSW 422, 442, and 81 classes,Westrail L class es, or V/Line G class.A
motorail facility was available between 1988 and 1990 on the train, usually lightly loaded, and seeing more than one motorail wagon would be rare. The service and quality of food in the buffet was described as "excellent" by arailfan who made a trip on the train in 1986, with both hot meals and take away food available.By 1990 the "Intercapital Daylight" was limited to 100 km/h due to the decision to use heavier freight locomotive to haul the train, with the running time becoming 12 hours to Sydney, and 12 hours 45 minutes to Melbourne. Following the deregulation of the Australian airline industry, cut-price air travel decimated the market for intercapital rail travel, with the train once departing Melbourne with only 43 passengers on board, the final run of the train to Sydney being made on Saturday
August 31 ,1991 , with many of the travellers being railfans.References
ee also
*"
Spirit of Progress "
*"Southern Aurora "
*"Sydney/Melbourne Express "
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