NZR DSA class
The New Zealand Railways DSA class was a class of 0-6-0DM diesel-mechanical locomotives built by W. G. Bagnall, Hunslet, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, and Vulcan Foundry for the Drewry Car Co. They were built between 1953 and 1968.
Introduction to service
Following on from the success of the initial batch of DS class 0-6-0DM shunting locomotives, NZR management decided to acquire further locomotives of this type. These locomotives would be similar to the DS class, and would be allocated to the major centres where they would be used primarily as shunting locomotives. As they would be slightly heavier, these locomotives were allocated the DSA classification.
The first batch of seven DSA class locomotives arrived in 1953 from the Drewry Car Company, with another fourteen coming from that maker the following year. NZR also placed orders in 1954 with W. G. Bagnall and Hunslet for a further ten and fifteen locomotives respectively, which were delivered in 1956-57 by Bagnall and 1954-58 by Hunslet. After this, no further DSAs were purchased until NZR placed an order with Mitsubishi Heavy Engineering for a further ten locomotives in 1967, all of which were delivered later that year.
The DSA class locomotives
Drewry Car Company
- Road numbers DSA 216-235 (TMS DSA 209-401)
- Maker's Nos. 2414/D163-2433/D182
Designated as maker's model A-2, these locomotives were built by the Vulcan Foundry of English Electric for the Drewry Car Company. They weighed 29.5 tons ready for service, and were powered by a Gardner 8L3 diesel engine producing 204 hp. The driving wheels were 39¾", the same size as that of the DS class. All entered service between November 1953 and June 1954, and were based mostly in the North Island. However two locomotives, DSA's 218 and 234, were reallocated to the South Island and were noted in January 1977 as being based at Invercargill.[1]
Visually, the Drewry DSA was very similar to the earlier DS class, although the upper half of the cab tapered inwards as opposed to the straight-sided cab of the DS. Most retained their original red livery to the end of their service with NZR although two, DSA 265 (pre-TMS DSA 221) and DSA 401 (pre-TMS DSA 235) did receive the International Orange livery at NZR Otahuhu Workshops in 1982 and 1983 respectively.[2]
W. G. Bagnall
- Road numbers DSA 240-249 (TMS DSA 414-510)
- Maker's Nos. 3079-3088
These ten locomotives were standard Bagnall 0-6-0DM shunting locomotives, similar to those supplied to Tasman Pulp and Paper in 1954 (one locomotive) and Wilsons Portland Cement in 1958 (two locomotives). They weighed 30.6 long tons (34.3 short tons; 31.1 t) ready for service, and were originally powered by a National M4AA6 diesel engine producing 240 hp (180 kW) connected to a Vulcan-Sinclair fluid coupling and Wilson five-speed epicyclic gearbox.[3] They had 39 3⁄4 in (1,010 mm) wheels and a top speed of 52 km/h (32 mph) as built, later reduced to 39 km/h (24 mph) after re-powering. All were exclusively based in the North Island, and in 1977 it was noted that DSA's 240-247 were based in Wellington while DSA's 248 and 249 were based at Palmerston North. Later, several migrated to Gisborne where they finished their NZR service.
Due to issues with the M4AA6 engine, NZR decided to refit the locomotives in 1968 with more reliable 315 hp (235 kW) Caterpillar D343T diesel engines and Twin Disc torque converters. This resulted in the cosmetic appearance of the locomotive changing with a new housing mounted on the left-hand side running board to protect the torque converter while several hood panels were fitted with large mesh sections to improve cross-ventilation.
Most of the locomotives were eventually repainted into the International Orange livery. One notable variant of this was DSA 470 (pre-TMS DSA 245) after it was involved in an accident which destroyed the original hood-front. A new one was fabricated from sheet metal, giving 470 a more austere look with its flat-faced hood. This locomotive spent its last years working out of Gisborne and was withdrawn in April 1990.
W. G. Bagnall for industry
- Road numbers 3079 (maker's number), WPC 10-11
- Maker's NO's 3079, 3132, 3144
A further three 0-6-0DM locomotives were built by W. G. Bagnall for industrial service in New Zealand. The first, Bagnall 3079 of 1954, was delivered to Tasman Pulp & Paper for use at their Kinleith paper plant in the Bay of Plenty. The other two, maker's nos. 3132 and 3144 of 1958, were delivered to Wilsons Portland Cement for use on their private quarry railway at Portland, just south of Whangarei. All three were exactly the same as the ten NZR locomotives which were built to the same pattern as Bagnall 3079. They were initially equipped with National M4AA6 diesel engines producing 240 hp (180 kW).
All three were later re-powered by A & G Price at their Thames workshops; Bagnall 3079 with a 315 hp (235 kW) Caterpillar D343T diesel engine and Twin Disc torque converter, while the two Portland locomotives, numbered WPC 10 (3132) and WPC 11 (3144) received 204 hp (152 kW) Gardner 8L3 diesel engines which were used in the DS and Drewry DSA class locomotives. Bagnall 3079 was also later fitted with extra ballast weight to increase its power output
Bagnall 3079 was withdrawn in 1989 due to the increased shunting being beyond its capabilities. Replaced by chop-nosed DA 512, it was provisionally sold to the Bay of Islands Vintage Railway who planned to have it towed by rail to their Kawakawa depot. Unfortunately NZ Rail Ltd was concerned that the tyres needed reprofiling and wanted the locomotive to be road transported to Westfield depot in Auckland for this work to be carried before it could be moved by rail. Unable to meet the cost of transporting the locomotive and reprofiling the tyres, the BoIVR were unable to move the locomotive and it was later scrapped at Kinleith in 1990.
WPC 10 and 11 were retired in 1990 when the Portland quarry railway closed. Both were sold to Kamo Engineering and were moved to their yard where the Gardner 8L3 engines were removed and fitted in a ship. After being stored in the yard for 15 years both were sold in 2005:
- WPC 10 was purchased by the Whangarei Steam and Model Railway Club and moved to their short line at the Whangarei Museum, Kamo in 2005. It has been cosmetically overhauled pending the arrival of a replacement Gardner 8L3 or similar low-revolution diesel engine. Its current livery is that of Wilsons Portland Cement Ltd, but with a darker shade of blue used in place of the original.
- WPC 11 moved to the Waitara Railway Preservation Society depot at Waitara Road (Brixton) in 2005. It stayed here for five years before moving to the Taranaki Flyer Trust's depot in the former Stratford goods shed. Since the trust folded this has returned to Waitara. Bagnall 3144 has not been restored and retains its original Portland Blue livery, albeit heavily faded and rust-streaked. A Gardner 8L3 engine has been acquired for this locomotive when restoration commences.
Hunslet Engine Company
- Road numbers DSA 250-264 (TMS DSA 523-510)
- Maker's NOs. 4528-4537, 4697-4701
These fifteen locomotives were standard Hunslet 0-6-0DM diesel shunting locomotives, similar to the British Rail Class 2/8 and 2/9 class shunting locomotives. They weighed 30.5 long tons (34.2 short tons; 31.0 t) ready for service and had 39 3⁄4 in (1,010 mm) wheels. The initial batch of ten locomotives were fitted with National M4AA6 diesel engines developing a slightly higher 250hp powering a Hunslet friction clutch and four-speed gearbox but this gave trouble and the last batch were fitted with hydraulic transmissions, again powered by the 250hp M4AA6.
All of the Hunslet locomotives were based exclusively in the South Island and came in three batches - the first in 1954-55 (DSA's 250-254, 257), the second in 1956 (DSA's 255, 258) and the third and final batch in 1957-58 (DSA's 256, 257, 259-264). At an early stage five were repowered with 204hp Gardner 8L3 diesel engines but all were eventually repowered with 315hp Caterpillar D343T engines.
Mitsubishi Heavy Engineering
- Road numbers DSA 265-276 (TMS DSA 699-822)
- Maker's NO's. 1460-1471
These eleven locomotives were the last DSA class locomotives to enter service and the most modern. They weighed 38.1 tons ready for service and had 39¾" wheels. All were fitted with 315 hp Caterpillar D343T diesel engines with Twin Disc torque converters. All were exclusively confined to the South Island pre-1991. The class was regularly allocated to Timaru and at least three locomotives of this type were allocated here in the 1980s.
Withdrawal and preservation
With the rationalisation of New Zealand Railways Corporation in the 1980s, the need for the DSA class was reduced, with the first locomotives of this class being withdrawn early in this decade. The entire class was withdrawn by 1990 with the exception of two locomotives; Hunslet DSA 551 (DSA 253) which was owned by Railways but used as the shunting locomotive for the Kingston Flyer at Kingston, and Mitsubishi DSA 782 (DSA 273) which had been overhauled and moved to Poverty Bay for use at Wairoa as a shunting locomotive.
Due to the number of DSA class locomotives and their higher power rating, these locomotives were purchased in large numbers by industrial users. A fewer number of locomotives were purchased direct from Railways as they were withdrawn.
Return to service
In the 1990s, New Zealand Rail Ltd. and its successor Tranz Rail took two DSA class locomotives back into their stock list - Hunslet DSA 551 (DSA 253) and Mitsubishi DSA 782 (DSA 273).
In 1991, DSA 782 was returned from loan to Rail Base Systems after the conclusion of track recovery beyond Middlemarch on the Otago Central Railway. Although obsolete, the DSA was overhauled and dispatched to Wairoa on the Palmerston North-Gisborne Line for use as a shunting locomotive in 1995. It retained its "International Orange" livery but with Frutiger-script numbers on the cab. The locomotive was later on-sold to the Northland Dairy Company and used to shunt their plant at Kauri.
In 1999, former Kingston Flyer shunting locomotive DSA 551 was replaced by a TR class loco. The DSA was then trucked to Dunedin and overhauled at Hillside Workshops, during which time it was repainted in a variant of the Tranz Rail "Cato Blue" livery. It was returned to service in 2001, before moving to Awatoto in 2003 to replace Mainline Steam-owned DSA 258 (DSA 617) at Ravensdown Fertiliser Awatoto. The locomotive was later sold to Ravensdown for use as their plant shunter.
Class register
Key: | In service | Out of service | Auckland Transport service | Preserved | Overhaul/Repair | Scrapped |
---|
Original no. | TMS no. | Builder | Introduced | Withdrawn | Allocated | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
216 | 209 | Drewry | November 1953 | March 1981 | North Island | Formerly displayed at a park in New Plymouth. |
217 | 211 | Drewry | November 1953 | April 1984 | North Island | Formerly known as "Lady Di". Used by Baymilk for their Edgecumbe plant until March 1987 when the 1987 Edgecumbe Earthquake struck. Scrapped in 1994 after being surplus to their requirements.[4] |
218 | 224 | Drewry | December 1953 | August 1982 | South Island | Preserved, The Plains Railway. |
219 | 237 | Drewry | December 1953 | April 1984 | North Island | |
220 | 252 | Drewry | December 1953 | March 1981 | North Island | |
221 | 265 | Drewry | December 1953 | August 1986 | North Island | |
222 | 278 | Drewry | March 1954 | April 1984 | North Island | Preserved, East Coast Museum. |
223 | 280 | Drewry | March 1954 | December 1985 | North Island | Preserved, Museum of Transport and Technology. |
224 | 293 | Drewry | March 1954 | April 1984 | North Island | |
225 | 305 | Drewry | March 1954 | August 1986 | North Island | Preserved, Cable Bay Railway. |
226 | 318 | Drewry | April 1954 | December 1983 | North Island | |
227 | 320 | Drewry | December 1953 | February 1982 | North Island | Preserved, Feilding and District Steam Rail Society. |
228 | 333 | Drewry | March 1954 | April 1982 | North Island | |
229 | 346 | Drewry | February 1954 | March 1981 | North Island | |
230 | Drewry | January 1954 | September 1978 | North Island | Formerly preserved by the Glenbrook Vintage Railway. Scrapped in 1990 due to shunting damage.[5] | |
231 | 359 | Drewry | December 1953 | October 1986 | North Island | Preserved, Minogue Park, Te Rapa. |
232 | 361 | Drewry | February 1954 | April 1982 | North Island | |
233 | 374 | Drewry | March 1954 | March 1981 | North Island | |
234 | 387 | Drewry | June 1954 | March 1981 | South Island | Preserved, Oamaru Steam and Rail. |
235 | 401 | Drewry | June 1954 | August 1986 | North Island | |
240 | 414 | Bagnall | December 1956 | March 1990 | North Island | Preserved, Waitara Railway Preservation Society. |
241 | 427 | Bagnall | January 1957 | December 1988 | North Island | |
242 | 442 | Bagnall | February 1957 | December 1988 | North Island | Formerly preserved by the Gisborne City Vintage Railway. Scrapped 1990. |
243 | 455 | Bagnall | September 1956 | December 1988 | North Island | Preserved, Glenbrook Vintage Railway. |
244 | 468 | Bagnall | February 1957 | April 1990 | North Island | |
245 | 470 | Bagnall | February 1957 | April 1990 | North Island | |
246 | 483 | Bagnall | March 1957 | April 1990 | North Island | Winstone Pulp & Paper, Karioi. |
247 | 496 | Bagnall | October 1956 | December 1988 | North Island | |
248 | 508 | Bagnall | October 1956 | December 1988 | North Island | |
249 | 510 | Bagnall | September 1956 | September 1989 | North Island | |
250 | 523 | Hunslet | November 1954 | March 1981 | South Island | |
251 | 536 | Hunslet | November 1954 | September 1982 | South Island | Formerly used by PPC at their Burnside plant. |
252 | 549 | Hunslet | November 1954 | September 1982 | South Island | Owned by PPC Burnside. Currently on loan to the Ocean Beach Railway. |
253 | 551 | Hunslet | November 1954 | 2004 | North Island | Withdrawn in April 1985. Returned to service on 10 April 2001. Formerly used by Ravensdown, Awatoto. Preserved, Goldfields Railway. |
254 | 564 | Hunslet | July 1955 | November 1982 | South Island | |
255 | 577 | Hunslet | March 1956 | November 1982 | South Island | Formerly used by NZ Cement at their Burnside plant. |
256 | 592 | Hunslet | September 1955 | August 1986 | South Island | Preserved, Ocean Beach Railway. |
257 | 604 | Hunslet | January 1956 | March 1981 | North Island | |
258 | 617 | Hunslet | January 1956 | August 1985 | North Island | Formerly preserved by the Mainline Steam. Scrapped in 2004 due to shunting damage.[6] |
259 | 632 | Hunslet | May 1957 | November 1987 | South Island | Formerly used by NZ Cement at their Burnside plant. |
260 | 645 | Hunslet | June 1957 | November 1982 | South Island | |
261 | 658 | Hunslet | June 1957 | April 1985 | South Island | Preserved by a Dunedin local. |
262 | 660 | Hunslet | June 1957 | April 1985 | South Island | Preserved, Nelson Railway Society. |
263 | 673 | Hunslet | June 1957 | March 1981 | South Island | |
264 | 686 | Hunslet | March 1958 | November 1987 | South Island | Formerly used by NZ Cement at their Burnside plant. |
265 | 699 | Mitsubishi | September 1967 | February 1988 | North Island | |
266 | 700 | Mitsubishi | September 1967 | February 1988 | North Island | |
267 | 713 | Mitsubishi | September 1967 | February 1988 | South Island | |
268 | 726 | Mitsubishi | September 1967 | February 1988 | North Island | |
269 | 739 | Mitsubishi | October 1967 | February 1988 | North Island | |
270 | 741 | Mitsubishi | September 1967 | February 1988 | South Island | |
271 | 754 | Mitsubishi | September 1967 | August 1989 | South Island | |
272 | 767 | Mitsubishi | August 1967 | February 1988 | North Island | |
273 | 782 | Mitsubishi | September 1967 | February 1988 | North Island | Fonterra, Kauri. |
274 | 795 | Mitsubishi | September 1967 | February 1988 | North Island | |
275 | 807 | Mitsubishi | October 1967 | February 1988 | North Island | |
276 | 822 | Mitsubishi | September 1967 | February 1988 | South Island | Preserved, Weka Pass Railway. |
Industrial locomotive register
Key: | In service | Out of service | Auckland Transport service | Preserved | Overhaul/Repair | Scrapped |
---|
Builder | Builders Number | Entered Service | Withdrawn | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
W. G. Bagnall | 3079 | 1954 | 1989 | Formerly used by Tasman Forestry. |
W. G. Bagnall | 3132 | 1958 | 1990 | Formerly used by Portland Cement as PC 10. Preserved, Whangarei Steam and Model Railway Club. |
W. G. Bagnall | 3144 | 1958 | 1990 | Formerly used by Portland Cement as PC 11. Preserved, Waitara Railway Preservation Society. |
References
- ↑ McGavin, p. 31.
- ↑ http://nzrailwaysrollingstocklists.weebly.com/dsa---drewry-of-1953.html
- ↑ Palmer, Stewart, p. 149.
- ↑ name=Class register>"Railfan" 8 (4). Triple M Publications. September 2002. ISSN 1173-2229.
- ↑ http://www.nzrsr.co.nz/view_page.php?page=4&search=false&sort=none&order=none
- ↑ http://www.nzrsr.co.nz/view_page.php?page=4&search=false&sort=none&order=none
Further reading
- Palmer, A. N and W. W. Stewart, Cavalcade of New Zealand Locomotives, Reed 1956, second ed. 1965.
- McGavin, T. A, NZR Locomotives and Railcars 1977, NZR&LS 1977.
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