Baden VI c

Baden VI c
DRG Class 75.4,10–11
Number(s): DRG 75 401…494, 1001–1023, 1101–1120
Quantity: 135
Manufacturer: Karlsruhe, Jung
Year(s) of manufacture: 1914–1921
Retired: 1969
Wheel arrangement: 2-6-2T
Axle arrangement: 1'C1' h2t
Gauge: 1,435 mm
Length over buffers: 12,700 mm
Service weight: 76.2 t
Adhesive weight: 47.8 t
Axle load: 16.4 t
Top speed: 90 km/h
Indicated Power: 580 kW
Driving wheel diameter: 1,600 mm
Leading wheel diameter: 990 mm
Trailing wheel diameter: 990 mm
Cylinder bore: 540 mm
Piston stroke: 640 mm
Boiler Overpressure: 12 bar
Grate area: 2.12 m²
Superheater area: 43.02 m²
Evaporative heating area: 105.22 m²

The first steam locomotives of the Baden Class VI c were delivered in 1914 by the Maschinenbau-Gesellschaft Karlsruhe for service in southwestern Germany with the Grand Duchy of Baden State Railway (Großherzoglich Badische Staatsbahn).

Design

Their design benefited from experience with the Baden VI b steam engines, but they were a fundamentally different class with a superheater, new running gear with larger wheels and a longer, fixed wheelbase. The boiler was pitched higher, and the double steam dome was done away with along with its connecting pipe.

Service

The Grand Duchy of Baden State Railway procured a total of 135 of these engines between 1914 and 1921 in nine batches. After the end of the First World War, 15 locomotives had to be given away to France and 13 to Belgium as part of the reparations required under the terms of the Versailles Treaty.[1] The remaining 107 went to the Deutsche Reichsbahn. The lighter units of the first seven series were grouped into DRG Class 75.4, the heavier vehicles with a reinforced locomotive frame of the last two series were designated as DRG Class 75.10-11.

After the Second World War 66 Class VI c engines went into the Deutsche Bundesbahn, where they were stationed at various locomotive depots including Freiburg, Offenburg, Radolfzell, Singen, Waldshut, Karlsruhe and Villingen.[2] In 1967 the last one serving with the Bundesbahn, number 75 1118, was retired.[3] The Deutsche Reichsbahn in East Germany still had some of these engines working at that time.

Preserved

Number 75 1118 is operated today by the Ulmer Eisenbahnfreunde ('Ulm Railway Friends') on the branch line from Amstetten to Gerstetten [2] about 20 kilometres northwest of Ulm.

See also

References

  1. Eisenbahn Journal, Band No. 2 Typenblätter, Baureihen 60-98, Archiv 1/2001, Horst J. Obermayer, p 51, paragraph 1.
  2. 2.0 2.1 www.uef-dampf.de article '75 1118, the Baden VIc'
  3. Eisenbahn Journal, Band No. 2 Typenblätter, Baureihen 60-98, Archiv 1/2001, Horst J. Obermayer, p 51, paragraph 3.

External links