SG is the name of a class of Indian steam locomotives used for freight trains. In the designation stands S for Standard, G for Goods. It was by number of built locomotives one of the largest steam locomotive classes built in United Kingdom. The design originated from a BESA standard.
Vulcan Foundry, North British Locomotive Company and Robert Stephenson and Hawthorns
Build date
SG: 1905-13 and SGC3:After 1927
Total produced
SG: 486 and SG1: 66
Rebuild date
After 1927
Specifications
Configuration:
•Whyte
0-6-0
Gauge
5ft6in (1,676mm)
Coupled dia.
61.5in (1.562m)
Wheelbase
15ft 3in (4.65m)
Axle load
16 long tons (16t; 18 short tons)
Loco weight
48 long tons (49t; 54 short tons)
Tender weight
39.25 long tons (39.88t; 43.96 short tons)
Fuel type
Coal
Fuel capacity
7.5 long tons (7.6t; 8.4 short tons)
Water cap.
3,000impgal (14,000l; 3,600USgal)
Firebox: •Firegrate area
25.3sqft (2.35m2)
Boiler
54in ×11in (1,372mm ×279mm)
Boiler pressure
180psi (1.24MPa)
Heating surface: •Tubes
1,229.5sqft (114.22m2)
•Firebox
120sqft (11m2)
Cylinders
Two, inside
Cylinder size
18.5in ×26in (470mm ×660mm)
Valve gear
Rotary Lentz valve gear
Valve type
Slide valve
Performance figures
Maximum speed
Freight: 18mph (29km/h)
Troop trains: 30mph (48km/h)
Career
Operators
Indian Railways, Eastern Bengal Railway, EIR and Oudh and Rohilkhand Railway
Locale
Eastern Railway zone and Northern Railway zone
Disposition
Scrapped
History
With the growing demand for locomotives in the British Raj it became for the British industry more and more difficult to deliver the required amount. To speed up delivery the British Engineering Standards Association (BESA) was chartered to develop standard locomotive types. The first BESA report issued in 1903 contained a design recommendation for a 4-4-0 standard passenger locomotive called SP and one for a 0-6-0 standard goods locomotive called SG. Revised versions proposed eight classes of broad gauge locomotives and four classes of meter gauge locomotives for various services. These locomotives were later called BESA locomotives.[2]
The SG class was used by the North Western State Railway (NWR), the Eastern Bengal Railway (EBR), the East Indian Railway (EIR) and the Oudh and Rohilkhand Railway (ORR) in India, not only in front of goods trains, but also often in front of passenger trains. They could haul 1450 tons of freight with a speed of 18mph (29km/h). Some locomotives were in service in India until the early 1980s and in Pakistan until the 1990s.[3]
Technical variants
A later built variant with Schmidt superheater was called class SGS, where the designation stands for 'Standard Goods Locomotive, Superheated'. Compared to the saturated steam version, the locomotives received larger cylinders with piston valves and larger boilers, as well as a four-axle tender with bogies.[3]
Locomotives delivered as SG class, which were later converted to superheated locomotives were allocated to the class SGC, where the C stands for 'converted'. The class SGSC, later called SGC2, had round fireboxes instead of the Belpaire firebox of the initial version. SGC3 class locomotives were not only retrofitted with superheaters and but received also a Lentz rotary valve gear.[3]
The 2nd class of standard goods converted locomotives, abbreviated as SGSC and later as SGC2, was another variant distinguished by round fireboxes. Despite its classification, they were used for hauling passenger and mail trains frequently.[3]
There was also a class SG1 with unknown characteristics.[3]
Sub classes
Designation
Number
Year of construction
(Rebuilding)
Comments
Divisons
SG
486
1905–1913
Original variant, Belpaire boilers, saturated
NWR
EBR
SG1
66
SGC, SGC1
(ab 1927)
Converted SG locomotives with superheater
NWR
SGS
362
Superheater ex works
NWR
SGSC, SGC2
Round top boiler, superheated
SGC3
Superheated, Lentz valve gear
EIR
Preservation
Plinted at Saidpur Works SGC-2 240 made by Vulcan in 1921, 1936 converted to oil, and afterwards used for shunting at Saidpur Works until its withdrawal in 1983.
Working
Class
Number
Location
Built
Zone
Builders
Build No
Name
No
SGC-2
Saidpur Works, Bangladesh
1921
BW
Vulcan Foundry
240
See also
Indian Railways
Rail transport in India#History
Locomotives of India
Rail transport in India
References
"SG". Archived from the original on 6 January 2012. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
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