Remove ads
Livery used on New Zealand railway locomotives From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bumble-Bee was an informal term, promoted by the editors of NZ Railfan magazine, describing a New Zealand railway locomotive livery (resulting from the combination of black and yellow in the colour scheme) found in common usage amongst the railfan community.
The livery, first introduced in May 2001 to promote level crossing safety to replace the Cato Blue livery and was initially trialed on Tranz Rail locomotive DC 4323, and over time was applied to numerous other locomotive classes up until 5 May 2004, when Toll Rail took over the rail system, and introduced the Corn-Cob livery.[1]
The first four locomotives that were painted in the livery, including DC 4323 and DFT 7160, received the livery with the Tranz Rail "winged" logo.[2] DC4185, DX5166 and EF30071 never received branding when they were repainted in the livery.[3] DC4185 did not receive branding either when it was repainted, but the sloping block letters were later applied to the loco.[4]
As of July 2020, only one DC, one DSC and three EFs still operate in this livery.
A few locomotives had been repainted in variations of this livery:
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.