:''For other meanings of 'RDC', see
RDC (disambiguation).''
The '
Budd Rail Diesel Car' or 'RDC' is a self-propelled
diesel-hydraulic rail passenger car. During the period of
1949–
1956, 398 RDCs were built by the
Budd Company of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. These cars were primarily adopted for passenger service in rural areas with low traffic density or in short-haul commuter service, and were less expensive to operate in this context than a traditional
locomotive-drawn train. The cars could be used singly or several coupled together in trainsets and controlled from the cab of the front unit.
The
Boston and Maine Railroad owned by far the largest number of these units, but they were also very popular for commuter and short distance service with the passenger heavy railroads such as the
New Haven Railroad,
New York Central,
Reading Railroad,
Pennsylvania Reading Seashore Lines,
Baltimore and Ohio, and
Jersey Central and
Canadian railways such as the
Canadian Pacific Railway (where they were known as ''Dayliners''), the
Canadian National Railway known as ''Railiners,'' and the former
BC Rail.
VIA Rail still uses RDCs for scheduled services on
Vancouver Island and in
Northern Ontario, and the planned
Blue22 service connecting
Toronto to
its airport will use refurbished RDCs as well.
Since
1994 three RDCs are being used for the
OnTrack commuter rail line in
Syracuse, New York. The Trinity Railway Express (TRE) service between Dallas, Texas and Fort Worth are currently using RDCs for commuter passenger during off-peak hours, with connections available at various points to Amtrak and the DART system. As well, the
Alaska Railroad possesses five RDCs, with four in service and one for parts
cannibalization. Three were from
SEPTA, two were from the former
New Haven Railroad, and one was from
Amtrak.
[1] RDCs are typically coupled and used for the railroad's Hurricane Turn service and the annual Fair Train. The Hurricane Turn is the last remaining
flag stop service in the U.S. and is the only transportation to many summer (and year-round) cabins on a stretch of track between
Talkeetna and Hurricane Gulch. (The
Parks Highway, the nearest road, is several miles to the west on the other side of a mountain ridge.) The annual Fair Train takes fairgoers from
Anchorage to the
Palmer stop next to the fairgrounds. RDC's are also still used in tourist train service by the
Cape May Seashore Lines, the Wilton Senic Railroad, and the Portland and Western.
The basic car was adapted from a standard 85
ft (26
m) coach. They were powered by two
Detroit Diesel (then a division of
General Motors)
diesel bus engines, each of which drives an axle through a
hydraulic torque converter, a technology adapted from military tanks of
World War II. RDC trains were an early example of self-contained
diesel multiple units, an arrangement now in common use by railways all over the world.
Variants

An RDC train operated by the former BC Rail. ''(www.trainweb.com photo)''
Budd manufactured five basic variants of the RDC:
★ The RDC-1 — an 85 ft (26
m) all-passenger coach seating 90 passengers.
★ The RDC-2 — an 85 ft (26 m) baggage and passenger coach configuration seating 70 passengers.
★ The RDC-3 — an 85 ft (26 m) variant with a Railway Post Office, a baggage compartment and 49 passenger seats. Some had no R.P.O.
★ The RDC-4 — a 65 ft (20 m) variant with only the Railway Post Office and baggage area. Some were all baggage/express.
★ The RDC-9 (also known as the RDC-5) — an 85 ft (26 m) passenger coach seating 94, a single engine and no control cab.
Over the years, various railroads cars had slightly differing capacity due seating types and in some cases replacement of seats with a snack counter or even a galley.
The RDC-1 was powered by two 6-cylinder
Detroit Diesel engines, each of 275
hp (205 kW).
Circa 1956, the
New Haven Railroad ordered a custom-built, six-car RDC trainset named the "Roger Williams". It consisted of 2-single-ended cab units, and four intermediate cars to make a complete train. The units even were fitted with third-rail shoes, electric
traction motors, and associated gear for operation into
Grand Central Terminal, though this was short lived. In the New Haven's later years, the set was broken up, and used with regular New Haven RDCs, and by Amtrak into the 1980s. The two cab units and one intermediate car are fully restored and operational, and are on display at the
Danbury Railway Museum in
Connecticut.
In
1978, Budd offered a new RDC model, called the 'SPV-2000' (self-propelled vehicle), but only 24 of them were sold, as they proved unreliable and did not gain marketplace acceptance. The few remaining in service have long been converted to unpowered,
locomotive-drawn coaches.
Five cars were built under licence in
Australia by
Commonwealth Engineering for the
New South Wales Government Railways. They were smaller than the standard RDC in all dimensions. One car was built with a buffet/snack bar accommodation in one end. The five-car set operated the South Coast Daylight Express between
Sydney and
Nowra.
Unusual modifications
In what was billed as an experiment toward
high speed rail, the
New York Central (NYC) fitted a pair of jet engines atop one of their RDCs and added a shovelnose front to its cab. This RDC, which NYC had numbered M497, set the United States speed record in
1966 when it travelled at just short of 184
mph (296
km/h) between
Butler, Indiana, and
Stryker, Ohio. Most sources agree, however, that this was purely a
publicity stunt on the part of the NYC.
Three RDC-1s were exported to Australia to operate with the
Commonwealth Railways. These cars ran between
Port Pirie and various locations, and later by
Australian National from
Adelaide to
Whyalla,
Port Augusta and
Broken Hill.
The buffet car built by
Commonwealth Engineering for the
New South Wales Government Railways was the only non-powered version of these carriages.
References
★ Scheurle, Bob, ''
New York Central RDC3 #M497''. Retrieved
March 14 2005.
★
See also
★
Diesel multiple unit
★
Railcar
External links
★
www.budd-rdc.org — a web site about the RDC
★
A virtual tour of the Budd RDC