In 1988, ten sets of 1938 stock were bought by
Network SouthEast for use on the
Island Line service on the
Isle of Wight, and were allocated two-car
TOPS Class 483. These units were heavily rebuilt and introduced between 1989 and 1992 to replace the even older
Class 485 and 486 trains that had been running on the line since 1967, also constructed from ex-Tube stock. Four sets have been scrapped and the other six have been withdrawn, with the final service running on the 3 January 2021. As of January 2021, on withdrawal, the Class 483s were the oldest stock in mainline usage in the United Kingdom, aged 82 years. The units were leased from
HSBC Rail until
South West Trains bought them outright in May 2007. After running many years in Network SouthEast (NSE) colours, the trains were repainted into a
Dinosaur themed livery to celebrate the Isle of Wight's rich palaeontological history. However, due to customer dissatisfaction, all trains returned to an approximation of their original LT train red livery; albeit with yellow fronts, as per mainline regulations in 2008. In early-2018, the units had the Island Line sign and the
South Western Railway logo. In 2019, South Western Railway announced that as part of a £26m programme of improvements to the Island Line, the Class 483s were finally due to be replaced, following a spate of severe service interruptions from technical faults arising in the 81-year-old stock. The
Vivarail D-Train, converted from
London Underground D78 Stock, was selected as the successor to the Class 483s; five two-car EMU units are to be used on the network and classified as
British Rail Class 484. The last converted 1938 stock ran in early 2021. Of the six units extant on the Isle of Wight at the time of retirement, four have been secured for preservation. 483006 and 483008 were obtained by the London Transport Traction Group for preservation and are currently at the
Llanelli & Mynwydd Mawr Railway in Carmarthenshire. South Wales two of the four preserved units are remaining on the Isle of Wight; 483007 was transferred to the adjacent Isle of Wight Steam Railway, initially as a static exhibit but with a medium-term goal of running the train, either via propulsion from one of the railway's diesel shunters or through the installation of a battery power supply system, while 483004, which had previously been used as a source of spare parts after withdrawal, was purchased by and delivered to Holliers Farm in
Hale Common, near the village of
Arreton. ==Accidents==