Amfleet II Coach
Proto
Photo: Photo by Fan Railer, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 4.0 · Wikimedia Commons
Technical Specifics
Source Category
Passenger Car
History
Full prototype page →The Amfleet I originated from Amtrak's urgent need to modernize its aging inherited fleet following the railroad's creation in May 1971. When Amtrak took over intercity passenger operations, it acquired roughly 1,190 passenger cars, the majority of which had been built during the 1940s and 1950s and were increasingly unreliable and difficult to maintain. Recognizing that the Budd Company still retained tooling from its earlier Metroliner electric multiple unit program, Amtrak placed an initial order with Budd on October 12, 1973, for 57 unpowered cars derived from that design at a cost of approximately 24 million dollars. The order grew substantially over the following two years through several expansions, reaching a total of 492 cars at a combined cost of approximately 192 million dollars. Budd publicly unveiled the new cars at its plant in Northeast Philadelphia on June 19, 1975, and the first examples entered revenue service on the Northeast Corridor on August 5 of that year. Amtrak promoted the introduction heavily, designating 1975 as the Year of the Amfleet and noting in timetables when trains had been equipped with the new equipment. A Federal Railroad Administration study conducted in 1978 found that ridership on Amfleet-equipped Northeast Corridor trains rose approximately 11 percent. From their initial deployment in the Northeast, the cars spread to routes across the country, appearing on services ranging from the San Joaquin in California to the Twilight Limited between Chicago and Detroit. Budd completed the full Amfleet I order on June 9, 1977. The Amfleet I coaches proved their worth beyond their intended short-haul role during the severe winter of 1976 to 1977, when Amtrak pressed them into long-distance service as older steam-heated equipment became inoperable in the extreme cold. Decades after their introduction, Amfleet I cars remained a central part of Amtrak's single-level fleet, particularly in the eastern and midwestern United States. As of October 2023, the substantial majority of the original 492 cars remained in active service, a testament to the durability of the Budd design and the absence of a full-scale replacement program through the early twenty-first century.
Available as HO Models
Prototype Reference
Real-world information about this equipment type
Amfleet I
passenger car