The Commonwealth Railways NSU class was a class of diesel-electric locomotives built in 1954 and 1955 by the Birmingham Railway Carriage and Wagon Company, England, for the Commonwealth Railways for use on the narrow-gauge Central Australia Railway and North Australia Railway.
Narrow-gauge diesel-electric locomotive class of the former Commonwealth Railways, Australia
Commonwealth Railways general arrangement drawing of the NSU class, including specifications and speed/tractive effort graphPichi Richi Railway's restored NSU52, crossing Saltia bridge near Quorn in October 2019, is only one of two NSU class locos in operationPreserved NSU58 at the Old Ghan Heritage Railway and Museum, Alice Springs, in 2015, with a rake of carriages from the legendary narrow-gauge train, The Ghan. As of 2020[update], it was one of two NSU class locomotives in near-operable condition, and it is planned to become fully operational again to haul tourist trains for the Old Ghan Heritage Railway and Museum.
By the end of World War II, the Commonwealth Railways were operating a diverse, worn-out collection of rolling stock on their narrow-gauge Central Australia Railway and North Australia Railway, and on their standard-gauge Trans-Australian Railway. Steam locomotives hauled both freight and passenger trains, and they had become very unreliable. On the two narrow-gauge lines that comprised the truncated north–south routes along which huge amounts of materiel and troops had been carried during the war, some of the locomotives had 50 or more years of use. Their condition had been worsened in the harsh outback environment through constant jolting – the track was lightweight and much of it had been laid on bare earth 60 years earlier. After post-war economic restrictions had moderated, in 1950 the Federal Government provided funding for the Commonwealth Railways to replenish its fleet of both narrow and standard gauge locomotives and rolling stock.[1]
Tenders
A call for tenders issued for 14 diesel locomotives for the 1,067mm (3ft6in) narrow-gauge lines included some important criteria:
axle loading of no more than 10.5 tonnes, in order to operate over lightweight rail of 41, 50 and 60 pounds per yard[note 1]
ability to operate in extreme conditions, with temperatures in excess of 45°C, poor quality water, and dry, dusty air heavily laden with sand.[1]
Thirteen companies submitted more than 30 designs. However, most tenders did not get past the first stage of the selection procedure because they did not address all the specifications, such as electrical transmission. One important factor was the Chief Mechanical Engineer's preference for the locomotives to have engines in the lower-revolution range, which was expected to lower maintenance costs. The engine in the winning tender, by the Birmingham Railway Carriage and Wagon Company Ltd, was a Sulzer plant with an idling speed of 750rpm. By contrast, a design submitted by A.E. Goodwin ran at 1500rpm.[2]
The decision to award the contract to the Birmingham Railway Carriage and Wagon Company in 1951 was a departure from the Commonwealth Railways' practice of purchasing "well proven" designs, exemplified by its choice of General Motors diesel-electric locomotives for its standard-gauge operations. The British company had a long history of building rail vehicles but this order was its first for locomotives. However, Sulzer had 42years of experience in locomotive design[1] and Sulzer plants had been used widely in the UK since the early 1930s.[note 3] Any doubt was resolved by the purchase contract stipulating that Sulzer Bros (London) Ltd would accept full responsibility for the design and performance of the completed locomotives.[1][4][pageneeded]
The Sulzer engine
The LDA series engine, which had its origins in the 1920s, was specifically designed for use in railway applications,[5][pageneeded][6][pageneeded] although an unfounded belief persisted that it originated in marine applications, as had the engines of the WAGR X class.[7][note 4]
In service
The NSU class locomotives were instrumental in the Commonwealth Railways assessment, four years after their introduction, that operating costs on the Central Australia Railway had fallen by 60per cent.[8]
The first locomotives to be unloaded at Port Adelaide were NSU52 on 10 May 1954 and NSU51 ten days later. They were immediately put to use for crew training. Still temporarily mounted on standard-gauge bogies on which it had been trialled in the UK, NSU51 was unveiled at Port Augusta on 12 June 1954 with nameplates showing George McLeay (whose portfolio included the Commonwealth Railways) on the cab sides.[9][10]
On 26 June 1954, locomotives 51 and 52 worked the first diesel-hauled northbound Ghan into Alice Springs – timed to coincide with a visit of Prime Minister Robert Menzies.[11] The last of the class was commissioned in August 1955.[12][13]
It was initially expected that the new locomotives would be able to complete a 1370 kilometre round trip from Oodnadatta to Alice Springs on one tank of fuel. This proved to be impracticable and a 91,000-litre fuel tank was installed at Alice Springs.[14] Minor faults with voltage regulators and air and oil filtration systems were quickly rectified, and the design went on to earn a reputation as an efficient and robust unit.[15] But the NSUs were very primitive. Crews reported, for example, that the spring-loaded, 18-notch throttle handle stayed in the selected position when new, but as it wore, it would swing unpredictably and cause the train to lurch violently.[16]
Initially the fleet worked out of Port Augusta on the narrow gauge.[note 5] Following the conversion of the Central Australia Railway from Port Augusta to Marree to standard gauge in 1957, two were transferred to the North Australia Railway operating out of Darwin. During the next 17 years locomotives were swapped periodically between the two lines.[17]
In July 1975 all the locomotives were included in the transfer of Commonwealth Railways to Australian National.
The NSU fleet remained intact until the Central Australia Railway was superseded by the opening of a new standard-gauge line to Alice Springs in 1980. Two were then transferred to Gladstone for use on the Wilmington line and one to Peterborough for use on the Quorn line. Several others were used by rail retrieval contractors along the Central Australian Railway after it closed.[17] The last was withdrawn in 1987.
Livery
The class spent their entire service with their bodies painted in Commonwealth Railways maroon and silver, and bogies (except for a pair of silver-painted standard-gauge bogies) in black.
Preservation
No members of the class were condemned in revenue service. As of 2021, two (NSU52 at the Pichi Richi Railway and NSU58 at Old Ghan Heritage Railway and Museum) were operating; locomotive 55 is potentially operable but has not been used for more than a decade; two were displayed indoors; and the remainder were either stored or displayed outdoors, most of them bogie-mounted body shells from which components had been removed. Further details are below.
Disposition of the NSU class fleet
No.
Main deployment
Status as of 2020
NSU51 "George McLeay"
With NSU52, worked the first northbound diesel-hauled Ghan train on 26June 1954.
Used by Goss Brothers for removal of Central Australia Railway narrow gauge infrastructure, 1982–1983.
Transferred from Marree to Steamtown Peterborough Railway Preservation Society January 1994 (for spare parts).[23]
In 2009 the locomotive was proposed to be cut up to create an interactive "cab display".[25]
On loan to Farina Restoration Group, for display in the historic town of Farina.[26]
Stored at Steamtown Heritage Rail Centre, soon to be moved to Farina.[26]
NSU63
Transferred to North Australia Railway November 1956.
Transferred to Port Augusta November 1967.
To Roberts Construction for removal of narrow gauge infrastructure from northern part of Central Australia Railway June 1981.
Engines removed from locomotive and sent to "east coast" September 1985.
Outdoor static display (sealed shell and bogies) at Adelaide River.
NSU64
Transferred to North Australia Railway, September 1956.
Transferred to Marree November 1971.
Roberts Construction for removal of narrow gauge infrastructure from northern part of Central Australia Railway June 1981.
On site at Old Ghan Heritage Railway and Museum.
Gallery
NSU53 on display at the turnoff from the Stuart Highway to the Old Ghan Heritage Railway and Museum, 10 km south of Alice Springs, NT, Australia.
NSU54 preserved at the Pichi Richi Railway museum in Quorn, South Australia on the 23rd of January 2007.
NSU56 abandoned (for sale) at Marree, January 2021
NSU57 on display at Marree and owned by Marree Progress Association, January 2021
NSU60 on display at Marree and owned by Marree Progress Association , January 2021
Notes
20, 25 and 30 kilograms per metre respectively.
93.41 kilonewtons
The earliest Sulzer-powered mainline diesels in the UK, the Armstrong-Whitworth "Universals", had been delivered in 1933.[3]
The engines for the NSU class were among the last engines Sulzer built at its Winterthur plant in Switzerland for use outside of Europe; later engines, with only a few exceptions, were built under contract by Vickers-Armstrongs, Barrow-in-Furness, England.[5][pageneeded][6]
An exception was NSU54 which, still on its inaugural standard-gauge bogies, worked on the standard gauge for some months between Port Augusta and Port Pirie.
Finlay, K. (January 1990). "Purchasing the NSU". Pichi Richi Patter. Quorn, South Australia: Pichi Richi Railway Preservation Society Inc. pp.10–12.
Cooper, B.K. (1999). Locomotive profile: class 33 Cromptons. Chertsey, UK: Ian Allan Ltd. ISBN0711018944.
Holden, Ralph (2006). No. 259: the curious story of a forgotten locomotive. Elizabeth, South Australia: Railmac Publications.
Tayler, A.T.H. (1984). Sulzer Types 2 and 3. Chertsey, UK: Ian Allan Ltd. ISBN9780711013407.
Webb, Brian (1978). Sulzer diesel locomotives of British Rail. Exeter, UK: David and Charles. ISBN9780715375143.
Doncaster, N. (Spring 1998). "The Crossley experience". The Partyline. Peterborough, South Australia: Steamtown Peterborough.
"From Bolivian Highlands to Australian Plains" Railway Transportation December 1958 page 11
"Demonstration run of CR narrow gauge locomotives takes place on standard gauge". Railway Transportation. Surry Hills, New South Wales.: Shennen Publishing and Publicity. July 1954. p.24.
Oberg, Leon (1975). Locomotives of Australia. Terrey Hills, New South Wales: A.H. & A.W. Reed Pty Ltd. pp.210–211. ISBN9780589071738.
"The History of the Pichi Richi Railway" Pichi Richi Railway Preservation Society 1984
"Purchasing the NSU" Pichi Richi Patter Vol 18, No 10, pp 10–12
Pearce, Kenn (2011). Riding the "wire fence" to the Alice. Elizabeth, South Australia: Railmac Publications. ISBN978-1-86477-079-7.
Anchen, Nick (2017). Iron roads in the outback: the legendary Commonwealth Railways. Ferntree Gully, Victoria: Sierra Publishing. p.81. ISBN9780992538828.
Oberg, Leon (1984). Locomotives of Australia 1850's - 1980's. Frenchs Forest: Reed Books. pp.215–216. ISBN0 730100 05 7.
Yates, R 1980 "Narrow Gauge Movements" Steamtown Newsletter No 9 June 1980 Steamtown Peterborough Railway Preservation Society
Sampson, R (editor) Catchpoint Port Dock Station Railway Museum, Various Editions
Perrin, S. (ed.) Steamtown Newsletter, various editions Steamtown Peterborough Railway Preservation Society
Evans, J 2008: "Proceed to Hawker; An operational and sometimes social history of the last years of the Quorn to Hawker section of the Great Northern Railway" Railmac Publications
The Partyline - Autumn 1984 Steamtown Peterborough Railway Preservation Society
Harvey J Y 1987: The Never Never Line; Hyland House Publishing, Melbourne
Fluck, Ronald E; Marshall, Barry; Wilson, John (1996). Locomotives and Railcars of the Commonwealth Railways. Welland, SA: Gresley Publishing. ISBN1876216018.
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