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Puffing into the future: the digital upgrade keeping steam on track
The Observer
|April 20, 2025
About 500 steam trains run across the UK each year, from Penzance in the south to Inverness in the north, transporting tens of thousands of passengers to a bygone age, bringing joy to the faces of enthusiasts and bemusing commuters.
But the future of main line steam operations could be under threat unless the traditional fire-breathing machines can be fitted with pioneering modern technology.
The UK's railways are undergoing a major change to their signalling systems in the coming years. Network Rail is planning to remove traditional lineside colour light signals in favour of in-cab signalling systems along key routes. No steam locomotive in the world had ever been run with in-cab digital signalling - until now.
On a Monday night earlier this month, the new technology was trialled for the first time as part of a "pathfinder" project aimed at securing the future of steam locomotives in the UK.
The "A1" No.60163 Tornado - Britain's first steam locomotive to be built in 50 years and which has appeared in the Paddington 2 movie and on Top Gear - has been fitted with European Train Control System (ETCS) technology as part of a Network Rail-led initiative that was launched in 2021. Fitting the new technology cost about £9m.
ETCS is to be rolled out across the country in the coming years and some trains will run in digital-only mode from the end of this year.
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