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British Rail Class 465

British Rail Class 465
Networker
The refreshed saloon of a Class 465
In service1 December 1992 – present
Manufacturer
Built at
Family nameNetworker
Replaced
Constructed1991–1994
Refurbished
  • 2005 (465/2 conversion to /9)
  • 2010–2012
  • 2016
Number built147
Number in service121
Number scrapped15
SuccessorClass 707
Formation
  • 4 cars per 465/0, /1, /2 unit:
    DMSO(A)-TSO-TSOL-DMSO(B)
  • 4 cars per 465/9 unit:
    DMCO(A)-TSO-TSOL-DMCO(B)
Capacity
  • 465/0: 334 seats
  • 465/1: 334 seats
  • 465/2: 331 seats
  • 465/9: 319 seats
Owners
Operators
DepotsSlade Green
Specifications
Car body constructionAluminium
Car length
  • DM vehs.: 20.89Β m (68Β ft 6Β in)
  • Trailers: 20.06Β m (65Β ft 10Β in)
Width2.81Β m (9Β ft 3Β in)
Height3.77Β m (12Β ft 4Β in)
DoorsDouble-leaf sliding plug
(2 per side per car)
Maximum speed75Β mph (121Β km/h)
Weight
  • DMSO vehs.: 39.2Β t (38.6 long tons; 43.2 short tons)
  • TSO vehs.: 27.2Β t (26.8 long tons; 30.0 short tons)
  • TSOL vehs.: 28.0Β t (27.6 long tons; 30.9 short tons)
Traction system
Traction motors
Power output2,240Β kW (3,000Β hp)
Acceleration0.98Β m/s (3.2Β ft/s)
Electric system(s)750Β VΒ DCΒ third rail
Current collector(s)Contact shoe
UIC classificationBoβ€²Boβ€²+2β€²2β€²+2β€²2β€²+Boβ€²Boβ€²
Bogies
  • 465/0 & /1:
  • Powered: BREL P3
  • Unpowered: BREL T3
  • 465/2 and & /9:
  • Powered: SRP BP58
  • Unpowered: SRP BT49
Braking system(s)Electropneumatic (disc) and rheostatic/regenerative
Safety system(s)
Coupling systemTightlock
Multiple workingWithin class, and with Class 466
Track gauge1,435Β mm (4Β ftΒ 8+1⁄2Β in) standard gauge


The British Rail Class 465 Networker are electric multiple unit passenger trains that were built by Metro-Cammell, British Rail Engineering Limited (BREL) and ABB Rail between 1991 and 1994. Originally operated by Network SouthEast, these units are now operated by Southeastern.

Background


The Network SouthEast sector of British Rail began the planning for the development of the Class 465 Networker in 1988, and invited a tender for 710 of the units to be built. The Class 465 was introduced in order to replace the 41-year-old Class 415 (4EPB) slam-door EMUs.

The first unit was delivered in December 1991, and the last unit in April 1995. The units entered passenger service from 1 December 1992 with a ceremony at Cannon Street station, by Transport Secretary John MacGregor. As part of the privatisation of British Rail, the 97 465/0s and 465/1s were sold to Eversholt Rail Group and the 50 Class 465/2s to Angel Trains.

All trains were originally supplied in the Network SouthEast livery and branded as the "Kent Link Networker". They have mostly used on suburban routes out of London Victoria, Charing Cross, Blackfriars, and Cannon Street to destinations in South London and Kent, and the first 20 Class 465/0s were repainted into the Connex South Eastern Yellow and Blue livery in 1998, the same livery as seen on the 16 Class 365s introduced in June 1997.

Some have been replaced by Class 707s, with two hauled to Worksop for store by Harry Needle Railroad Company in June 2021.

Construction


A Metro-Cammell unit (left) coupled cab-to-cab with a BREL unit (right). BREL-built units have air vents above some saloon windows; Metro-Cammell units do not.

Due to the size of the original order, British Rail approached two separate manufacturers to supply the new rolling stock. The first two sub-classes (designated 465/0 and 465/1) were built by BREL/ABB while the third sub-class (465/2) as well as the two-car (466) units were built by Metro-Cammell. Although built to the same specification and utilised interchangeably, there are subtle differences between the two fleets and they do not share common parts. The maximum speed of the Class 465 is 75Β mph (120Β km/h), and they are designed only for 750Β V DC third rail operation. A Solid State Traction Converter package controls three-phase AC traction motors, which allows for rheostatic or regenerative dynamic braking. Primary braking system is electro-pneumatically actuated disc brakes, which is blended with the Dynamic brakes. Tachometers on every axle of the unit provide for Wheel Slip/Slide Protection.

Traction equipment replacement


Plans were drawn up in 2007 to improve the reliability of the BREL and ABB units (Classes 465/0 and 465/1) by the installation of new traction equipment. The new package was developed and manufactured by Hitachi Rail. It was retrofitted across all 97 465/0 and 465/1 trains over the course of 2009/2010. Brush Traction, the supplier/manufacturer of the original traction equipment, worked as consultants to assist in retro-fitting the new equipment.

Refurbishment


In 2005, the first 34 465/2 units (465201-465234) were given an extensive refurbishment at Doncaster Works. This included new interior panelling, new flooring, new lighting, new seat moquette (in the same grey and blue design as on the Class 375 Electrostars) and the addition of a new first class seating area at the front and rear of the units, amongst other changes. This was done to allow them to be transferred to outer-suburban routes alongside the Class 375s. They would be replaced on inner suburban services by Class 376s. They were reclassified as a separate sub-fleet designated 465/9 (465901–465934) and replaced the remaining Class 423 slam-door stock. The last train in the Network SouthEast livery was repainted in September 2007.

Between 2010 and 2012, all Class 465/0 and 465/1s had an overhaul by RailCare of their door systems, air systems, couplings and trailer bogies. It was also at this time that all of the seats were given a retrim in Southeastern current mauve and blue seat moquette.

A further refresh of the entire Class 465 fleet took place gradually from 2016. This included the installation of new wheelchair spaces and fully accessible toilets, more handrails, and tactile floor surfaces in the vestibule areas, and louder, more audible door alarms. This was done in order to maintain RVAR (Railway Vehicle Accessibility Regulations) compliance. The Metro-Cammell units also had new doors fitted.

In 2025 unit 465908 was re-painted into Network South East livery and named after Chris Green the former managing director of Network South East, this was done as part of celebrations marking the 200th anniversary of the modern railway.

Fleet details


Units:
Class Operator Qty. Year built Cars per unit Manufacturer Unit nos. Notes
465/0 Southeastern 50 1991–1993 4 BREL/ABB 465001–465050 Includes 465301, built in 1992 as demonstrator for the Universal Networker; renumbered 465031 when placed in normal service.
465/1 Southeastern 47 1993–1994 ABB 465151–465197
465/2 Stored 4 1991–1993 Metro-Cammell 465235, 465241-465242, 465247,
Scrapped 14 465235-465240, 465243-465246, 465248-465249, 465250
465/9 Southeastern 24 465901–465904, 465906–465914, 465916, 465919, 465922-465929, 465932, Converted from 465/2 units (465201–465234)
Stored 9 465905, 465917-465918, 465920-465921, 465930-465931, 465933-465934
Scrapped 1 465915

Named units

Unit 465908 is named Chris Green.

Vehicle numbers

Vehicle number ranges:
Class Motor vehicles Trailer vehicles
465/0 64759–64858 72028–72172
465/1 65800–65893 72900–72993
465/2 65734–65749, 65784–65799 72787–72818
465/9 65700–65733, 65750–65783 72719–72786
Illustration of a Southeastern Class 465/9 unit


Last updated 24 June 2025. All information and images sourced from the relevant Wikipedia article(s) unless stated otherwise. If any information is incorrect, please let us know by emailing us: [email protected]. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms apply.