The shunters are not fitted with air brakes but are through-piped to enable them to be worked dead as part of a normal train.[3] An exception to that is RT46, a standard "Aresco Trak Chief", the only one of its type built for the VR, which entered service in 1966. RT54 is a one-off unit acquired from the Portland Harbour Trust, which had used the vehicle on its private siding. In March 1989, it was reported that a refurbishment program for rail tractors was being undertaken at the Ballarat Railway Workshops and, as units went through the program, they were repainted into the then-current V/Line orange livery.[4]
Units currently authorised to operate on Victorian tracks are RT 3-40, 42-43 and 45–53, the second group being more powerful, and all are permitted to travel at 15 km/h maximum.[3] Units RT 18, 28 and 43 were gauge converted and transferred to Sydney for use on the construction of the Epping to Chatswood railway.[5]
^"VICSIG". vicsig.net. Archived from the original on 8 June 2021. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
^Railmac Publications (1992). Australian Fleetbooks: V/Line locomotives. Kitchner Press. ISBN0-949817-76-7.