NZR WD class

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NZR WD class
Power type Steam
Builder Baldwin Locomotive Works
Serial number 18543–18554, 19259–19264
Build date 1901
Configuration 2-6-4T
Gauge 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm)
Length 34 ft 9 in
Total weight 44.5 t
Fuel type Coal
Career New Zealand Railways
Number in class 18
Number 316–327, 355–360
Locale Wanganui, Napier
First run 1901–1902
Retired 1935–1950
The correct title of this article is NZR WD class. It appears incorrectly here because of technical restrictions.

The NZR WD class was a class of tank locomotive built by Baldwin Locomotive Works to operate on New Zealand's national rail network. Essentially a more advanced version of 1898's WB class, the eighteen members of the WD class were ordered in 1901 and most entered service that year, though three were not introduced until the start of 1902. Based in locations all around the country, from Auckland in the north to Dunedin in the south, the WD class were suitable for a variety of trains from freight to suburban passenger services. Withdrawal of the class began with WD 356 in January 1933, with the final three, 327, 359, and 360, written off in March 1936. A number were not actually scrapped or dumped, but were sold to work on private industrial lines. One such locomotive, WD 357, survived long enough to be preserved by the Ferrymead Railway and notably still has its original boiler from 1901. It is currently the only operational example of a locomotive built by Baldwin for New Zealand, even though a total of 111 Baldwin locomotives were used by NZR.[1] Another WD, 356, has been located and salvaged by the Baldwin Steam Trust from where it was dumped near Pahiatua. This locomotive may one day be restored to mainline operational condition and is presently stored at the site of the Rimutaka Incline Railway Heritage Trust.[2]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Canterbury Railway Society, WD class Baldwin 2-6-4T No. 357, accessed 5 November 2007.
  2. ^ Rimutaka Incline Railway Heritage Trust, "Rail Vehicles", accessed 4 November 2007.

[edit] External links