Since June 2023, the future INOUI TGV (5th generation rolling stock,
named TGV M) has been undergoing tests on the French national railway network.
This campaign, which is being stepped up with the arrival of a new test train,
will last until the end of 2023, before the acceptance test phase in 2024.
The TGV M, the future INOUI TGV, from Alstom’s Avelia Horizon range,
is entering a new phase of testing. Ordered by SNCF Voyageurs for 115 trainsets
at a cost of around 3.5 billion euros, it represents the 5th generation of TGVs
and the realisation of a historic industrial and innovation project between
SNCF Voyageurs and the French designer and manufacturer Alstom. It will be
rolled out over ten years, starting in 2025, with the first trains running on
the Paris-Lyon-Marseille line.
A series of tests required before commercial release
In December 2022, pre-validation tests began at the Velim site, in
the Czech Republic. On this closed circuit, the aim was to validate for the
first time the train’s overall operation at speeds of up to 200 km/h.
In March 2023, the future INOUI high-speed train travelled to Vienna
for climatic tests. These trials enabled the future train to be tested at
extreme temperatures (between -20°C and +40°C). They are critical in the
current climate change context, as they will enable us to assess the energy
efficiency of the future INOUI TGV. The train’s resistance to climatic
constraints will make an active contribution to the objective of reducing the
energy consumption of the future INOUI TGV by 20%.
Since June 2023, pre-validation tests have moved to the French
national railway network (Réseau Ferré National). They will last until December
2023. They consist of testing and, if necessary, adjusting the train’s
operation, with trains travelling at speeds of up to 320 km/h.
From January to July 2024, admission tests will be carried out,
which consist of testing the operation of the trainset by reproducing the
configurations and contexts that it may encounter throughout the real life of
the train (single unit, multiple unit, degraded modes, weather conditions,
singular points on the network, etc.). They will be conducted by an accredited
body on the French national railway network, with traffic running at up to 320
km/h. The admission tests will be used to receive the Marketing Authorisation
issued by ERA (the European Railways Agency).
Finally, from autumn 2024, over an extended period prior to the
start of commercial service, several trainsets will run throughout the network
as part of pre-operation tests. These will assess the train’s reliability under
operating conditions. All functions will be tested, in particular those
relating to passenger comfort. These tests, which will be conducted with the
first 4 production trains, will also be an opportunity for drivers and
conductors to familiarise themselves with this new train and its innovations.
At the end of all these tests, the future INOUI TGV will have
benefited from 350 weeks of cumulative testing and will have covered more than
a million kilometres before the first customer experiences the SNCF Voyageurs
high-speed train of tomorrow.
State-of-the-art maintenance centres
SNCF Voyageurs has embarked on a major programme to modernise its
maintenance centres to accommodate the future INOUI TGV. This work involves
adapting maintenance facilities to make them compatible with the future train,
for example by installing automated benches that can check several hundred
parts in a few seconds. The ecological aspect is also very much present in
these investments, and optimal solutions from an energy point of view are
encouraged.
The ‘Technicentre Sud Est Européen’ (TSEE), which welcomed the first
TGVs in 1981, will be the first to welcome the future INOUI TGV. With its 850
employees, it maintains nearly a quarter of the SNCF Voyageurs TGVs running in
France, Italy, Switzerland, Spain, and Germany.
The TSEE modernisation project involves investment of nearly €300
million (from 2023 to 2027) and represents the standard for a new generation of
maintenance technicentre for SNCF Voyageurs, more modern, more connected, but
also more ecological, like the TGV M.
The first phase of the TSEE 4.0 work focused on adapting the 2-track
workshop, which can accommodate the future INOUI TGV since July 2023. For this
phase, Alstom provided its expertise to SNCF Voyageurs to take into account the
specific features of the future INOUI TGV.
The future INOUI TGV promises to usher in a new era in TGV
maintenance. It will be a communicating trainset that will provide permanent
remote access to technical data and clear information on the state of each of
its components. This will make it possible to plan maintenance operations based
on the actual condition of the components, and to anticipate breakdowns in
doors, air conditioning and, more generally, all the systems that contribute to
train operation and passenger comfort.
The TGV maintenance profession will also change with the arrival of
the future INOUI TGVs. The day-to-day life of technicians will change, as they
will literally be talking to a train, able to explain its problems. Their
diagnosis will be more detailed and precise. And work organisation will be made
easier because it will be possible, thanks to the data analysis, to anticipate
the treatment of a trainset in all its aspects: tools, tasks to be conducted,
necessary intervention time.