GWR 5700 Class

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Great Western Railway 5700 class
Great Western Railway 5700 class
GWR 5700 Class no. 4612,
as preserved on the Bodmin & Wenford Railway.
Power type Steam
Designer Charles B. Collett
Builder GWR Swindon Works (585);
Armstrong Whitworth (25);
W. G. Bagnall (100);
Beyer, Peacock & Co. (25);
Kerr Stuart (25);
North British Locomotive (75);
Yorkshire Engine Co. (25)
Build date 1929–1950
Total production 863
Configuration 0-6-0PT
Driver size 4 ft 7.5 in (1.410 m)
Boiler pressure 200 psi (1.38 MPa)
Cylinders Two, inside
Cylinder size 17.5 × 24 in
Valve gear Stephenson
Tractive effort 22,515 lbf (100.15 kN)
9729 at Highbridge Yard after the Western Region had taken over the S&D.
9729 at Highbridge Yard after the Western Region had taken over the S&D.

The Great Western Railway (GWR) 5700 Class is a class of 0-6-0 pannier tank steam locomotive, built between 1929 and 1950. 863 were built, making them the 2nd most produced British class of steam locomotive.

Contents

[edit] Overview

The GWR had favoured Pannier Tank locomotives since 1911 when they had started rebuilding locomotives built between 1870 and 1905 into this style. By 1929 these older locomotives were in need of replacement.

The first 5700s had round spectacles in the cab front but those built after 1933 had rectangular windows and a slightly different profile virtually identical to the style introduced with the GWR 5400 Class in 1931. Whilst they can be viewed as a simple update of the GWR 2721 Class, the Collett improvements were worthwhile and the class became as synonymous with the GWR as Castles and Kings, lasting until the end of steam on the Western Region of British Railways.

The size of the class demanded that the 5700 class locomotives were spread across several series of numbers.

  • 3600 - 3699
  • 3700 - 3799
  • 4600 - 4699
  • 5700 - 5799
  • 6700 - 6779
  • 7700 - 7799
  • 8700 - 8799
  • 9600 - 9682
  • 9701 - 9799

Most were built at Swindon Works, but about 25% were built by private builders:-

[edit] Other pannier tank locomotives

The GWR 5400 Class locomotives were a smaller engine derived from the William Dean -designed GWR 2021 Class, with larger wheels for higher top speed and fitted with autotrain apparatus ('auto-fitted') for push-pull passenger work. The GWR 6400 Class were similar to the 5400 Class, also being auto-fitted, but having the same size wheels as the 5700. The GWR 7400 Class were very similar to the 6400 Class, but were not auto-fitted and had a higher boiler pressure. The GWR 9400 Class was the post-war updated design: heavier and longer, but nominally no more powerful, using the same taper boiler as the GWR 2251 Class.

For a list of classes, see GWR 0-6-0PT.

[edit] The 9700 Class

11 engines of the 5700 Class, nos 9700-10 were turned out with various modifications for working along the Metropolitan Line.
11 engines of the 5700 Class, nos 9700-10 were turned out with various modifications for working along the Metropolitan Line.

The 9700 Class Pannier Tanks were a direct development of the 5700 Class. The prototype for the class, No.8700 (later 9700), was a rebuilt 5700 locomotive. They were specifically for working on the Metropolitan/Hammersmith & City lines between Paddington Stations and Smithfield Meat Market. They replaced 'Metro' and '633' class locomotives.

The eleven locomotives in the class had condensing apparatus that fed the exhaust steam back into the water tanks. The tanks themselves were shortened to make room for the external exhaust pipes and were extended down to the footplate in front of the cab to increase their capacity. As condensing the steam heated the water, a reciprocating pump (Weir pump) was fitted as a boiler feedwater pump because standard injectors will not work with hot water. The pumps led to (unsuccessful) tests with these locomotives acting as fire engines during World War II.

To work over the electrified underground lines, the 9700 Class locomotives had a special type of ATC equipment that lifted clear of the centre rail and had tripcock brake valves that matched the London Transport signalling system.

[edit] London Transport and industrial use

Several were sold to London Transport who used them until 1971.  Here is L95 (ex-5764) at Neasden in 1961.  This engine is now preserved.
Several were sold to London Transport who used them until 1971. Here is L95 (ex-5764) at Neasden in 1961. This engine is now preserved.

A number of 5700s were sold for further use after being withdrawn by British Railways. The National Coal Board bought a few (at least six) but the best known are those bought by London Transport.

Eleven 5700s were bought by London Transport and used on the London underground network starting in 1956. They replaced older LT steam locomotives on Permanent Way trains and were never used on normal passenger services. Main line running included trips between depots, to Acton Works and runs out to Croxley Tip, near Watford. A further two locomotives were later bought to replace classmates that were withdrawn in need of major repairs.

The tripcock brake valve system was fitted to these locomotives and worked on the vacuum system, stopping the locomotives whether or not they were pulling a train.

They were numbered L89 to L99 and were allocated to the depots at Lillie Bridge (Kensington) and Neasden. Only eleven were running at any one time, the original L90 being withdrawn for repairs but scrapped instead and replaced by another locomotive which carried the same number.

The LT 5700s lasted until the end of steam on London Transport in 1971. Three diesel locomotives were bought to carry out the shunting duties from then on.

GWR 5700s on London Transport
LT Number GWR/BR No. Date Built Date to LT Withdrawn by LT Notes
L89 5775 1929 1963 1969 Preserved
L90 (I) 7711 1930 1956 1961
L90 (II) 7760 1930 1961 1971 Preserved
L91 (I) 5752 1929 1956 1960
L91 (II) 5757 1929 1960 1968
L92 5786 1930 1958 1969 Preserved
L93 7779 1930 1958 1968
L94 7752 1930 1959 1971 Preserved
L95 5764 1929 1960 1971 Preserved
L96 7741 1930 1961 1967
L97 7749 1930 1962 1970
L98 7739 1929 1962 1970
L99 7715 1930 1963 1969 Preserved


The last 5700 in service was at Mountain Ash colliery, where it was working well into the 1970s and could still be seen on shed in 1980.

[edit] Preservation

Preserved No 7754 in NCB livery.
Preserved No 7754 in NCB livery.
5786 at Buckfastleigh in 2005.
5786 at Buckfastleigh in 2005.
Thumbs up from 5764's driver at Bewdley railway station in 2007.
Thumbs up from 5764's driver at Bewdley railway station in 2007.

A total of sixteen 5700 class locomotives have survived to be preserved along with a number of the other types of Pannier Tank.

GWR 5700s in Preservation
GWR/BR No. Date Built Built by Current Location Notes
3650 1936 Swindon Didcot
3738 1937 Swindon Didcot
4612 1942 Swindon Bodmin
5764 1929 Swindon Severn Valley Railway Ex LT L95
5775 1929 Swindon Worth Valley Ex LT L89
5786 1930 Swindon South Devon Railway Ex LT L92
7714 1930 Kerr Stuart Severn Valley Railway Ex NCB
7715 1930 Kerr Stuart Quainton Road Ex LT L99
7752 1930 North British Loco Tyseley Ex LT L94
7754 1930 North British Loco Llangollen Railway Ex NCB
7760 1930 North British Loco Tyseley Ex LT L90
9600 1945 Swindon Tyseley
9629 1945 Swindon Pontypool
9642 1946 Swindon Glos.Warks
9681 1949 Swindon Dean Forest
9682 1949 Swindon Chinnor & Princes Risborough

As the oldest locomotives were the first to be withdrawn and sold for further use, there are a disproportional number of early locomotives in preservation. A number of those bought from London Transport were still in running order and were used on preserved lines with minimal work. Interestingly, 5764 (ex-LT L95) was steamed the day it arrived at Bridgnorth on the Severn Valley Railway, being lit-up before it had be removed from the low loader on which it was delivered.

Several preserved locomotives have run in London Transport colours but only 7715/L99 has been consistently so painted.

[edit] The 5700 Class in Fiction

5775 on the Keighley and Worth Valley Railway featured in the film The Railway Children painted Brown and lettered for the "Great Northern and Southern Railway".

"Duck the Great Western Engine" in the The Railway Series books and the TV series Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends by Rev. W Awdry is a 5700 class Pannier Tank.

[edit] See also

  • GWR 0-6-0PTlist of classes of GWR 0-6-0 pannier tank, including table of preserved locomotives

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  • A pictorial Record of Great Western Engines, J.H.Russell (1975)
  • Keighley & Worth Valley Locomotives as they were, Tom Heavyside (1996)
  • Severn Valley Locomotives as they were, Tom Ferris (1995)
  • The last years of Metropolitan Steam, H.C.Casserley