Locomotives of New Zealand
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Locomotives of New Zealand currently in operation owned by Toll NZ consist of 172 diesel-electric locomotives, 22 electric locomotives, 59 electric multiple units, 3 railcars, and 103 shunting locomotives. There are also 29 diesel multiple units in Auckland, owned by the Auckland Regional Transport Authority (ARTA), and diesel-electric and steam locomotives and railcars in working order owned by private companies or preservation societies.
All New Zealand's main-line locomotives are 1067 mm (3 foot 6 inch) gauge.
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[edit] Classification details
The locomotives of Toll Rail and its predecessors are divided into classes. Each class was designed to perform specific duties. A class can be as small as one individual locomotive, and the largest class to run on New Zealand rails was the DA class, which comprised 146 locomotives.
Steam locomotives (which were retired from regular service by the end of October 1971) were originally categorised with just a single letter, such as the "F class". When a new class was built as an enhancement of an old class, the old class's letter was re-used, followed by a superscript upper-case letter. For example, the 1906 A class was followed by the AA and AB classes.
Diesel-electric and electric locomotive classifications originally consisted of an upper-case D or E respectively followed by a second and sometimes a third (sub-class) letter. The second and third letters are sometimes represented as smaller-sized upper case (for example, as seen on many locomotive cab-side number plates).
Diesel and diesel-electric classes appear to have originally been classified, after the first class letter ('D' as alluded to above), by the second letter being allocated to indicate the country of manufacture (for example DA for the American EMD designs, which were also, later, built in Canada and Australia; DE for England or 'English Electric'; DJ for the Mitsubishi units from Japan). Whilst this was a reasonable starting point, such issues as the introduction of 'sister models' and sub-classing caused by rebuild and refurbishment resulted in the pragmatic, contiguous use of other class letters. For example the eight cylinder version of the DA class became the DB class, and was later rebuilt as the DBR. When the DA class rebuilding began, the rebuilt locomotives became the DC class. Following the DJ there was a large gap in the classification continuum as NZR took a different tack and catalogued their new GE power as the DX class and then (because the original DFs had since been withdrawn) new Canadian-built EMD units took over that classification.
There are exceptions, and new classes were not always given the classification that alphabetically followed that of the previous class that had most recently been acquired. If an entire class had been withdrawn from service and the classification no longer in use, it was sometimes re-used; for example, two A classes exist, one from 1873 and one from 1906.
[edit] Traffic Monitoring System
Following the introduction of the computer-based Traffic Monitoring System (TMS) and consequent renumbering, classes were identified by the two upper-case letters with the first letter remaining D or E respectively and sub-classes being indicated by a third upper-case letter, such as DAA (DA modified for hump shunting), DAR (DA with rebuilt superstructure), DFT (DF with turbo-conversion), DXR (rebuilt DX), DQ (EMD units imported from Queensland), QR (EMD units imported from Queensland and placed into service unrebuilt - this non-standard classification originally intended to be temporary as these units were intended to eventually undergo rebuild). Most diesel-electric shunting locomotives have a three-letter classification with DS as the first two letters, following on from the original diesel-electric shunting class that was known simply as the DS class.
For electric locomotives the second letter often referred to where the locomotive was based, such as EC in Christchurch, EO in Otira and EW in Wellington. The ED and EF classes were an exception. The EM class in Wellington possibly stands for Electric Motor. ET is Electric Trailer. The DM class units were an exception to this.
Almost all railcars were classified RM (Rail Motor), and individual classes were known by alternate names such as the Vulcan railcars of the South Island and the Wairarapa railcars that ran over the Rimutaka Incline to the Wairarapa.
[edit] Liveries
New Zealand's locomotives have appeared in several different liveries over the ages. Steam locomotives were mainly black. When the railcars and first-generation diesels came in, they were painted in "carnation red" with a white or yellow stripe.
In the 1970s the first different livery appeared. Eleven members of the DJ class were painted "Southerner Blue" (mainly dark blue) to haul the Southerner express in the South Island. The Silver Fern railcars appeared in stainless steel, and the DX class, appearing in 1972, were painted "clockwork orange" (orange and yellow). In 1978, the rebuilt DC class appeared in "fruit salad" (red, yellow, grey and black), and many locomotives followed suit. Following the split of New Zealand Rail Limited from the New Zealand Railways Corporation in 1991, a modified livery of blue, yellow, grey and black appeared. For the first time, locomotives wore the name of their operator - New Zealand Rail - in prominent view. This livery was continued after 1993 when NZ Rail was privatised, and was slightly modified when the company was renamed Tranz Rail in 1995 by replacing the NZ Rail logo with the new Tranz Rail logo. In 2001 a new livery to promote level crossing safety was trialed on DC 4323. This colour scheme was nicknamed "bumble bee" because of its black and yellow colours. Following the takeover of Tranz Rail by Australia's Toll Holdings in 2004, Toll Rail's livery appeared, nicknamed "corn cob", consisting of green and yellow. Most of today's locomotives are painted in "fruit salad", blue, "bumble bee" or "corn cob".
[edit] Gallery
ADC 855 trailer unit at Britomart station. |
A DA class locomotive pulling the Endeavour at Paraparaumu in 1973 |
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Two DCs on the TranzAlpine |
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Two DJ class locomotives in service for Taieri Gorge Railway at Port Chalmers |
DQ 6324 in Tranz Rail colours at Palmerston North |
Two DX class locomotives on a coal train on the Midland line |
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A EF class locomotive on the North Island Main Trunk |
EW 1805 with DC 4611 near Paekakariki |
[edit] List of Locomotive Classes
This is a list of all classes of locomotives that operate or have operated on New Zealand's national railway network. It does not include locomotives used on private industrial lines or bush tramways. It is believed to be complete, and is sorted in alphabetical order rather than within type. Articles on specific individual classes can be accessed from this page.
[edit] Diesel-electric locomotives
(This list includes shunting classes. Some shunting classes worked on revenue services as well as performing yard shunting duties, most notably the DE class when it hauled Queen Elizabeth II's royal train in the early 1950s.)
- DA (including DAA and DAR)
- DB (including DBR)
- DC (including DCP)
- DE
- DF of 1954
- DF of 1979 (including DFB, DFM, DFT)
- DG (including English Electric DH of 1956, all converted to DG in 1968)
- DH of 1978 (General Electric)
- DI
- DJ
- DQ (including QR)
- DS
- DSA
- DSB
- DSC
- DSG
- DSJ
- DX (including DXB, DXC, DXH, DXR)
- EB (originally battery electric)
- TR
[edit] Electric locomotives
[edit] Battery electric locomotives
[edit] Electric Multiple Units
[edit] Railcars
Experimental railcars included the following:
- Clayton steam railcar
- Edison battery-electric railcar
- Leyland diesel railbus
- Leyland experimental petrol railcar
- MacEwan-Pratt petrol railcar
- Model T Ford railcar
- Sentinel-Cammell steam railcar
[edit] Diesel Multiple Units
[edit] Steam locomotives
- A of 1873
- A of 1906 (including AD)
- AA
- AB
- B Double Fairlie of 1874
- B of 1899
- BA
- BB
- BC
- C of 1873
- C of 1930
- D of 1874
- D of 1929
- E Double Fairlie of 1872-75
- E Mallet of 1906
- F
- FA (including FB)
- G of 1874
- G Garratt of 1929 (rebuilt[1937] as Pacifics)
- H
- J of 1874
- J of 1939
- JA
- JB
- K of 1877
- K of 1932
- KA
- KB
- L
- LA
- M
- N
- NA
- NC
- O
- OA
- OB
- OC
- P of 1876
- P of 1885
- Q of 1878
- Q of 1901 (the world's first Pacific locomotive)
- R
- S
- T
- U
- UA
- UB
- UC
- UD
- V
- W
- WA
- WAB (including WS)
- WB
- WD
- WE
- WF
- WG
- WH
- WJ
- WW
- X (the world's first Mountain locomotive)
- Y
Steam locomotive notes:
- ^ Two other types of locomotives built in the 1870s were included in the A class. All three had a wheel arrangement of 0-4-0T, but were technically and aesthetically quite different. The other A types are often known as the Shanks A and the Mills A, after their respective builders.
- ^ The M class started with a wheel arrangement of 0-6-0T; all were rebuilt as 2-4-4T.
- ^ A completely different type of locomotive was nominally classified as being the solitary member of the S class in 1877 (the main S class was not introduced until 1880), but it was typically known as Robina.
[edit] External links
- New Zealand Railways Steam Locomotives
- New Zealand Diesel and Electric Traction
- New Zealand Locomotives
- Current New Zealand Locomotive Assignments
[edit] References
- Heath, Eric, and Stott, Bob; Classic Railcars, Electric and Diesel Locomotives Of New Zealand, Grantham House, 1993
- Heath, Eric, and Stott, Bob; Classic Steam Locomotives Of New Zealand, Grantham House, 1993