Revel in the sounds of the Cummins NTA855R1 and the Perkins 2006-TWH! Includes 158s painted in ScotRail Saltire and Northern Rail liveries. I hope you all enjoy the video!
In my opinion the SCOTRAIL CLASS 158s are probably one of the best DMUS SCOTRAIL has to offer don't get me wrong I like the 170 but I just think you get a better engine sound
Nope, they’re just normal turbo diesels, the ones we have at ScotRail have the original Cummins Engine, and the whistling you can here is because the engines are cam shafted.
@@EnchantGaming2003 indeed the NT855 was originally designed in the 60s although Cummins updated it in the 90s when it became the N14, the Perkins unit sounds a lot nicer and the exhaust sounds a more grunty than they do with the Cummins.
UK Railway Sprinters MotorCoaches Leyland (Classed As: “153”) Metropolitan Cammell (Official Model Classed As: “152”) Leyland Sprinter - Push-Pull Driving Trailer Models Of Trains BREL Sprinter (Classed As: “150”, Reclassed: “154”) Metropolitan Cammell Sprinter Original (Classed: “151”) Leyland Sprinter (Classed As: “155”) Metropolitan Cammell Sprinter Official (Classed: “156”) HTPL Sprinter (Classed As: “157”) BREL Sprinter (Classed As: “158”, Reclassed: “159”) Driving Trailers (Built) Cabless Trailers (More Of These Per Model Built) Cabless Catering (In Need Of Construction For Each Model) Cabless Sleepers (In Need Of Construction For Each Model) And So On
Indeed, noisy little things. It seems they are so under-powered that the are only operated in digital mode: full power or idle. Their acceleration is fairly slow (compare to DB class 644 e.g.)
Believe it or not, these are far from the slowest DMUs we have here. Most other comparable DMUs from the 1980s to the 2000s take around three minutes to reach 60mph from a stand!