NZR D class (1929)
NZR D class
| Type and origin |
|---|
| Builder |
Clayton(1) |
|---|
| Build date |
1929 |
|---|
|
| Specifications |
|---|
| Configuration |
0-4-0 |
|---|
| Driver dia. |
42 |
|---|
| Loco weight |
25.7 long tons (26.1 t; 28.8 short tons) |
|---|
Firebox: • Firegrate area |
12.5 sq ft (1.16 m2) |
|---|
| Boiler pressure |
300 lbf/in2 (2.07 MPa) |
|---|
| Heating surface |
320 sq ft (30 m2) |
|---|
| Cylinders |
4, vertical |
|---|
| Cylinder size |
7 in × 10 in (178 mm × 254 mm) |
|---|
|
| Career |
|---|
| Operators |
NZR |
|---|
| Disposition |
Scrapped |
|---|
|
The NZR D class of 1929 comprised one 0-4-0 tank locomotive that was built for the New Zealand Railways Department by the Clayton Wagons Ltd in Lincoln, England.
History
Originally, D 1 was purchased for railcar type service but it was not successful. It had a White-Forster type boiler designed for a working pressure of 300 psi (2,068 kPa), had four vertical cylinders housed in the rear of the cab and was high geared. At a normal engine speed of 400 rpm, the unit was calculated to develop 200 horsepower (150 kW). The engine drove a central transverse jackshaft through reduction gearing, the drive from the jackshaft being transmitted to the wheels through conventional side rods.
Working Life
On arrival in New Zealand, D 1 was found to be more than 25 percent heavier than the specified maximum of 20 long tons (20.3 t; 22.4 short tons) and after trials in Wellington was allocated for use as a shunting engine at the Otahuhu workshops. However it never proved satisfactory and was written off in 1936 and scrapped and D 1 did not survive to be preserved.
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