Travelling through Africa with locomotives and Volvo Penta engines

Rail enthusiasts
Image: Rail enthusiast Rohan Vos founded the company in the mid 1980s. He wanted to offer his passengers a luxurious train journey using locomotives and he regards his
business as the “Orient Express of Africa”. Rudi Jones, head of Volvo Penta’s operations in South Africa, provides service and support.

Rovos Rail is a company that offers luxury “journeys of distinction” through Africa by steam engine. The wood-panelled coaches are refurbished and remodelled to peak condition and offer all the luxury amenities of a fivestar hotel. Behind the glamour, Volvo Penta engines are hard at work to make things as comfortable as possible for the passengers.
 Coenie van Der Walt   Coenie van Der Walt, maintenance manager
at Rovos Rail, thinks
that Volvo Penta’s engines
are reliable and
fuel efficient.

The rail journeys promise passengers topclass comfort and style. To ensure that all these promises are kept and to provide air conditioning, underfloor heating, hot showers and other power-driven services, a special carriage, also
known as a power car, is also included. It carries Volvo Penta’s gen-sets, which have the task of producing electricity.

The relationship with Volvo Penta has been ongoing for more than a decade, with the first engines going into operation in 1999. The configuration for the power cars in which the gen-sets are located is typically one carriage with one prime unit and a second back-up unit installed. One gen-set runs continuously, but, should problems be encountered, Rovos Rail’s engineers have the option to switch over and the comfort of the passengers is not compromised.

There are five of these power cars in the Rovos fleet and, as maintenance manager, Coenie van der Walt explains, “All the stock is running and we have very few problems. The latest model is capable of running the auxiliary services for the whole train”. Coenie confirms that the Volvo Penta engines are reliable and fuel efficient, “We have calculated up to 20% fuel consumption savings with these units,” he comments.

“These engines are expected to run for 23,000 hours before they need overhauling or repairing.

This equates to more than 2.5 years of continuous running time,” he says. Coenie works closely with the general manager for Volvo Penta, Rudi Jones, on all sales, parts and service issues. The Volvo network of dealerships is situated on many of the routes covered by the Rovos Rail trains. Rovos Rail’s operation is a complex, multi-layered business. Founder and owner, Rohan Vos, strives to bring every aspect of purchasing, remodelling, refurbishing and maintenance under Rovos Rail’s control.
 
To achieve this, the business operates out of Capital Park Station, once the hub of steam locomotion in the old Transvaal, and employs engineers, technicians, carpenters and skilled workmen to keep the carriages, equipment and miscellaneous fittings up to standard. The steam locomotives are from a bygone era, but they can still convert 50,000 litres of water and 18 tonnes of coal into about 150-200 kilometres of 60 km an hour leisurely train travel. On the station, wooden panels were being sanded, doors planed, carriages cleaned and polished and fittings repaired. In a dedicated yard beyond
the platforms, a “scrap yard” of  locomotives, wheels, engines and carriages were lined up neatly, all awaiting the attention of qualified technicians to bring them back to full life and function. A Volvo Penta engine that has done its time stands alongside a disused locomotive and Coenie tells us that he will soon overhaul the engine and re-install the switchgear to bring it back into service as a gen-set available for the operation. The yard is even fitted with huge lifting equipment capable of lifting a whole train carriage or locomotive to allow for access to the wheels and other undercarriage functions.

Locomotive

The history of the enterprise is interesting; engineer and entrepreneur, Rohan Vos, has carved this small empire in the tradition of the renowned Orient Express in the heartland of Africa.

This family company was founded almost by chance after a trip in 1985 on another short train day trip, where Rohan was totally fascinated by the workings of the engine. Later that year, he investigated the option of buying a few rail carriages at auction with the aim of restoring them and ultimately hitching them to a South African Railways (SATS) train to serve as a family caravan. It was complicated working with SATS so Rohan went on to purchase a 1938 class 10D locomotive and negotiate permission to run the train along SATS rail lines. The costs proved to be pretty high, so the idea of running a vintage train as a business was conceived.

On 29 April 1989, the first train left Pretoria heading east for the lowveld of Mpumalanga. Rohan recalls, “It was a huge challenge to run a schedule-based
operation and the demand to provide ‘consistency and reliability to agents and passengers’ proved to be financially draining”.

However, a plan was eventually made to offer a trip from Cape Town to Victoria Falls and, by the end of that year, Rohan was delighted to receive confirmation for four train loads of travellers.

While this business may be perceived as a “train service”, it is far from that, as Rohan points out. “This is a service industry with high-demand, discerning customers,” he says and, when the train from Cape Town pulls in, he quickly moves off to meet and greet his passengers.