NZR P class (1885)

NZR P class (1885)
Type and origin
Power type Steam
Builder Nasmyth, Wilson & Co.
Serial number 272–281
Build date 1885
Total produced 10
Specifications
Configuration 2-8-0
UIC class 1′D n2G
Gauge 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm)
Driver dia. 41 in (1,041 mm)
Length 50 ft 6 12 in (15.41 m)
Adhesive weight 27.7 long tons (28.1 t; 31.0 short tons)
Loco weight 32.5 long tons (33.0 t; 36.4 short tons)
Tender weight 20 long tons (20 t; 22 short tons)
Fuel type Coal
Fuel capacity 2.2 long tons (2.2 t; 2.5 short tons)
Water cap 1,300 imp gal (5,900 l; 1,600 US gal)
Firebox:
  Firegrate area
15.8 sq ft (1.47 m2)
Boiler pressure 135 psi (931 kPa)
Heating surface 858 sq ft (79.7 m2)
Superheater None
Cylinders Two, outside
Cylinder size 15 in × 20 in (381 mm × 508 mm)
Performance figures
Maximum speed 20 mph (32 km/h)
Tractive effort 11,415 lbf (50.78 kN)
Career
Operators New Zealand Railways Department
Locale Auckland, Westland, Otago, Southland.
Delivered 1886
First run 8 February 1886
Last run October 1930
Retired 1930
Withdrawn October 1930
Preserved Two
Disposition 2 preserved, 8 scrapped

The P class was a class of steam locomotives built to haul freight trains on the national rail network of New Zealand. The class consisted of ten individual locomotives ordered from the British company of Nasmyth, Wilson and Company in 1885, but miscommunications about the weight limitations imposed on the locomotives meant they did not start work until 1887. This debacle came at a time when the New Zealand Railways Department (NZR) was suffering from a lack of motive power to work on its rapidly expanding network and was part of what prompted a shift towards American and home-grown manufacturers.

The classification of this class as "P" was the first example of the re-use of a classification that had previously been used for an earlier class. The members of the P class of 1876 had been sold to private companies or the Public Works Department, leaving the classification unused. The Railways Department chose to assign it to this class, setting a pattern that was followed with other classes in years to come, with the most prominent example being the A class of 1906 re-using the classification of the A class of 1873.

Initially, seven of the P class locomotives were deployed in Otago, with the remaining three based in Auckland, and in 1899, the Auckland fleet expanded to four when one was transferred north from Otago. The locomotives started their lives with wooden cabs in a Gothic style, but they were later replaced with steel cabs.

In service

The P class locomotives were designed primarily for pulling freight trains. However, they were also capable of working passenger trains as required, and photographs exist of the engines occasionally pulling special excursion trains as required. Some changes were found necessary to obtain the best performance from them; the smokeboxes were extended, and the original Belpaire-type boilers were replaced with a new type to an NZR design.

The passenger equivalent of the P class were the V class 2-6-2 tender locomotives, which were designed primarily for express passenger work. The locomotives shared a common design of boiler, which allowed boilers to be exchanged between classes during overhaul, as well as a similar design of tender. The later P class steel cab was also adapted for use on the V class.

By 1926, all four Auckland members of the P class had been withdrawn from service, and the six southern members were retired within the next four years. Multiple members of the class are known to have been dumped in rivers to provide riverbank stability and halt erosion.

Preservation

Four P class locomotives have been rescued for preservation. All were salvaged from locomotive dump sites in Otago and Southland as incomplete hulks. In 1992, then-Dunedin based group Project Steam salvaged the remains of P 25 and P 107 from Beaumont on the former Roxburgh Branch. Both locomotives were moved to Dunedin for restoration; due to the poor condition of P 107's frame, the locomotive's frame was swapped with that from its sister locomotive. In 2009, the rolling chassis of P 107 was trucked from Dunedin to Springfield for storage at the Midland Rail Heritage Trust's centre, where the restoration will be completed. Both locomotives were dumped with their tenders and other fittings still attached, and so are more complete than other examples of the type.

In 2004, the Ohai Railway Board Heritage Trust salvaged the remains of P 60 and P 133 from the Branxholme locomotive dumpsite on the Wairio Branch. Both were moved to the group's workshop at Wairio where they were placed in outside storage. In 2014, the hulk of P 133 was moved from Wairio to Mosgiel, pending transport to Middlemarch where it will be stored pending the funding needed to restore it to working order. Both of the ORBHT engines were more heavily stripped and are missing many parts; P 60 was also dumped with the boiler of a classmate temporarily bolted on; the boiler later came apart from the frames, resulting in the salvage of the frames only.

Class register

Key: In service On lease Out of service Preserved Overhaul/Repair Scrapped
Road number Builder Builders number In service Withdrawn Notes
25 Nasmyth Wilson & Co 281 May 2, 1887 October 1919 Dumped in the Clutha River in 1932. Recovered in May 1992 for part supply for P 107.
52 Nasmyth Wilson & Co 277 May 28, 1887 March 1919
60 Nasmyth Wilson & Co 279 July 6, 1887 March 31, 1927 Dumped at the Branxholme locomotive dump on 5 June 1927. Recovered in April 2003. Chassis now on display at Lumsden railway station.[1]
107 Nasmyth Wilson & Co 278 August 20, 1887 March 1928 Dumped in the Clutha River in 1932. Recovered in May 1992. Preserved, Project Steam.
133 Nasmyth Wilson & Co 280 March 31, 1886 March 1927 Dumped at the Blanxholme locomotive dump on 5 June 1927. Recovered on 4 April 2003. Currently preserved at Mosgiel. Formerly preserved by the Ohai Railway Board Heritage Trust.
134 Nasmyth Wilson & Co 274 February 8, 1886 March 1927
135 Nasmyth Wilson & Co 275 February 13, 1886 October 1930
268 Nasmyth Wilson & Co 272 May 1887 March 1922
269 Nasmyth Wilson & Co 273 May 1887 March 1927
270 Nasmyth Wilson & Co 276 February 1887 March 1922

See also

References

External links

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