Prussian G 8.1
G 8.1 (Prussia, Mecklenburg, Alsace-Lorraine) DRG Class 55.25–56, 55.58 DB Class 055 PKP Tp4 | |
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Number(s) | DRG 55 2501–3366, 3368–5665, 5801–5810, 5851–5852 DR 55 5898, 7251–7260, 8170 |
Quantity | 5,155 |
Year(s) of manufacture | 1913–1921 |
Retired | 1973 |
Axle arrangement | D h2 |
Gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in) standard gauge |
Length over buffers | 18,290 mm (60 ft 1⁄8 in) |
Service weight | 69.9 t (68.8 long tons; 77.1 short tons) |
Adhesive weight | 69.9 t (68.8 long tons; 77.1 short tons) |
Axle load | 17.6 t (17.3 long tons; 19.4 short tons) |
Top speed | 55 km/h (34 mph) |
Indicated Power | 927 kW (1,243 hp) |
Driving wheel diameter | 1,350 mm (53.15 in) |
No. of cylinders | 2 |
Cylinder bore | 600 mm (23.62 in) |
Piston stroke | 660 mm (25.98 in) |
Boiler Overpressure | 14 bar (1,400 kPa; 200 psi) |
Grate area | 2.58 m2 (27.8 sq ft) |
Evaporative heating area | 143.28 m2 (1,542.3 sq ft) |
Tender | Prussian 3 T 16,5/20 pr 2'2' T 21,5 |
Water capacity | 16.5 m3 (580 cu ft)/20.0 m3 (710 cu ft)/21.5 m3 (760 cu ft) |
The Prussian G 8.1 was a heavier, stronger development of the G 8 and was initially referred to as a 'strengthened standard class' (Verstärkte Normalbauart).
History
The engines were built by Robert Garbe between 1913 and 1921, and formed the largest class of state railway locomotives in Germany. The boiler was larger than that of the G 8, and the loco was deliberately designed to be heavier, so that it could haul even the heaviest trains without sanding, due to its higher adhesive weight. Because it had a high axle load, the G 8.1 could however only be used on main lines. In addition to its employment with heavy goods traffic, it was later used for heavy pusher duties as well.
A total of 4,958 engines alone were made for the Prussian state railways and, later, the Deutsche Reichsbahn. The Imperial Railways in Alsace-Lorraine were given 137 (see the Alsace-Lorraine G 8.1), 10 went to the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg Friedrich-Franz Railway, 50 to the German military railways in the First World War, 6 or 10 to the Gewerkschaft Deutscher Kaiser coal mine at Duisburg and 185 were sold abroad to Poland, Romania and Sweden).
In 1925 the Reichsbahn took over 3,121 Prussian locomotives as Class 55.25–56 with operating numbers 55 2501–5622 (less 55 3367). The twelve Mecklenburg engines (two of which had been bought in 1920 by the Prussian state railways) were incorporated as Class 55.58 with the numbers 55 5801–5810 and 55 5851–5852. Included amongst the Prussian locomotives were also the ten G 8.1 from the Imperial Railways in Alsace-Lorraine. In 1935, 43 more locomotives came into the Reichsbahn fleet from the Saarland as numbers 55 5623–5665, the last of which came originally from the Alsace-Lorraine too. In the Second World War numerous locomotives from Poland and Lithuania were also designated as Class 55 engines. The engines taken over from Belgium were given the numbers 55 5666–5699. After 1945 the DR in East Germany added a further locomotive from Poland as 55 5898, and several from Belgium and France as 55 7251–7260 and 55 8170.
Between 1934 and 1941 a total of 691 G 8.1s were fitted with a leading axle in order to allow a higher top speed and to reduce the average axle load. The converted locomotives were redesignated as DRG Class 56.2–8.
More than 1,000 engines remained after the end of the Second World War. In 1968 the DR still had 150 locomotives, and the Deutsche Bundesbahn another 50, which they reclassified as Class 055 from 1968. The last G 8.1 with the DB, number 055 538-3, was taken out of service on 21 December 1972.
The vehicles were coupled with Prussian 3 T 16,5, 3 T 20 and 2'2' T 21,5 tenders.
Number 55 3345 (ex Cassel 5159) has been preserved. It was built in 1915 by Henschel and is today in the Bochum Dahlhausen Railway Museum.
See also
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