JGR Class 7170 | |
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Power type | Steam |
Builder | Baldwin Locomotive Works |
Build date | 1889 |
Total produced | 2 |
Configuration | 2-6-0 |
Gauge | 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) |
Driver diameter | 1,016 mm (3 ft 4.0 in) |
Length | 13.005 m (42 ft 8.0 in) |
Height | 3.696 m (12 ft 1.5 in) |
Weight on drivers | 7.77 t (7.65 long tons; 8.56 short tons) |
Locomotive weight | 24.33 t (23.95 long tons; 26.82 short tons) |
Tender weight | 15.44 t (15.20 long tons; 17.02 short tons) |
Locomotive & tender combined weight |
39.77 t (39.14 long tons; 43.84 short tons) |
Fuel type | Coal |
Fuel capacity | 1.88 t (1.85 long tons; 2.07 short tons) |
Water capacity | 4,220 l (930 imp gal; 1,110 US gal) |
Boiler pressure | 760 kPa (110 psi) |
Heating surface: Total |
69.8 m2 (751 sq ft) |
Cylinder size | 356 × 457 mm (14.0 × 18.0 in) |
The Japanese Class 7170 steam locomotive was among the first trains to be used in Hokkaidō, and was utilized alongside the JNR Class 7100 on the Horonai Railway.
The two tender locomotives that were to become the Class 7170 were purchased from the American Baldwin Locomotive Works in 1889, and were included into the numbering sequence of the six 7100 trains as numbers 7 and 8. Soon afterwards, the Horonai Railway came to be controlled by Hokuyūsha company president Murata Tsutsumi, who renamed them "First Murata" and "Second Murata" (dai-ichi and dai-ni Murata). The two were later sold off by the Meiji government, which privatized (sold) a great many government endeavors.
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Though originally numbered 8 & 9 upon their import from the United States, the two locomotives were re-numbered 9 & 10 upon their sale by the government-controlled Horonai Railway to the Hokkaidō Colliery and Railway Company in 1889. The 1906 Railway Nationalization Act then incorporated the Hokkaidō Collery and Railway Company into the Japanese Government Railways. Three years later, legislation would formalize and standardize the numbering, establishing the Class 7170 as consisting of these two locomotives, dubbed 7170 and 7171. At this time, the chimneys were altered, and the forward sections of the steam rooms expanded.
Following the nationalization of the railways, in 1920 the two were sold to the Suttsu Railways, and re-numbered No. 1 and No. 2, serving Kutchan, Muroran, Asahikawa and Hakodate. Though they served their new purpose well, and were used extensively, one of the locomotives suffered an accidental collision on July 2, 1950, and was scrapped the following year.
The tender locomotives had their maker's standard 2-6-0(1C) axle positions. Like the 7100 series, they bore a diamond-shaped chimney and cow catcher in the older American style, but had straight-top boilers instead of wagon-top ones, and a steam-dome in the second boiler compartment. The furnace was located between the second and third driving wheels, which were 1,372 mm apart; the first and second driving wheels were 2,296 mm apart. Of the tender's three axles, the second and third were bogies.
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