4-8-0
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Under the Whyte notation for the classification of steam locomotives, a 4-8-0 locomotive has four leading wheels, eight coupled driving wheels and no trailing wheels. The type was nicknamed the Mastodon or Twelve-wheeler in North America. Mastodon (No. 229) was the unofficial name of the very first 4-8-0, which was built by the Central Pacific Railroad in 1882 at the Sacramento Locomotive Works.
In the United States the 4-8-0 was essentially a freight locomotive - a marginal devleopment of the 2-8-0. Most US 4-8-0s were built in the late 19th century or early 20th century, but the type never achieved great popularity. The wide-firebox 2-8-2 Mikado had much more potential as far as speed but the Norfolk & Western's 4-8-0s needed the short wheelbase and 4 wheel lead or engine truck for stability and the ability to have over 90 percent of the engines weight on the drivers. N&W's 4-8-0s were the largest built and many lasted into the 1950s. One was even converted into a high availability-low maintenance automatic type locomotive. In continental Europe, notably France and Austria, the type was used for heavy passenger work. In Britain the type was use in small numbers for shunting tanks.
Other equivalent classifications are:
UIC classification: 2D (also known as German classification and Italian classification)
French classification: 240
Turkish classification: 46
Swiss classification: 4/6
In the United Kingdom, there were two classes of 4-8-0 tank locomotives, both built for hump shunting. Fifteen were built by the North Eastern Railway, designated NER Class X, later LNER Class T1. These had three cylinders, following Robinson's 0-8-4 design for the Great Central. The London and South Western Railway also built a class of four two-cylinder machines to Urie's design for Feltham marshalling yards. The Great Southern and Western Railway in Ireland similarly had a small class of inside-cylinder shunting machines .
Both the London Midland and Scottish Railway and the Southern Railway however contemplated 4-8-0 tender freight engines, but these never materialised.[1]
In Austria, the wheel arrangement was used for some express locomotives: class 570 of 1915 and class 113 of 1923, both numbered as class 33 from 1938 on.
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[edit] Australia
The 4-8-0 saw service in Australia from 1900.
In Tasmania the private railway company of Emu Bay ordered 4 of these 4-8-0 tendered locomotives for their narrow (1,066mm) gauge system. In 1910 another locomotive was delivered from the now reformed North British Coy. Two examples of these engines are preserved.
Initially designed in South Australia for use on its narrow gauge 3ft 6 ins (1,066mm) system, a new class of 4-8-0 engine proved suitable workhorses and by 1917 there were seventy eight locomotives in the class. During 1922-23 five of the class were converted to state's broad gauge system (1,600mm) and then reconverted during 1949 back to narrow gauge. In 1921-22 the Tasmanian Government purchased six of the SAR narrow gauged engines. During the Second World War the Commonwealth Railways also obtained four SAR narrow gauge locomotives for a period. Several ex-SAR engines are preserved.
In Queensland the QR which also operates a narrow gauge system a 4-8-0 class was introduced in 1903 as C16 class locomotives. A total of 152 engines were in service by 1917. During the Second World War (1939-45) the Commonwealth Government acquired eleven C16s on loan. Only one example of this class was preserved. From 1920, as the Queensland 4-8-0s acquired super heaters they were classed as C17 - and all up 227 engines were in this class. The Commonwealth Railways also ordered 22 engines of the same class for their narrow gauge rail system. Twenty examples of the class are preserved.
In 1922 the QR ordered 22 new 4-8-0s as class 19 engines. (all Australian details: Oberg)
[edit] France
In France this wheel arrangement appeared as the famous 240P, 2-4-0 referring to the number and arrangement of axles rather than wheels. These machines were technically rebuilds of some of the earliest Pacifics in Europe, built for the Chemin de Fer de Paris à Orléans. The 240P was considered to be one of André Chapelon's finest works and benefited from his thorough understanding of thermodynamics and his appreciation of the need to consider the entirety of the steam circuit. The locomotive was a 4 cylinder compound fitted with Lentz-Dabeg poppet valves. With a power output of 4,700 kilowatts (6,302.80 hp) the 240P was reported to have the highest power to weight ratio of any steam locomotive. Discussion continues as to how robust they were mechanically - whether the size of the bearings was too near the bone, or whether they were simply worked to death during the difficult war years. Coupled with the elegant French style tender the second batch at least was also a very aesthetic locomotive. Unfortunately none have survived into preservation.
[edit] South Africa
[edit] Soviet Union
In Soviet Union 4-8-0 were the first passenger locomotives built by the new state. They were represented by one hundred M-class locomotives built by Putilov Works in Leningrad (Saint Peterburg) in 1927. Initially built as a 3-cylinder machines they were later rebuilt as a 2-cylinder ones and redesignated as Mr. The M series were not considered a great success, and the are not to be confused with Norfolk & Western's successful M class 4-8-0 (See "4-8-0 475").
[edit] References
- Marsden, Richard. The Worsdell Class T1 4-8-0 Tank Locomotives. Retrieved on April 27, 2005.
- Oberg, Leon. Locomotives of Australia, Reed, Sydney, 1975.
- ^ Cox, Locomotive Panorama, Volume 1; Holcroft, Locomotive Adventure, Volume 1
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