New Zealand EA class locomotive
EO45 at Plimmerton in 2008. | |||||||||||||||||||
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The New Zealand EA class (EO from 1968) of electric locomotives were used on the New Zealand rail network between 1968 and 1997 on the Otira – Arthur's Pass section of the Midland line in the South Island, through the Otira Tunnel. Following reconditioning, three were used by KiwiRail's Tranz Metro in Wellington from 2008 to 2011 to top and tail Metlink suburban passenger trains as an interim measure before new rolling stock arrived. Four of the five locomotives were scrapped in 2013 with one being set aside for preservation.
Introduction
The class replaced the EO class of 1923, by then largely worn out, on Otira Tunnel duties in 1968. Like their predecessors, the EA class operated as a group of three, with two on standby at Otira. They were more powerful at 1,290 hp than the original EO class at 680 hp, and so could handle heavier trains. This was to prove useful when West Coast coal exports began in the late 1970s using trains of dedicated LC highsider wagons.
Standard operation of the EA's would see three in service at any one time hauling trains between Otira and Arthur's Pass. The other two locomotives would remain at the Otira electric locomotive depot, although any one of the two spare units could be sent to Addington Workshops for overhaul as required. They were mostly used to haul freight trains, although they did occasionally haul passenger trains either on their own or in multiple with the diesel locomotive pulling the train.
Originally the locomotives were classified as the EA class until the early 1980s, when they were reclassified into the EO class.
Withdrawal
In the mid-1980s, demand for export coal necessitated the introduction of the C class bogie hoppers on Ngakawau-Lyttelton coal trains. These hoppers were heavier than the dedicated LC highsiders previously used, and this led to a reduction in the amount that three EO's could haul through the tunnel. Initial trials with diesel locomotives on their own had failed, and this requiring the retention of the EO's to help the train locomotives pull the trains through the tunnel.
In the early 1990s, rail operator Tranz Rail began experimenting with the use of diesel traction through the Otira Tunnel, using modified DX class locomotives with low-level intakes and modified drawgear (locomotives modified in this manner were later reclassified DXC). It was decided that the use of an extraction fan and tunnel doors would be sufficient to allow diesel operation, and so the decision was made to decommission the Otira electrification which was no longer capable of meeting modern requirements, and was also largely worn out after 74 years of heavy use.
The Otira – Arthur's Pass electrification was decommissioned in 1997 in favour of dieselisation with modified DX locomotives and an upgraded Otira Tunnel ventilation to cope with the hot exhaust gases produced by the locomotives. As a result, the EO class was withdrawn and placed into storage. EO 45 and EO 74 were moved to the Ferrymead Railway in June 1998[1] while EO 39, 51, and 68 were stored at Linwood Locomotive Depot in Christchurch. The trio at Linwood were stored outside, and became targets for local vandals, prompting Tranz Rail to move them to Ferrymead in November 1999.[1]
Ferrymead could not store the locomotives either - they were kept out in the open on the main line connection beside the electric depot at Moorhouse station. With an eye to possibly restoring them for use in Wellington, Tranz Rail had EO's 45, 51 and 74 moved to the Picton locomotive depot for storage in 2004. EO 39 and EO 68 remained at Ferrymead, where Electric Traction Group volunteers repainted EO 39.[2] The ETG had also operated EO 45, 68, and 74 on several notable occasions while they were there.[1]
Reuse in Wellington
In 2007 the three Picton locomotives were transferred north to the Hutt Workshops where they were refurbished for use by Tranz Metro on Wellington Metlink suburban trains as a short-term solution to increase capacity before the arrival of the Matangi EMUs. Two locomotives top and tailed six SE carriages owned by the Greater Wellington Regional Council and refurbished at Hillside Workshops, while the third locomotive was kept as a spare. The first such train ran on 8 December 2008. In October 2008 the two remaining EO's at Ferrymead, EO's 39 and 68, were also moved north to Hutt Workshops, where they were used for donor parts and remained unrestored.
The EO/SE train was typically stabled in Upper Hutt overnight, running an early morning service into Wellington before running to Plimmerton and back on the Paraparaumu Line (now the Kapiti Line). It stabled in Wellington until the afternoon peak, when it ran to Upper Hutt - a projected afternoon service to Plimmerton never eventuated. In early 2011 the Plimmerton run was discontinued, and towards the latter half of the year the trip from Upper Hutt typically did not run, with the train returning to Wellington after the evening trip and overnighting there.
From September 2011 the train saw very little use in service, typically going out on a test run once a fortnight and if that was successful running the evening train. The last time the train carried passengers all the way to Upper Hutt was on 10 October 2011, and mechanical issues sidelined the train again. On 25 October, after a test run, the train carried passengers from Wellington Station as far as opposite Thorndon locomotive sheds, where it failed. It managed to get back to Wellington under its own power to drop the passengers off, and the service was cancelled. Another test run was made on 3 November, but was unsuccessful. During this time EO45 had been parked up at Hutt Workshops, leaving the set without a spare loco, but it returned to Wellington on 10 November and for a time all three refurbished EOs were coupled together in Wellington's north yard.
On 28 November 2011 the three EOs and the SE set were hauled to Hutt Workshops, withdrawn because of the EO maintenance issues.[3] The SE carriages were intended to be modified for use on Wairarapa trains, but the fate of the EOs was unclear. One suggested use for the refurbished units was a return to banking duties replacing the two DBR locomotives primarily used for this on the North Island Main Trunk south of Paekakariki. However the electrification to the freight yard had been removed following the withdrawal of the EW locomotives in the late 1980s and the EO's general lack of reliability seemed to preclude their use.
It is believed that the unreliability issue stems from the use of the EO's as passenger locomotives, as they are in effect lower-geared freight locomotives. During their time in passenger service, the locomotives were required to run at speeds of up to 90 km/h, a speed which they would never have reached in service while at Otira. Another likely factor in their latter unreliability on the Wellington system was the upping of the DC voltage in the overhead system from 1500V to 1600V for the Matangi units, which similarly affected the English Electric DM/D units reliability.
It was noted by some Wellington locomotive drivers that the EO class were good locomotives to drive in an article for New Zealand Railfan magazine in September 2011.
Disposal
In March 2013, four of the five locomotives stored at the Hutt Workshops were noted as being held on the workshops scrap road, after useful parts (many of them common to the later Toshiba-built DSJ class shunting locomotives) were stripped from them.[4] The decision was taken to have one locomotive put aside for preservation; as a result, EO 45 was selected for preservation and was offered to the Canterbury Railway Society for the storage of EO 45 and the other four locomotives.[4] The CRS declined the offer, but it was then donated to the National Railway Museum of New Zealand and is currently stored on their connection to the Ferrymead Railway for storage until the museum is completed.[4]
Scrapping of the four remaining locomotives started on 1 May 2013, with the unrefurbished pair of EO 39 and 68 the first to be scrapped on 8 May and 3 May. EO 51 and EO 74 were scrapped on 20 May and 15 May respectively.[4]
Accidents
The EO class has only ever been involved in one accident. On 21 May 1980, EO's 45, 51, and 74 were hauling a coal train from Otira to Arthur's Pass at around 4pm after the decision was made to suspend operations due to heavy rain earlier that day. As the train approached the Goat Creek bridge, it derailed into the swollen Otira River which had washed away 50 metres of track. Locomotive driver Owen Fitzgerald was trapped in the cab of leading locomotive EO 45 and subsequently drowned. His assistant was able to escape through one of the front windows which had broken in the derailment.
The three EO class locomotives were badly damaged, while the Midland line was closed until the locomotives could be recovered and the trackbed rebuilt. As a result, 1,800 hp electric locomotive EW 159 was sent down from Wellington to replace the three EO's while they were rebuilt at Addington Workshops. This required two locomotive drivers to run the EW in conjunction with the two remaining EO's (EO 39 and EO 68) as the EW did not have multiple unit equipment. This combination produced a total of 3,000 hp in comparison to the 1,800 hp produced by three EO's.
Gallery
- A locomotive at Plimmerton in 2008.
Class register
Key: | In service | On lease | Out of service | Preserved | Overhaul/Repair | Scrapped |
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Original no. | TMS no. | Introduced | Withdrawn[n 1] | Livery | Notes |
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EA 1 | EO 39 | April 1968 | 16 July 1997 | New Zealand Government Railways Red | Scrapped[4] |
EA 2 | EO 45 | April 1968; December 2008 | 16 July 1997; 10 November 2011 | KiwiRail | Preserved, National Railway Museum of New Zealand. |
EA 3 | EO 51 | April 1968; December 2008 | 16 July 1997; 10 November 2011 | KiwiRail | |
EA 4 | EO 68 | April 1968 | 16 July 1997 | New Zealand Government Railways Red | |
EA 5 | EO 74 | April 1968, December 2008 | 16 July 1997; 10 November 2011 | KiwiRail |
- ↑ Withdrawal from Otira service; withdrawal from Wellington service.
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to New Zealand EA class locomotive. |
Citations
- 1 2 3 http://www.canterburyrailsociety.co.nz/gallery/index.php?cat=3
- ↑ http://www.canterburyrailsociety.co.nz/gallery/displayimage.php?album=9&pos=0
- ↑ "Railfan". 18 (1). Triple M Publications. December 2011. ISSN 1173-2229.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Railfan". 19 (2). Triple M Publications. March 2013. ISSN 1173-2229.
Books
- Parsons, David (2002). New Zealand Railway Motive Power 2002. New Zealand Railway and Locomotive Society. p. 64. ISBN 978-0-90-857378-3.