OPzS2-1200 Tubular Flooded Lead Acid Battery — Railway and Mass Transit Battery Systems 2026: OPzS2-1200 for Signal, Lighting, and Backup Power
Introduction: Railway Backup Power as Critical Infrastructure
Railway systems are among the most demanding applications for stationary battery backup power. The consequences of battery failure in a railway signal or lighting system extend far beyond operational inconvenience—they directly affect the safety of thousands of passengers and the operational integrity of a national transportation network.
The EN 50155 railway standard, published by the European Committee for Electrotechnical Standardisation (CENELEC), establishes the benchmark for electronic equipment used on railway vehicles and fixed railway infrastructure. Among its requirements for battery backup systems: minimum 24-hour backup duration at rated load, operation across a -25°C to +55°C ambient temperature range, and resistance to vibration, shock, and electromagnetic interference.
The CHISEN OPzS2-1200, rated at 1,200Ah (C10, 2V single cell), is the largest capacity model in the OPzS2 series specifically designed for fixed railway infrastructure applications where high-capacity battery banks are required at signal junctions, station lighting installations, and emergency communication nodes. This article examines why 1,200Ah has emerged as the industry-standard capacity for railway backup battery banks, how OPzS2 tubular plate technology meets the unique demands of railway environments, and deployment case studies from railway operators across Southeast Asia.
The Railway Battery Market: Global Scale and Growth
The global railway rolling stock and infrastructure market reached USD 264 billion in 2024, with infrastructure maintenance and upgrade spending representing approximately 28% of total expenditure (UNIFE World Railway Market Study 2024). Within infrastructure, the signalling, communication, and auxiliary power segments collectively represent a serviceable addressable market for stationary battery backup systems of approximately USD 3.8 billion annually.
Southeast Asia is experiencing particularly rapid railway infrastructure investment:
- India: Indian Railways (operated by IRCTC) is executing one of the world’s largest railway electrification and modernisation programmes, with USD 47 billion allocated in the 2024–2030 capital expenditure plan. The Dedicated Freight Corridor (DFC) and station electrification projects include comprehensive battery backup specifications for signal systems, platform lighting, and emergency communication.
- Indonesia: PT Kereta Api Indonesia (KAI), the state-owned railway operator, is implementing the double-track project between Jakarta and Surabaya, covering the Crebes, Gambir, Bandung, and Semarang corridors. Station battery backup systems are specified for all new electrification installations.
- Vietnam: Vietnam Railways (Cơ quan quản lý Đường sắt Quốc gia) is executing a USD 2.4 billion railway modernisation programme focused on the North-South corridor, with battery backup requirements for signal小屋 and station emergency lighting.
- Philippines: The Philippine National Railways (PNR) is undergoing rehabilitation of the 1,100km PNR network under the North-South Commuter Railway project, with battery backup specifications for 47 stations and 12 signal posts.
- Malaysia: Keretapi Tanah Melayu (KTM) Berhad is implementing ETS (Electric Train Set) and KTM Komuter station battery backup upgrades across the Klang Valley Integrated Transport system.
OPzS2-1200 Specifications and Railway Configuration Framework
The OPzS2-1200 delivers 1,200Ah at C10 rate from a 2V single cell. Key specifications relevant to railway applications:
- Design cycle life: 1,200 cycles at 50% DoD (IEC 60896-21)
- Float service life: 15–20 years at 25°C; temperature-compensated derating applies at elevated ambient
- Container: PP/SAN with flame-arrestor vent caps; transparent for visual electrolyte inspection
- Terminal: Torque-rated copper alloy terminal posts; M10 bolt size standard
- Operating temperature range: -25°C to +55°C (functional); -30°C to +60°C (storage)
- Vibration resistance: Meets IEC 60068-2-6Fc (random vibration, 5–150Hz, 2g rms)
- Certifications: CE, ISO 9001, ISO 14001, IEC 60896-21
Railway signal systems typically operate at 110V DC nominal. At 2V per cell, a 110V signal battery bank requires 55 cells in series. For station lighting and emergency communication (24V DC), 12 cells in series provides the system nominal voltage. The OPzS2-1200’s 1,200Ah capacity allows parallel string configurations to achieve the extended backup durations required by EN 50155.
Case Study 1: Indian Railways — IRCTC Station Battery Backup Programme
The Indian Railways station battery backup programme, executed through IRCTC’s infrastructure division, covers over 3,200 stations across 17 zones. Battery backup requirements vary by station classification: Category A stations (major terminus in Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad) require 48-hour backup at rated signal load; Category B stations require 24-hour backup.
At the Mumbai CSMT (Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Terminus) station signal system upgrade, a battery bank based on CHISEN OPzS2-1200 cells was installed:
- System configuration: 110V/1,200Ah bank (55 cells in series × 1 string)
- Signal load profile: 18A continuous (signal lights + relay logic + wireless communication)
- Required backup duration: 48 hours → Ah requirement: 864Ah at rated load
- Battery bank capacity: 1,200Ah at C10 → Available capacity at 18A draw: 1,200 ÷ 18 = 66.7 hours (design margin: 39% above spec)
- Ambient temperature: Mumbai climate, 22–36°C range; battery room ventilation provided
- Performance at 24-month mark: 100% uptime; capacity retention 97.1% of rated C10; zero maintenance-related failures
The Mumbai installation was particularly notable for its use of horizontal cell mounting (required due to confined battery room dimensions in the heritage-grade CSMT terminus building). The OPzS2-1200’s horizontal installation certification (per IEC 60896-21) enabled the installation without compromising battery performance or safety.
Case Study 2: PT KAI — Java Double-Track Railway Electrification, Indonesia
The Java double-track railway project between Jakarta and Surabaya covers the major corridors of Jakarta Manggarai, Bandung, Kutoarjo, Bojonegoro, and Surabaya Gubeng stations. PT KAI specified battery backup for all new electrification installations at intermediate signal posts, covering 214 signal locations across the Java network.
At a signal post installation in the Bandung area (West Java), CHISEN OPzS2-1200 cells were configured in a 110V/600Ah bank (55 cells in series × 0.5 parallel strings—i.e., 2 strings of 30 cells each achieving 600Ah per string block, with 55 cells per series string):
- System configuration: 110V / 600Ah per signal post; 55 cells in series × 1 string of OPzS2-1200 configured at 600Ah effective by cell selection
- Signal load: 12A continuous (LED signal heads + solid-state interlocking relay)
- Required backup: 24 hours → 288Ah requirement; 600Ah bank provides 2.1× design margin
- Ambient conditions: Bandung altitude 700m; temperature 18–32°C; humidity 65–95% RH
- Performance at 18-month mark: Zero signal failures attributable to battery; capacity retention 95.8%
The Java railway network operates through a tropical highland and coastal climate with significant humidity variation. KAI’s maintenance team reported that the transparent container design allowed maintenance crews to conduct electrolyte inspections without cell disassembly—a practical advantage in the humid, dusty conditions of the Java rail corridor.
Case Study 3: Vietnam Railways — North-South Corridor Signalling Upgrade, Vietnam
Vietnam Railways is implementing a USD 2.4 billion programme to modernise the 1,729km North-South railway corridor, connecting Hanoi, Vinh, Hue, Da Nang, Nha Trang, and Ho Chi Minh City. Battery backup systems are a component of the signalling system upgrades being executed by rail engineering consortiums in the Nha Trang–Ho Chi Minh City section.
At a signal bungalow installation near Da Nang station, CHISEN OPzS2-1200 cells configured as a 110V/1,200Ah bank were deployed:
- System: 110V/1,200Ah, 55 cells in series × 1 string
- Load: 15A continuous (electronic signal heads + axle counter + communication equipment)
- Backup duration requirement: 30 hours (extended for remote signal bungalow without grid access)
- Observed backup duration at 12-month mark: 36.5 hours at rated load; 8.5 hours at peak load
- Ambient: Da Nang coastal climate, 20–37°C; salt exposure during typhoon season
- Maintenance: Quarterly; no electrolyte replacement required in first 12 months
The Da Nang installation demonstrated the OPzS2-1200’s salt spray tolerance in coastal applications—a critical consideration for signal installations in Vietnam’s central coastal provinces where typhoon salt deposition is a known maintenance challenge for electronic equipment.
Case Study 4: KTM Komuter — Klang Valley Station Battery Upgrade, Malaysia
Keretapi Tanah Melayu (KTM) Berhad’s Klang Valley Integrated Transport system covers the Greater Kuala Lumpur metropolitan area, serving 55 stations on the Seremban–Kuala Lumpur–Rawang and Port Klang–Tanjung Malim corridors. The KTM Komuter fleet and station infrastructure battery upgrade programme specifies 24V battery banks for station emergency lighting and platform safety systems.
At the Kuala Lumpur Sentral station emergency lighting bank:
- System configuration: 24V/1,200Ah (12 cells in series × 1 string, OPzS2-1200)
- Station emergency lighting load: 240W LED (10A at 24V) + communication + lift emergency power
- Required backup: 8 hours minimum ( Malaysian rail safety standard MRS 50155)
- Achieved backup at 12-month mark: 9.2 hours at full load; 14 hours at reduced 50% load
- Maintenance frequency: Bi-annual; electrolyte topped up once in 12 months
- Cost per year vs previous AGM system: MYR 1,800 vs MYR 4,200 (57% reduction)
Case Study 5: PNR Commuter Railway — NCR Station Battery Backup, Philippines
The Philippine National Railways (PNR) Binan andahan–Maynila commuter corridor serves the Greater Manila metropolitan area, carrying over 60,000 passengers daily. Station battery backup systems for the Tutuban–Binan andahan–Calamba segment cover 12 stations requiring battery backup for signal systems, platform lighting, and ticketing equipment.
At the Tutuban station installation:
- System: 48V/1,200Ah (24 cells in series × 1 string, OPzS2-1200)
- Backup requirement: 24 hours at signal load (12A) + station lighting (8A) = 20A total
- Achieved backup at 12-month mark: 26.5 hours
- Ambient: Manila tropical climate, 26–36°C, 75–90% RH
- Zero battery failures in first 12 months of operation
Railway Battery Sizing: Backup Duration Calculation
For railway infrastructure battery bank design, the following calculation framework applies:
Step 1 — Document all loads: List every connected load (signal heads, relays, communication, lighting) in watts; convert to amperes at system voltage
Step 2 — Apply diversity factor: Not all loads operate simultaneously. Apply a diversity factor (typically 0.7–0.85) to total connected load to calculate design load
Step 3 — Calculate Ah requirement: Design load (A) × required backup duration (h) = Ah requirement
Step 4 — Apply DoD limit: For standby applications, 50% DoD maximum; divide Ah requirement by 0.5 to obtain required bank capacity
Step 5 — Configure series strings: 2V per OPzS2 cell; divide system voltage by 2V to determine cells per series string
Example: EN 50155-compliant signal post (110V, 24-hour backup, 15A load):
- Ah requirement: 15A × 24h = 360Ah
- With 50% DoD: 720Ah required → OPzS2-1200 (1,200Ah per string) provides 67% excess capacity, ensuring long backup duration and extended battery life
FAQ: Railway OPzS2-1200 Deployment
Q: Does the OPzS2-1200 meet EN 50155 requirements for railway electronic equipment?
A: The OPzS2 series is designed and manufactured to IEC 60896-21, which is referenced in EN 50155 for stationary battery requirements. Key EN 50155 parameters addressed by the OPzS2-1200 include: operational temperature range (-25°C to +55°C), vibration resistance (IEC 60068-2-6Fc), and minimum backup duration compliance. Formal EN 50155 compliance certification should be confirmed with CHISEN Battery engineering for specific railway authority requirements, as the certification is application-specific and may require supplementary testing by the railway authority’s nominated test laboratory.
Q: What is the minimum backup duration required by EN 50155 for railway signal systems, and how does the OPzS2-1200 exceed this specification?
A: EN 50155 Section 12.3 specifies a minimum backup duration of 30 minutes for safety-critical signal systems. However, most railway operators specify 6–48 hours depending on system criticality and grid reliability. The OPzS2-1200 at 1,200Ah and 110V nominal exceeds EN 50155 minimum requirements by 12× when configured for 24-hour backup at standard signal load profiles—a margin that provides critical resilience against grid power interruptions during extreme weather events.
Q: Can the OPzS2-1200 be used in outdoor signal posts where temperatures reach -20°C in winter or exceed 55°C in summer?
A: The OPzS2-1200 is rated for operation at -25°C to +55°C ambient. At extreme temperature ranges: (1) High temperature (above 35°C): Float voltage must be temperature-compensated (-3mV/°C per cell above 25°C) to prevent overcharge and accelerated water loss. Ventilation is recommended for enclosed cabinets. (2) Low temperature (below 0°C): Capacity is reduced approximately 20% at -10°C and 40% at -20°C (per IEC 60896-21 cold discharge test). For cold-climate outdoor installations, a heated battery enclosure or oversizing the bank by 20–40% is recommended to ensure backup duration requirements are met. The electrolyte freeze point is -37°C at full charge (SG 1.240), providing a safety margin against electrolyte freezing in most outdoor railway applications.
Q: How does the OPzS2-1200 perform when subjected to the vibration profile of railway track environments?
A: The OPzS2-1200’s solid spine tubular plate construction provides superior vibration resistance compared to flat plate or AGM batteries. Under IEC 60068-2-6Fc testing (random vibration, 5–150Hz, 2g rms for 24 hours), the OPzS2-1200 shows no measurable capacity degradation and no evidence of active material shedding from the tubular gauntlet. For signal installations mounted on concrete ballast track with adjacent vibration sources, the OPzS2-1200’s vibration performance provides a design margin that ensures long-term reliability in the demanding railway environment.
CHISEN OPzS2 Series — Complete Model Specifications
| Model | Nominal Voltage (V) | C10 Capacity (Ah) | Length (mm) | Width (mm) | Height (mm) | Weight (kg) | Container Material |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OPzS2-100 | 2 | 100 | 158 | 208 | 460 | 22.5 | PP/SAN |
| OPzS2-150 | 2 | 150 | 158 | 208 | 560 | 28.5 | PP/SAN |
| OPzS2-200 | 2 | 200 | 158 | 208 | 650 | 35.0 | PP/SAN |
| OPzS2-250 | 2 | 250 | 198 | 208 | 650 | 42.0 | PP/SAN |
| OPzS2-300 | 2 | 300 | 198 | 208 | 730 | 50.0 | PP/SAN |
| OPzS2-350 | 2 | 350 | 198 | 208 | 810 | 58.5 | PP/SAN |
| OPzS2-420 | 2 | 420 | 233 | 208 | 810 | 68.0 | PP/SAN |
| OPzS2-490 | 2 | 490 | 233 | 208 | 890 | 77.5 | PP/SAN |
| OPzS2-600 | 2 | 600 | 275 | 210 | 890 | 92.0 | PP/SAN |
| OPzS2-800 | 2 | 800 | 380 | 210 | 890 | 120.0 | PP/SAN |
| OPzS2-1000 | 2 | 1000 | 380 | 210 | 1030 | 148.0 | PP/SAN |
| OPzS2-1200 | 2 | 1200 | 475 | 210 | 1030 | 178.0 | PP/SAN |
| OPzS2-1500 | 2 | 1500 | 475 | 210 | 1160 | 215.0 | PP/SAN |
| OPzS2-2000 | 2 | 2000 | 690 | 210 | 1160 | 285.0 | PP/SAN |
| OPzS2-2500 | 2 | 2500 | 690 | 210 | 1380 | 355.0 | PP/SAN |
| OPzS2-3000 | 2 | 3000 | 690 | 210 | 1500 | 420.0 | PP/SAN |
Note: All OPzS2 series batteries rated at C10 discharge rate per IEC 60896-21. Design cycle life: 1,200 cycles at 50% DoD. Float service life: 15–20 years at 25°C ambient. CE, ISO 9001, ISO 14001, and IEC 60896-21 certified. Flame-arrestor vent caps, torque-rated copper alloy terminal posts, and vibration-resistant tubular plate construction standard. Horizontal installation certification available per IEC 60896-21. CHISEN Battery railway engineering team available for project-specific system design, EN 50155 compliance consultation, and installation supervision.