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・ Victorian Railways C class (diesel)
・ Victorian Railways Dd class
・ Victorian Railways dining cars
・ Victorian Railways E class
・ Victorian Railways E class (electric)
・ Victorian Railways F class
・ Victorian Railways F class (diesel)
・ Victorian Railways fixed wheel passenger carriages
・ Victorian Railways G class
・ Victorian Railways H class
・ Victorian Railways H class (diesel)
・ Victorian Railways hopper wagons
・ Victorian Railways iced vans
・ Victorian Railways J class
・ Victorian Railways K class
Victorian Railways L class
・ Victorian Railways livestock transport
・ Victorian Railways louvre vans
・ Victorian Railways M class
・ Victorian Railways M class (diesel-hydraulic)
・ Victorian Railways miscellaneous vehicles
・ Victorian Railways motor car transport
・ Victorian Railways N class
・ Victorian Railways NA class
・ Victorian Railways narrow gauge freight vehicles
・ Victorian Railways narrow gauge guard's vans
・ Victorian Railways open wagons
・ Victorian Railways power vans
・ Victorian Railways Q class
・ Victorian Railways R class


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Victorian Railways L class : ウィキペディア英語版
Victorian Railways L class

The L class were a class of electric locomotives built by English Electric, for the Victorian Railways in 1953/54.
==History==
Australia was a relatively early adopter of electric traction and Electric Multiple Unit trains, with a General Electric advertisement in Railway Age magazine of 1924 claiming that Melbourne had the largest suburban electrification scheme in the world at 346 miles (557 km).〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Electrification in Australia )〕 However, electrification in Victoria had until the 1950s been restricted to the Melbourne suburban network. Apart from the EMU fleet the only electric locomotives operated by the VR were a fleet of 12 small 620 hp (460 kW) E class electric locomotives, built at VR's Newport Workshops for suburban goods service,〔(E Class Electric (1500V DC) ) Vicsig〕 using the same General Electric traction motors and electrical equipment employed on Melbourne's EMU fleet.
During the early 1950s, Victorian Railways embarked on an £80 million program dubbed ‘Operation Phoenix’ to rebuild a network badly run down by years of Depression-era underinvestment and wartime overutilisation.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=ARHS Railway Museum: History 1950 - 2000 )〕 This included a substantial upgrade (regrading, rerouting and electrification) of the Gippsland line servicing Victoria's substantial brown coal fields in the Latrobe Valley to allow for greatly increased traffic in briquettes for industrial use. A suitably powerful electric locomotive was sought for both express passenger and heavy freight use on the upgraded, electrified line.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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