Amtrak paint schemes

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A passenger train led by two diesel locomotives. The first locomotive has a black roof, light gray sides, and red and blue horizontal stripes separated by a thin white stripe. The second locomotive has a black roof, gray sides, and a red-and-blue Amtrak logo on the side.
Amtrak's livery has included a variety of designs, most based on a red, white, and blue color scheme. The lead locomotive here is in Phase II livery, while the trailing locomotive is still in Phase I.

rolling stock since taking over intercity passenger rail service in the United States in 1971. A series of seven schemes termed Phases, first introduced in 1972, have seen the widest use. Phases primarily use geometric arrangements of red, white, and blue—the national colors of the United States
—part of Amtrak's patriotic visual identity.

Amtrak began operations in May 1971 with a mixture of equipment still painted in the distinct colored liveries of the freight railroads that relinquished their passenger service to Amtrak. The company retained the equipment that it determined to be in the best condition, and elected not to keep the same rolling stock on the same routes. Since this resulted in trains with mismatched liveries, which contrasted with the previous coordinated liveries, that period was later known as the Rainbow Era.

To build the brand of Amtrak as a unified passenger railroad, the rolling stock was gradually repainted into a new system-wide livery starting around 1972. Successive liveries are known as Phases and are sequentially numbered using

locomotives
use the 2000-introduced Phase V, while passenger cars use the 2002-introduced Phase VI (or Phase IVb). A modified Phase III scheme was introduced for some equipment in 2013. Non-revenue equipment uses bright lime green or a variation of Phase V.

Some routes financially supported by individual states use service-specific liveries to provide a more regionalized distinction. These include the three

wrapped
for advertising promotions. When testing equipment from other railroads, Amtrak has mostly kept existing livery, though some longer-term tests used Phase schemes.

Rainbow Era

A passenger train exiting a mountain snowshed. The four diesel locomotives are dark gray, with a red nose on the lead locomotive. Four passenger cars are visible - one dark grey and three yellow.
A "Rainbow Era" Amtrak train in 1971

When Amtrak took over intercity passenger rail service on May 1, 1971, it inherited a collection of rolling stock from twenty different railroads, each with its own distinct colors and logos.[1] Operating only 184 of the 366 privately operated trains, Amtrak was able to pick the 1,200 best passenger cars to lease from the 3,000 that the private railroads owned.[2] Equipment was used nationwide and did not always stay on predecessor routes, resulting in trains with the mismatched colors of several predecessor railroads. This "Rainbow Era" was short-lived; Amtrak began purchasing some of the leased equipment in mid-1971, setting the stage for wholesale repainting from 1972 to 1974 as the equipment was refurbished.[3][4]

Phase paint schemes

The Phase paint schemes have been used on most passengers equipment – locomotives, passenger cars, and trainsets – as well as some non-passenger cars and non-revenue equipment. Phase schemes generally have red, white, and blue on the sides of equipment, with black or gray sections around the wheels and roof to hide grime.[5]

Phase I

Introduced in 1972, Phase I was the first paint scheme to be implemented system-wide on Amtrak's trains.[6] It was the first new paint for most equipment under Amtrak, for a small number of locomotives that had been painted into experimental and promotional paint schemes.[6] The scheme was part of Amtrak's larger move to a visual identity featuring the national colors of red, white, and blue.[7] Amtrak did not initially assign nomenclature for its livery; model railroaders began referring to this first paint scheme as Phase I and numbering all subsequent phases sequentially using Roman numerals. Amtrak later made the Phase numbering scheme the official terminology.[8]

Locomotives in Phase I were painted light gray ("Platinum Mist") with a black roof, the Amtrak "Pointless Arrow" chevron logo on the side, and a red nose (which led to a "Bloody Nose" nickname).

Turboliner trainsets, and self-propelled RDC and Metroliner railcars.[6]

  • A passenger train with three diesel locomotives. All have black roofs and light gray sides with red-and-blue Amtrak logos
    An EMD FP7 and two EMD SDP40Fs in 1975
  • A white passenger trainset with red and blue horizontal stripes on the side
    A Turboliner trainset in 1975
  • Postcard view of a stainless steel passenger rail car with red and blue stripes horizontally across the windows
    A circa-1975 postcard of an Amfleet I passenger car
  • A gray electric locomotive with red ends and a blue side stripe
    A GG1 locomotive in 1978
  • A train of two-level passenger rail cars at a station. The coaches are stainless steel, with red and blue horizontal stripes halfway up their sides
    Hi-Level passenger cars in 1974
  • Stainless steel passenger rail cars with red and blue stripes horizontally across the windows. The visible end is covered with three vertical red, white, and blue stripes.
    Rail Diesel Cars in 1975
  • A white passenger trainset with red and blue horizontal stripes on the side and red noses on both ends
    TurboTrain in 1974
  • Stainless steel passenger rail cars with red and blue stripes horizontally across the windows. The visible end is covered with three vertical red, white, and blue stripes.
    Metroliners in 1975

Phase II

Phase II was introduced in late 1974 with the arrival of the new GE E60 locomotives.[10] The red nose and chevron logo on Phase I locomotives were replaced with the same stripes found on passenger cars, which wrapped around the nose of the locomotive. Locomotive roofs remained black. Most passenger cars were essentially unchanged from Phase I, except for the removal of the chevron logo; new Sightseer lounges had a higher stripe with an angled transition on each end.[6]

  • A passenger train led by an electric locomotive with black roof, light grey sides, and horizontal red and blue stripes separated by thin white stripes. The passenger cars are stainless steel with stripes matching the locomotive.
    GE E60 locomotive in 1980
  • Stainless steel passenger railcars with horizontal red and blue stripes separated by thin white stripes. The visible end of the near car is red with a large blue stripe at the bottom, with "Amtrak" in large white letters.
    Metroliners in 1980
  • A train of two-level passenger rail cars at a station. The coaches are stainless steel, with red and blue horizontal stripes halfway up their sides.
    Superliner passenger cars in 1985

Phase III

Phase III, introduced in 1976, is still used on some equipment. On both passenger cars and locomotives, the outer white pinstripes were removed while the inner stripe was widened, resulting in red, white, and blue stripes of equal width. Turboliners and the LRC test train were painted in white, with the stripes at the bottom of the train.[6] This scheme was introduced "for safety, graphic aid and saving money", as the white band was highly reflective and provided a place for car information, and the standard widths made better use of raw material.[11]

Several types of locomotives that were acquired later were given variations on Phase III. AEM-7 locomotives had the blue stripe expanded to cover the entire lower part of the body.[6] On Dash 8-32BWH locomotives, a deeper blue and red was used; the stripes had additional pinstripes and angled upward across the middle of the body.[6] The similarity to the Pepsi logo led to the units being nicknamed "Pepsi Cans".[12][13]: 108  Genesis locomotives had a lighter roof and narrower white stripe; the stripes angled downward on the sloped nose, and faded towards the rear.[6] That variant was created by industrial designer Cesar Vergara, who also designed the angular bodies of the locomotives.[13]: 111 

In October 2013, Amtrak introduced a new variant of Phase III with the production of the new Viewliner II cars, the first of which entered service in 2015.[14] The Viewliner cars have some changes from previous Phase III passenger cars, including a red reflective stripe at the bottom and a newer ("Travelmark") logo.[6] In January 2016, Amtrak revealed a P32AC-DM that was repainted into Phase III, similar to that of the heritage units Nos. 145 and 822, but featuring modern logos and "Empire Service" emblems on the sides. All P32AC-DMs were repainted into this scheme, with costs shared between Amtrak and the state of New York.[15]

  • A gray diesel locomotive with a black roof. On the side are red, white, and blue stripes of equal width.
    P30CH locomotive in 1987
  • A gray diesel locomotive with red, white, and blue stripes wrapping around the sides and front. There is one wide stripe of each color, plus several narrower stripes.
    P32-8BWH locomotive in "Pepsi Can" livery in 1992
  • A white passenger trainset with red, white, and blue stripes of equal width on the side under the windows
    Class RTL Turboliner trainset in 1984
  • A gray electric locomotive with a black roof. At the bottom of the sides and front is a wide blue stripe, with thinner white and red stripes above.
    AEM-7 locomotive in 1987
  • A gray diesel locomotive with red, white, and blue stripes of equal width on the side. The stripes narrow and angle downwards on the front.
    P40DC locomotive in 1993
  • A gray diesel switcher locomotive with black roof and underside. On the side are red, white, and blue stripes of equal width.
    RS3M work locomotive in 1987
  • A stainless steel passenger dome rail car with red, white, and blue stripes of equal width on the side
    Heritage Fleet dome car "Ocean View" in 2016
  • A gray diesel locomotive with red, white, and blue stripes of equal width on the side. The stripes narrow and angle downwards on the front under the black-painted cab area.
    P32AC-DM locomotive in 2021
  • A stainless steel passenger rail car with red, white, and blue stripes of equal width on the side
    Viewliner II diner in 2017

Phase IV

Beginning in 1993, Phase IV was introduced as a striking departure from the traditional red, white, and blue style seen previously. Brought into service with the delivery of the newer Superliner II cars, Phase IV has two thin red stripes and a thick dark blue stripe.[6] In 1997, Amtrak extended the scheme to locomotives, initially GE P42DC diesel locomotives on Northeast Corridor services.[16]: 7  Locomotives for the Northeast Corridor services were light gray with a darker gray stripe at top; locomotives outside the Northeast Corridor did not have the top stripe.[6]: 17 

  • A stainless steel bilevel passenger rail car. A blue stripe and two thinner red stripes are on the side between the two levels of windows.
    Superliner passenger cars in 1998
  • A light gray diesel locomotive with a blue stripe and two thinner red stripes on the side. The stripes narrow and angle downwards on the front.
    P42DC locomotive in 2001
  • A light gray diesel locomotive with a dark gray top stripe, a middle blue stripe, and two thinner red stripes on the side. The stripes narrow and angle downwards on the front.
    P32AC-DM locomotive with the Northeast Corridor scheme in 2001
  • Stainless steel passenger rail cars with a thick blue stripe across the windows and two thinner red stripes above
    Amfleet I passenger cars in 2002
  • A stainless steel passenger rail car with a thick blue stripe across the windows and two thinner red stripes above. A logo within the blue stripe reads "Amtrak NortheastDirect Service".
    NortheastDirect branding in the 1990s
  • A depowered diesel locomotive with gray paint and a black roof. A wide blue stripe and two thinner red stripes are on the sides and front.
    NPCU
    in 2005

Phase V

Phase V was introduced with the arrival of the

non-powered control units (NPCUs). The Amtrak "Travelmark" logo is painted near the front or rear of the unit.[6]

Acela Express trainsets have grey and stainless steel bodies with the lower red stripe, with the blue roof and Acela logo on the power cars only. The Acela passenger cars have no blue stripe; colored shapes called "mobiles", based on the shape of the Acela logo, are used to indicate the type of car (Business Class, Cafe Bistro, or First Class).[6] A similar scheme was created for Amfleet coaches used on the Acela Regional, with a window stripe (light blue for Coach Class and baggage cars, blue for Business Class and cafe cars) and mobiles to indicate the type of service.[6] The rebuilt Turboliners also had a version of the Phase V livery, with similar window stripes and mobiles.[6][13]: 153 

Non-passenger cars such as Auto Train auto racks are all-gray except for the logo and red stripe; Express Box Cars had blue stripes on top and bottom.[6]

  • Stainless steel passenger trainset with a blue roof and a thin red sill stripe
    Acela Express trainset in 2012
  • Stainless steel electric locomotive with a blue roof and a thin red sill stripe. Behind it are stainless steel passenger cars with a mottled blue window stripe and a thin red sill stripe.
    HHP-8 locomotive (with Acela logo) and Amfleet I passenger cars in Phase V livery in 2002
  • A gray diesel locomotive with a blue roof and a thin red sill stripe
    P42DC locomotive in 2007
  • A gray electric locomotive with a blue roof and a thin red sill stripe. The cab window is surrounded by black and blue areas, with a red stripe at the bottom.
    ACS-64 locomotive in 2014
  • A gray boxcar with blue stripes at top and bottom. A dotted red stripe is above the lower blue stripe.
    Express Box Cars in 2001
  • A gray diesel switcher locomotive with a blue roof
    MP14B switcher in 2018

Phase VI (Phase IVb)

Phase VI (also called Phase IVb) was introduced in 2002, and is currently used on most passenger cars.[6] It retains the same stripe style as Phase IV: wide window stripes on single-level cars, and narrow stripes on Superliners. The red reflective sill stripe and mid-tone blue on Phase V are used. Single-level cars have white logos within the blue stripe, while Superliners have blue logos below the stripes.[6] Five of the first six Siemens Charger ALC-42 locomotives have a Phase VI scheme consisting of a mostly blue body with red and black around the windshield, with red and silver chevrons at the rear.[17]

  • Stainless steel bilevel passenger rail cars with a blue stripe and two thinner red stripes between levels, plus a red sill stripe
    Superliner I dining car in 2006
  • Stainless steel passenger rail cars with a blue stripe and two thinner red stripes at window level, plus a red sill stripe
    Amfleet I passenger cars in 2007
  • Stainless steel passenger rail car with a blue stripe and two thinner red stripes at window level
    Viewliner I sleeping car in 2008
  • A blue diesel locomotive with red and silver chevrons at the rear
    Siemens ALC-42 locomotive in 2022

Phase VII

Phase VII was introduced in 2022 as the new livery for most Amtrak equipment, with the new Siemens Charger ALC-42 units being the first to have the paint scheme. The Chargers have sides in two tones of blue, separated by a curved white stripe. The black cab window area is flanked by red and white stripes, and red and white sill stripes run along the length of the locomotives.[8][18][19] In January 2024, Amtrak started repainting Genesis locomotives into a Phase VII scheme similar to the Chargers due to Beech Grove Shops' supplies of Phase V paint being depleted.[20]

  • A blue diesel locomotive with a curved white stripe, red nose, and a red sill stripe
    ALC-42 locomotives in 2023
  • A blue diesel locomotive with an angular white stripe, red nose, and a red sill stripe
    P42DC locomotive in 2024

Route-specific paint schemes

Thirteen Amtrak-operated, state-funded corridor routes — eight Midwest routes, three Amtrak California routes, and the Cascades and Piedmont — are operated by Amtrak using equipment that is largely owned by the states in which they operate, and painted in custom schemes that deviate from the national Amtrak livery. Several other route-specific paint schemes have been used in the past.

Amtrak California

The three routes under the Amtrak California brand — the Capitol Corridor, Pacific Surfliner, and San Joaquins — use equipment painted in several custom schemes. The Capitol Corridor and San Joaquin largely use California Cars, F59PHI locomotives, and Charger SC-44 locomotives painted with the state colors of blue and yellow. F59PHI locomotives are gray with a navy blue underside, yellow bottom stripe, black roof, and navy blue cab area; Caltrans and Amtrak California logos are prominent.[13]: 116  The California Cars are stainless steel with a black upper window stripe, a navy blue lower window stripe with a yellow pinstripe, and orange triangles next to boarding doors.[6][13]: 137  Charger SC-44 locomotives are gray with navy blue curved shapes on the front and rear with yellow accents, a black cab area, and Amtrak California logos on the front and sides.[21] Single-level Comet IB and Horizon cars used on the San Joaquin have a yellow bottom stripe and a navy blue window stripe with orange, turquoise, and light blue accents. Several NPCUs used for the service are gray with turquoise and light blue stripes and a curve towards the top rear of the locomotive, red chevron stripes on the front (a nod to a 1985 Caltrain paint scheme), and yellow grab bars.[6][22]: 68  Siemens Venture passenger cars for the San Joaquins will be stainless steel with yellow doors, a dark blue stripe along the windows, and a multi-color stripe along the bottom with yellow plus several shades of blue.[23]

The Pacific Surfliner uses Charger SC-44 locomotives and Surfliner cars in a deep blue and gray paint scheme. The upper half of the passenger cars are deep blue with a white pinstriping, plus a white pinstripe on the bottom of the cars. The stripes continue onto locomotives, with the blue stripe narrowing and curving under the black-painted cab area. Lettering is white and placed in the blue stripe.[6][13]: 114, 138  The Charger locomotives are painted in the same shape as the Northern California units but using the Pacific Surfliner color scheme.[24] Amtrak-owned F59PHI locomotives previously used on the Pacific Surfliner were painted in a scheme to match the Surfliner cars, featuring a large sweeping blue arc running from the front to the top of the locomotive.[6] Amtrak wrapped F59PHI No. 457 in a special scheme to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Pacific Surfliner and the train's ridership surpassing 25 million. The locomotive's new scheme was released on May 8, 2010, for National Train Day.[25]

  • A passenger train along a shoreline. The diesel locomotive is gray with a navy blue underside, yellow bottom stripe, black roof, and navy blue cab area. The bilevel passenger cars are stainless steel with a black upper window stripe and a navy blue lower window stripe with a yellow pinstripe.
    Capitol Corridor train in Amtrak California livery in 2011
  • A passenger train with bilevel passenger cars painted in gray and blue stripes. The blue stripe on each side tapers to a point on the nose of the locomotive.
    Pacific Surfliner train with an F59PHI locomotive in 2006
  • A locomotive painted gray with turquoise and light blue stripes and a curve towards the top rear of the locomotive, with red chevron stripes on the front.
    NPCU and Comet IB passenger cars in 2023
  • A diesel locomotive with navy blue curved shapes on the front and rear with yellow accents, a black cab area, and Amtrak California logos on the front and sides
    Charger SC-44 locomotive in Amtrak California livery in 2019
  • A diesel locomotive with navy blue curved shapes on the front and rear with white accents, a black cab area, and Amtrak California logos on the front and sides
    Charger SC-44 locomotive in Amtrak Pacific Surfliner livery in 2022
  • A stainless steel passenger rail car with yellow doors, a dark blue stripe along the windows, and a multi-color stripe along the bottom with yellow plus several shades of blue
    Venture passenger car in San Joaquins livery in 2020

Cascades

The

Amtrak Airo trainsets for the Cascades, expected to enter service in 2026, will have a primarily dark green paint scheme. The trainsets will have brown and white sill stripes and window accents, plus graphics of Mount Rainier and Mount Hood.[27]

On the newer Charger SC-44 locomotives, the green stripe is narrower and runs along the top and over the cab.[28] One trainset was originally painted in blue, silver, and white for a Los Angeles-Las Vegas service that was never implemented.[29] In 2016, one NPCU, #90250, was wrapped in Seattle Seahawks livery for several months.[30] The newer Series 8 trainsets are painted similarly to the older sets. One end has a cab car, where the brown and green stripes come to a point, with the top of the cab also painted green.[31]

  • A passenger train with white, dark brown, and dark green stripes. The green stripe curves up along the side of the diesel locomotive.
    Cascades trainset with NPCU in 2006
  • A passenger train with white, dark brown, and dark green stripes.
    Cab end of a Series 8 trainset in 2012
  • A white diesel locomotive with a dark brown underside and dark green roof
    Charger SC-44 locomotive in 2018

Amtrak Midwest

The Charger SC-44 locomotives used on the eight Amtrak Midwest routes (Hiawatha Service, Illini and Saluki, Illinois Zephyr and Carl Sandburg, Lincoln Service, Missouri River Runner, Wolverine, Blue Water, and Pere Marquette) have a blue front with a halftone transition into the gray side, with a red sill stripe.[32] Siemens Venture passenger cars for the services have a matching gray scheme with halftone blue transitions at the end of the window level, with a wider red sill stripe.[33]

  • Gray diesel locomotive with a red sill stripe. The area around the cab windows is black. The sides of the cab are blue, tapering with halftone dots onto the side of the body.
    Charger SC-44 locomotives in 2021
  • Gray rail passenger cars with a thick red sill stripe and a thick blue window stripe flanked by thinner white stripes
    Siemens Venture cars in 2022

Piedmont

The equipment used on the Piedmont is painted in North Carolina state colors, with wide blue stripes on the passenger cars and blue fronts on the locomotives.[13]: 113 

  • A passenger train with a diesel locomotive. The cars are grey with a blue window stripe and a red sill stripe. The locomotive is blue and gray with a black roof and red sill stripe.
    Piedmont train in 2016
  • Gray passenger rail cars with a wide blue window stripe
    Piedmont refurbished passenger cars in 2019

Other routes

  • A passenger train with diesel locomotives. The locomotives have blue paint with gold accents and silver undersides. The passenger cars are light gray with blue and gold window stripes.
    The Adirondack with Delaware and Hudson Railway equipment in 1974
  • A railway baggage car painted with a mural of mountains
    Adirondack baggage car in 2004
  • A passenger trainset with a geometric red, white, and black color scheme
    RTL-II trainset in 2006
  • A white passenger trainset with a red window stripe and black cab roof
    Talgo Series 8 trainset in 2018

Special paint schemes

"Day 1" livery

A black diesel locomotive with the Amtrak "pointless arrow" logo on the side. The blue stripes of the logo wrap around the front, where they are checked with white.
EMD E8 No. 4316 in August 1971

EMD E8 No. 4316 and coach 1589 were painted for display in New York when Amtrak began service in May 1971; they saw later use on the Broadway Limited. The locomotive was painted black; the Chevron "pointless arrow" logo on each side wrapped around the front with blue and white safety stripes.[37] The coach has a wide blue window stripe with a large Amtrak logo near one end.[16]: 152  Amtrak has retroactively referred to this paint scheme as the "Day 1" livery.[8]

40th anniversary heritage units

For Amtrak's 40th anniversary in 2011, the railroad painted four P42DC Genesis locomotives with special

Capitol Limited on January 30, 2011. Three other locomotives followed: Nos. 156 in Phase I, 66 in Phase II, and 184 in Phase IV.[38] Other locomotives, beginning with P42DC No. 130 in Phase II livery in 2016, were repainted to replace heritage units that were damaged in collisions.[39]

The 40th Anniversary Exhibit Train consisted of P40DC locomotive No. 822, NPCU No. 406, modified Budd 10-6 heritage sleeper/Crew Dorm No. 10020 Pacific Bend, three heritage baggage cars used to house exhibits, and Amfleet cafe car No. 85999, used as a gift shop.[40] The whole train was painted in Phase III.[41]

  • A gray diesel locomotive with black cab area, red on the lower front end, black underside, and Amtrak logo on the side
    P42DC 156 in Phase I paint
  • A gray diesel locomotive with a black cab area. Red and blue stripes separated by thin white stripes run along the sides and wrap across the front, where they pinch slightly
    P42DC 66 in Phase II paint
  • A gray diesel locomotive with a black cab area. Red, white, and blue stripes run along the sides and wrap across the front, where they pinch slightly
    P40DC 822 in Phase III paint
  • A gray diesel locomotive with a black cab area. Red, white, and blue stripes run along the sides and wrap across the front
    NPCU 406 in Phase III paint
  • A gray diesel locomotive with a blue stripe and several thinner white stripes. The stripes run along the sides and wrap across the front, where they pinch slightly
    P42DC 184 in Phase IV paint

50th anniversary heritage units

A diesel locomotive in dark blue paint
P42DC 100 in "Midnight Blue" 50th anniversary livery

On March 16, 2021, Amtrak announced the release of six heritage paint schemes, all with an "Amtrak 50" logo on the side, to be applied to five Genesis locomotives and one Charger ALC-42 locomotive. The liveries include heritage versions of the black "Day 1" livery on ALC-42 No. 301, a Phase I livery on P42 No. 161, a Phase III "Pepsi Can" livery on P42 No. 160, a Phase V livery on P42 No. 46, and a Phase VI livery on P42 No. 108 that is similar to the first ALC-42 units.[42] The sixth scheme was "Midnight Blue," a dark blue livery on P42 No. 100 celebrating employees who "keep passengers moving across the nation all throughout the night".[8][43] On December 9, 2021, Amtrak announced that ACS-64 locomotive No. 662 had been wrapped in modified Phase III livery as a promotion for Train Sim World 2.[44][45]

Other special paint schemes

  • The Amtrak California routes have wrapped locomotives to promote the Operation Lifesaver safety campaign. The decals featured bright designs with slogans about being safe around railroad tracks.[46][47][48][49]
  • The first three ACS-64 units released from Siemens in 2013 had special decals applied. Locomotive Nos. 600 and 601 received a large American flag on the sides as well as smaller logos for Siemens & Amtrak.[50] Locomotive No. 602 had a "Reliability - Efficiency - Mobility" promotional graphic on the sides.[51] All three were later repainted with a conventional Phase V scheme before entering service.[52]
  • In June 2013, P42DC #42 was painted in a red, white, black, and dark blue scheme with a large logo on the side saying "America's Railroad Salutes our Veterans". A blue band near the wheelbase contains 50 white stars.[53] ACS-64 No. 642 and NPCUs Nos. 90208 and 90221 received similar paint schemes in 2015 and 2016.[54][55][56][57]

Non-revenue equipment

A railway work vehicles in bright yellow paint with a blue Amtrak logo
An Amtrak catenary maintenance vehicle in 2004-introduced lime paint

Beginning in 1976, Amtrak work train equipment was painted safety orange with black undersides. Light grey livery with a red bottom stripe, similar to Phase V non-passenger cars, was introduced for work train cars in 2004.[6] Safety yellow livery was introduced for maintenance of way equipment and roadway vehicles in 2001; it was replaced with a pale lime around 2004, and a brighter lime around 2013.[6] Non-revenue locomotives typically use variations of the Phase paint schemes to make them visually distinct from revenue locomotives while maintaining consistent styles.[6]

In 1997, Amtrak bought 50 rebuilt 50-foot (15 m) boxcars to supplement its newly built 60-foot (18 m) Express Box Car fleet. The rebuilt cars arrived in their original Southern Pacific Olive Green paint scheme, rather than the Phase V scheme of the newer cars, though some were later repainted.[58][59]

Advertising

Union Station
in Washington, D.C. in 1999

Since the late 1990s, Amtrak has occasionally rented advertising space on the exterior of its passenger equipment. The ads sometimes take the form of

wraps rather than true paint schemes. Customers have included fast food restaurants, auto manufacturers, television networks, and politicians.[60][61]
In some cases, the advertisements were on equipment rented for private use, rather than on equipment in normal revenue service. Notable temporary advertisements have included:

Test train schemes

Amtrak has tested a number of types of off-the-shelf equipment on the Northeast Corridor and short corridors. Some of these have been painted fully in Amtrak livery:

  • Bombardier LRC cars received a variation of the Phase III scheme very similar to the RTL Turboliners.[13]: 154 
  • The Swedish
    Rc4 (numbered X995) and the French CC 21000 (X996), used for testing during the design of the AEM-7 locomotives in the late 1970s, used a Phase II scheme similar to the E60 locomotives the AEM-7 would replace.[68]

Other equipment largely retained their paint schemes from usage elsewhere:

  • A gray electric locomotive with a black roof and red and blue side stripes
    X995 in Phase II paint in 1976
  • A gray electric locomotive with a black roof and red and blue side stripes
    X996 in Phase II paint in 1977
  • A white locomotive with black cab area, blue underside, and red stripe
    Bombardier LRC in Phase III variant in 1980
  • A silver passenger trainset with "Amtrak" written below the cab windows
    X2000 in Statens Järnvägar livery in 1993
  • A white passenger rail car with a wide black stripe and thin red, white, and blue stripes
    Talgo 200 in modified AVE paint scheme in 1994
  • A passenger train with blue and black stripes and red ends
    IC3 in Israel Railways livery in 1996

References

  1. .
  2. ^ "A Closer Look: Out on the Range". History Blog. Amtrak. December 15, 2014.
  3. ^ Kelly, John (June 5, 2001). "Amtrak's beginnings". Classic Trains Magazine. Archived from the original on June 2, 2008. Retrieved December 29, 2010.
  4. OCLC 24545029
    .
  5. ^ Franz, Justin (April 28, 2021). "It Takes a Lot of Thought and Planning to Paint a Train". Atlas Obscura.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac "Official Paint Scheme and Logo Branding Guide" (PDF). Amtrak. February 2019. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 30, 2020.
  7. ^ "A Uniform Retrospective". Amtrak. January 30, 2014.
  8. ^ a b c d Donnelly, Matt (March 16, 2021). Amtrak 50th - Paint Scheme and Livery History (Video). Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved March 16, 2021.
  9. ^ "Prototype for the Adapted Phase I Livery". Amtrak.
  10. ^ Holland, Kevin J. (Spring–Summer 2009). "Amtrak's F40PH: From dark clouds, a silver lining". Railroad History (200): 59.
  11. ^ "Hot Line To President Boyd" (PDF). Amtrak News. No. September–October 1980. Amtrak. p. 10.
  12. – via Google Books.
  13. ^ .
  14. ^ "Coming Soon: New Long Distance Cars". Amtrak. October 24, 2013. Retrieved February 26, 2018.
  15. ^ Gunnoe, Chase (January 12, 2016). "Amtrak confirms 'Phase III' scheme for 'Empire Service' locomotives". Trains. Retrieved January 13, 2016.
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External links

Media related to Amtrak liveries at Wikimedia Commons