British Rail Class 16
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
BR Class 16 | ||
---|---|---|
TOPS numbers | None | |
Early numbers | D8400-D8409 | |
Builder | North British Locomotive Company | |
Introduced | 1958 | |
Wheel Arrangement | Bo-Bo | |
Weight | 68 te | 69091 kg |
Height | 12 ft 6 in | 3.8 m |
Width | 8 ft 8.5 in | 2.7 m |
Length | 42 ft 6 in | 13.0 m |
Wheel Dia. | 3 ft 7 in | 1.1 m |
Bogie Wheel Base | 8 ft 6 in | 2.6 m |
Bogie Pivot Centres | 20 ft | 6.1 m |
Minimum radius | 3 ½ chains | 70.4 m |
Maximum speed | 60 mph | 97 km/h |
Engine output | 800 hp 627 hp at rail |
597 kW 468 kW |
Max. Tractive Effort | 42,000 lbf | 187 kN |
Cont. Tractive Effort | ||
Brake type | Vacuum | |
Brake force | 31 te | 309 kN |
Route availability | 4 | |
Fuel Tank | 400 imp gal | 1,800 litre |
Multiple Coupling | Red Circle | |
Heating type | None; through steam pipe | |
Boiler Water Capacity|None |
The Class 16 diesel locomotive was ordered under the Modernisation Scheme as a Type 1 locomotive for the Eastern Region; based on prototype No. 10800. Only ten were ever built and were completely incompatible with virtually every other fleet. This class was troubled by poor reliability and was scrapped relatively early.
The engine was a Paxman 16YHXL with 7 in (178 mm) cylinder bore and 7.75 in (197 mm) cylinder stroke. The traction motors were 4 x GEC WT 441, nose suspended with single reduction gear drive. The Main Generator was a GEC WT 881and the Auxiliary Generator was also of GEC manufacture.