Three-phase
Three-phase electric power (abbreviated 3ϕ) is a common type of alternating current (AC) used in electricity generation, Electric power transmission, transmission, and Electric power distribution, distribution. It is a type of polyphase system ...
AC railway electrification, which promised some advantages over established DC electric rail power and steam traction, started at the turn of the twentieth century. The first standard gauge line, from 1899 to 1933, was
from Burgdorf to Thun in Switzerland (). Italy was the major user, from 1901 until 1976, although lines through two tunnels also used the system; the
Simplon Tunnel
The Simplon Tunnel (''Simplontunnel'', ''Traforo del Sempione'' or ''Galleria del Sempione'') is a railway tunnel on the Simplon railway that connects Brig, Switzerland, Brig, Switzerland and Domodossola, Italy, through the Alps, providing a shor ...
between Switzerland and Italy from 1906 to 1930 (but not connected to the Italian system), and the
Cascade Tunnel of the
Great Northern Railway in the United States from 1909 to 1939. Single phase AC railways with a single overhead line proved more practical.
Since the 1980s, modern electric locomotives use three-phase AC internally, generated from a single overhead line, thanks to advances in
semiconductor
A semiconductor is a material with electrical conductivity between that of a conductor and an insulator. Its conductivity can be modified by adding impurities (" doping") to its crystal structure. When two regions with different doping level ...
inverter technology. These inverters are also used in electric cars, from a DC battery, or from DC photovoltaic panels into the three-phase AC grid.
Advantages
The system provides
regenerative braking with the power fed back to the system, so is particularly suitable for mountain railways (provided the grid or another locomotive on the line can accept the power). The locomotives use three-phase induction motors. Lacking brushes and commutators, they require less maintenance. The early Italian and Swiss systems used a low frequency ( Hz), and a relatively low voltage (3,000 or 3,600 volts) compared with later AC systems. (However, both regenerative braking and Hz were successfully implemented also for single-phase systems, like for the Swiss
Ce 6/8 II and III "Crocodile" type.)

In Germany, the Siemens and AEG
Experimental three-phase railcars set new overall speed records, in 1903 at , faster than any other manned vehicle for about a decade. Due to issues with the three overhead wire concept, German railways continued with single phase AC.
Disadvantages
The overhead wiring, generally having two separate overhead lines and the rail for the third phase, was more complicated, and the low frequency used required a separate generation or conversion and distribution system. Train speed was restricted from one to four speeds which obtained by pole-changing, cascade operation or both.
Historical systems
The following is a list of the railways that have used this method of electrification in the past:
* The
Cascade Tunnel of the
Great Northern Railway.
* The
Ferrovia della Valtellina in Italy.
* The
Giovi Railway between
Genoa
Genoa ( ; ; ) is a city in and the capital of the Italian region of Liguria, and the sixth-largest city in Italy. As of 2025, 563,947 people live within the city's administrative limits. While its metropolitan city has 818,651 inhabitan ...
and
Pontedecimo in Italy.
* The Italian part of the Mont-Cenis line
Turin–Modane.
* Many other lines in Northern Italy.
* The Santa Fe - Gergal line in Spain.
*The
Burgdorf–Thun railway in Switzerland.
* The
Simplon Tunnel
The Simplon Tunnel (''Simplontunnel'', ''Traforo del Sempione'' or ''Galleria del Sempione'') is a railway tunnel on the Simplon railway that connects Brig, Switzerland, Brig, Switzerland and Domodossola, Italy, through the Alps, providing a shor ...
between Switzerland and Italy.
Current systems
The system is mostly used today for rack (mountain) railways, where the overhead wiring is less complicated and restrictions on the speeds available less important. Modern motors and their control systems avoid the fixed speeds of traditional systems, as they are built with solid-state converters.
The four current such railways are
* The
Corcovado Rack Railway in
Rio de Janeiro
Rio de Janeiro, or simply Rio, is the capital of the Rio de Janeiro (state), state of Rio de Janeiro. It is the List of cities in Brazil by population, second-most-populous city in Brazil (after São Paulo) and the Largest cities in the America ...
Brazil.
* The
Gornergratbahn in Switzerland.
* The
Jungfraubahn in Switzerland.
* The
Petit train de la Rhune in France, still using the original locomotives of 1912
All use standard frequency (50 Hz, or 60 Hz (Brazil)) rather than low frequency, using between 725 and 3,000 volts.
Automated guideway transit in China and Japan can also use three-phase electrification via multiple third rails located on the side of the guideway.
Voltage and frequency
This list shows the voltage and frequency used in various systems, historical and current.

* Various,
Siemens
Siemens AG ( ) is a German multinational technology conglomerate. It is focused on industrial automation, building automation, rail transport and health technology. Siemens is the largest engineering company in Europe, and holds the positi ...
Factory Experiments 1892
* 200 V / 25 Hz
Panama Canal
The Panama Canal () is an artificial waterway in Panama that connects the Caribbean Sea with the Pacific Ocean. It cuts across the narrowest point of the Isthmus of Panama, and is a Channel (geography), conduit for maritime trade between th ...
1915
* 350 V / 40 Hz
Lugano Tramway 1895
* 460 V / 60 Hz Panama Canal Authority, date unknown
* 500 V / ??Hz
Ganz Factory Experiment 1896
* 550 V / 40 Hz
Gornergratbahn, at opening, 1898
* 600 V / 60 Hz
Taoyuan International Airport Skytrain, at opening, 2003
* 600 V / 50 Hz
Bukit Panjang LRT line, at opening, 1999
* 650 V / 50 Hz
Zhujiang New Town APM System, at opening, 2010
* 725 V / 50 Hz Gornergratbahn, current
* 750 V / 40 Hz
Burgdorf–Thun railway, 1899–1933
* 750 V / 40 Hz
Hasle-Rüegsau–Langnau railway, 1919–1932
* 1,125 V / 50 Hz
Jungfrau Railway
* 3,000 V / 15 Hz
Ferrovia della Valtellina 1902 - 1917
* 3,300 V / 16.7 Hz Galleria del Sempione,
SBB 1906 - 1930
* 3,000 V / 15.8 Hz Valtellina FS 1917 - 1930
* 3,600 V / 16.7 Hz Valtellina FS 1930 - 1953
* 3,600 V / 16.7 Hz Genoa-Turin, Turin-Frejus-Modane Gallery (F) and other lines in Piedmont and Liguria from 1910 to 1976
* 3,600 V / 16.7 Hz Trento-Bolzano-Brennero, Bolzano-Merano FS 1929 - 1965
* 3,600 V / 16.7 Hz Genova-La Spezia e Fornovo FS 1926 - 1948
* 3,600 V / 16.7 Hz Sondrio-Tirano (
Ferrovia Alta Valtellina)
* 5,200 V / 25 Hz Gergal-SantaFe FC Sur - Spagna
* 6,600 V / 25 Hz Cascade Range,
Great Northern Railway (U.S.)
The Great Northern Railway was an American Class I railroad. Running from Saint Paul, Minnesota, to Seattle, Washington (state), Washington, it was the creation of 19th-century Canadian-American railroad entrepreneur James Jerome Hill, James ...
, 1909 - 1927
* 7,000 V / 50 Hz Experiments, Torino-Bussoleno FS 1927 - 1928
* 10,000 V / 45 Hz Roma-Sulmona FS 1929 - 1944
Converter systems
This category does not cover railways with a single-phase (or DC) supply which is converted to three-phase on the locomotive or power car, ''e.g.'', most railway equipment from the 1990s and earlier using solid-state converters. The Kando system of the 1930s developed by
Kálmán Kandó
Kálmán Kandó de Egerfarmos et Sztregova (''egerfarmosi és sztregovai Kandó Kálmán''; July 10, 1869 – January 13, 1931) was a Hungary, Hungarian engineer, the inventor of phase converter and a pioneer in the development of AC electric rai ...
at the
Ganz Works
The Ganz Machinery Works Holding is a Hungary, Hungarian holding company. Its products are related to rail transport, power generation, and water supply, among other industries.
The original Ganz Works or Ganz ( or , ''Ganz companies'', formerly ...
, and used in Hungary and Italy, used
rotary phase converters on the locomotive to convert the single-phase supply to three phases, as did the phase-splitting system on the
Norfolk and Western Railroad in the United States.
Locomotives

Usually, the locomotives had one, two, or four motors on the body chassis (not on the bogies), and did not require gearing. The
induction motors are designed to run at a particular synchronous speed, and when they run above the synchronous speed downhill, power is fed back to the system. Pole changing and cascade (concatenation) working was used to allow two or four different speeds, and resistances (often
liquid rheostats) were required for starting. In Italy freight locomotives used plain cascade with two speeds, ; while express locomotives used cascade combined with pole-changing, giving four speeds, 37, 50, 75 and 100 km/h (23, 31, 46 and 62 mph). With the use of 3,000 or 3,600 volts at (16.7) Hz, the supply could be fed directly to the motor without an onboard transformer.
Generally, the motor(s) fed a single axle, with other wheels linked by connecting rods, as the induction motor is sensitive to speed variations and with non-linked motors on several axles the motors on worn wheels would do little or even no work as they would rotate faster. This motor characteristic led to a mishap in the Cascade Tunnel to a GN east-bound freight train with four electric locomotives, two on the head and two pushing. The two pushers suddenly lost power and the train gradually slowed to a stop, but the lead unit engineer was unaware that his train had stopped, and held the controller on the power position until the usual time to transit the tunnel had elapsed. Not seeing daylight, he finally shut down the locomotive, and found that the wheels of his stationary locomotive had ground through two-thirds of the rail web.
Overhead wiring
Generally two separate overhead wires are used, with the rail for the third phase, though occasionally three overhead wires are used. At junctions, crossovers and crossings the two lines must be kept apart, with a continuous supply to the locomotive, which must have two live conductors wherever it stops. Hence two collectors per overhead phase are used, but the possibility of bridging a dead section and causing a short circuit from the front collector of one phase to the back collector of the other phase must be avoided. The resistance of the rails used for the third phase or return is higher for AC than for DC due to "
skin effect
In electromagnetism, skin effect is the tendency of an alternating current, alternating electric current (AC) to become distributed within a Conductor (material), conductor such that the current density is largest near the surface of the conduc ...
", but lower for the low frequency used than for industrial frequency. Losses are also increased, though not in the same proportion, as the impedance is largely reactive.

The locomotive needs to pick up power from two (or three) overhead conductors. Early locomotives on the Italian State Railways used a wide
bow collector which covered both wires but later locomotives used a wide pantograph with two collector bars, side by side. A three-phase system is also prone to larger lengthwise gaps between sections, owing to the complexity of two-wire overhead, and so a long pickup base is needed. In Italy this was achieved with the long bow collectors reaching right to the ends of the locomotive, or with a pair of pantographs, also mounted as far apart as possible.
In the United States, a pair of
trolley pole
A trolley pole is a tapered cylindrical pole of wood or metal, used to transfer electricity from a "live" (electrified) overhead line, overhead wire to the control and the electric traction motors of a tram or trolley bus. It is a type of current ...
s were used. They worked well with a maximum speed of . The dual conductor
pantograph
A pantograph (, from their original use for copying writing) is a Linkage (mechanical), mechanical linkage connected in a manner based on parallelograms so that the movement of one pen, in tracing an image, produces identical movements in a se ...
system is used on four mountain railways that continue to use three-phase power (
Corcovado Rack Railway in
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Rio de Janeiro, or simply Rio, is the capital of the state of Rio de Janeiro. It is the second-most-populous city in Brazil (after São Paulo) and the sixth-most-populous city in the Americas.
Founded in 1565 by the Portuguese, the city wa ...
,
Jungfraubahn and
Gornergratbahn in Switzerland and the
Petit train de la Rhune in France).
See also
*
Three-phase electric power
Three-phase electric power (abbreviated 3ϕ) is a common type of alternating current (AC) used in electricity generation, transmission, and distribution. It is a type of polyphase system employing three wires (or four including an optional n ...
*
:Railway electrification system#Polyphase alternating current systems
*
:Three-phase AC locomotives
Footnotes
References
*
*
*
* p. 98
* pp 412–3 & 423-5
* pp 542–3 (para 872) & pp 630–1 (para 919)
*
*
*
* p 347
External links
{{commons category-inline, Three-phase electrifications
History of rail transport
Electric rail transport
*