Hawker Siddeley Canada - Products

Products

A list of products made by Hawker Siddeley Canada:

Transit
  • H1 subway cars - for the Toronto Transit Commission 1965-1966
    • H-Series automated surface metro cars - for the 67 World Fair Expo-Express, operated by the CTM (now STM) (1965)
    • RTC-85SP/D were modified H1 cars for GO Transit
  • H2 subway cars - for the Toronto Transit Commission 1971
  • H4 subway cars - for the Toronto Transit Commission 1974-1975
  • H5 subway cars - for the Toronto Transit Commission 1976-1979
  • Port Authority Trans-Hudson (PATH) PA3 rail transit cars for New Jersey (1972)
  • MBTA Blue Line 0600 series subway cars (1979)
  • MBTA Orange Line 01200 series subway cars (1980)
  • Municipal Service Car - demo only for the TTC
  • GO Transit Hawker Siddeley DMU Coaches and Bi-level coaches I and II
Aviation

Hawker-Siddeley Canada also manufactured aircraft engines for Avro Canada and other aircraft manufacturers:

  • Orenda Engines General Electric J-79
  • Orenda Engines General Electric J-85-CAN-40
  • Orenda Engines General Electric J-85-CAN-15
Railcar

Hawker-Siddeley Transportation also produced railway freight cars primarily for Canadian railways and leasing companies during the 1970s and 1980s at plants in Thunder Bay, ON and Trenton, NS. Today the Thunder Bay plant is owned by Bombardier Transportation and the Trenton plant is now owned by The Greenbrier Companies. The Thunder Bay plant primarily built passenger rail and transit equipment and the Trenton plant built freight cars.

  • Covered Hopper Cars - for grain and other dry bulk commodities
  • Tank Cars - for liquids and compressed gases
  • Box Cars - for paper and general freight
  • Flat Cars - for lumber, steel, vehicles and large bulky freight
  • Gondolas - for steel, logs, stone, other bulk freight

Read more about this topic:  Hawker Siddeley Canada

Famous quotes containing the word products:

    It seemed there was a sort of poisoning, an auto-infection of the organisms, so Dr. Krokowski said; it was caused by the disintegration of a substance ... and the products of this disintegration operated like an intoxicant upon the nerve-centres of the spinal cord, with an effect similar to that of certain poisons, such as morphia, or cocaine.
    Thomas Mann (1875–1955)

    But, most of all, the Great Society is not a safe harbor, a resting place, a final objective, a finished work. It is a challenge constantly renewed, beckoning us toward a destiny where the meaning of our lives matches the marvelous products of our labor.
    Lyndon Baines Johnson (1908–1973)

    ... white people, like black ones, are victims of a racist society. They are products of their time and place.
    Shirley Chisholm (b. 1924)