The South African Railways Class NG9 4-6-0 of 1915 was a narrow-gauge steam locomotive.
South African Class NG9 4-6-0
Class NG9, c. 1930
Type and origin
Power type
Steam
Designer
Baldwin Locomotive Works
Builder
Baldwin Locomotive Works
Serial number
42301-42306
Build date
1915
Total produced
6
Specifications
Configuration:
•Whyte
4-6-0
•UIC
2'Cn2
Driver
2nd coupled axle
Gauge
2ft (610mm) narrow
Leading dia.
22in (559mm)
Coupled dia.
33in (838mm)
Tender wheels
22in (559mm)
Wheelbase
36ft 10in (11,227mm)
•Engine
13ft 1in (3,988mm)
•Leading
4ft (1,219mm)
•Coupled
6ft 3in (1,905mm)
•Tender
13ft 7in (4,140mm)
•Tender bogie
4ft 1in (1,245mm)
Wheel spacing (Asymmetrical)
1-2: 3ft 3in (991mm) 2-3: 3ft (914mm)
Length:
•Over couplers
44ft 4+3⁄8in (13,522mm)
Height
10ft 4+1⁄4in (3,156mm)
Axle load
5LT 16cwt (5,893kg)
•Leading
4LT (4,064kg)
•1st coupled
5LT 7cwt (5,436kg)
•2nd coupled
5LT 16cwt (5,893kg)
•3rd coupled
5LT 2cwt (5,182kg)
•Tender bogie
10LT 6cwt (10,470kg)
•Tender axle
5LT 3cwt (5,233kg) average
Adhesive weight
16LT 5cwt (16,510kg)
Loco weight
20LT 5cwt (20,570kg)
Tender weight
20LT 16cwt 2qtr (21,160kg)
Total weight
41LT 1cwt 2qtr (41,730kg)
Tender type
2-axle bogies
Fuel type
Coal
Fuel capacity
5LT (5.1t)
Water cap.
1,250impgal (5,680l)
Firebox type
Round-top
•Firegrate area
7.5sqft (0.70m2)
Boiler:
•Pitch
4ft 8+5⁄16in (1,430mm)
•Diameter
3ft 2+1⁄8in (968mm)
•Tube plates
10ft 8in (3,251mm)
•Small tubes
67: 2in (51mm)
Boiler pressure
180psi (1,241kPa)
Heating surface
424.4sqft (39.43m2)
•Tubes
381sqft (35.4m2)
•Firebox
43.4sqft (4.03m2)
Cylinders
Two
Cylinder size
11+3⁄4in (298mm) bore 16in (406mm) stroke
Valve gear
Walschaerts
Valve type
Slide
Couplers
Bell-and-hook
Performance figures
Tractive effort
9,036lbf (40.19kN) @ 75%
Career
Operators
South African Railways Moçâmedes Railway
Class
Class NG9
Number in class
6
Numbers
NG42-NG47
Delivered
1915-1916
First run
1915
Withdrawn
1951
The 2nd coupled axle had flangeless wheels
During 1915 and 1916, the South African Railways placed six 4-6-0 steam locomotives in service on the Langkloof narrow-gauge railway. When a system of grouping narrow-gauge locomotives into classes was eventually introduced somewhere between 1928 and 1930, they were classified as Class NG9.[1][2]
Manufacturer
Due to the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, the usual British locomotive suppliers were hard pressed to satisfy British requirements at the time, let alone those of other parts of the world. As a result, the South African Railways (SAR) placed an order with the Baldwin Locomotive Works in the United States of America in 1915 for six narrow-gauge 4-6-0 locomotives. They were all built by August 1915 and were delivered to the SAR in 1915 and 1916, numbered in the range from NG42 to NG47.[1][2]
Characteristics
The locomotives were very similar to the Bagnall-built Type B locomotives which had been delivered to the Cape Government Railways (CGR) in 1903, except that they were equipped with Walschaerts valve gear.[1]
Service
South African Railways
They were erected at the Uitenhage workshops and placed in service on the Walmer branchline of the Langkloof railway between Port Elizabeth and Avontuur. They all remained in service there until 1929, although some were at one time also employed to help out on the line from Kalbaskraal to Saldanha in the Western Cape.[1][2][3]
The system of grouping narrow-gauge locomotives into classes was only adopted by the SAR somewhere between 1928 and 1930 and, at that point, these locomotives were designated Class NG9.[1][4]
The Walmer branch succumbed to bus competition and was closed on 26 November 1928, after being in operation for over twenty years. Numbers NG42 and NG43 were withdrawn from service in 1929. In that same year, numbers NG44 and NG46 were transferred to Upington to work on the branchline to Kakamas. The last remaining one of these locomotives on the Avontuur railway, no. NG45, was relieved from line work and retained at Humewood Road in Port Elizabeth for yard duties until 1939, when it was also transferred to Upington and replaced by Class NG3 tank engine no. NG5 from Natal.[1][2][3]
Moçâmedes Railway
The three locomotives at Upington, numbers NG44, NG45 and NG46, survived in SAR service until April 1951 when they were sold to the Caminhos de Ferro de Moçâmedes (CFM) of Angola.[1][3][5]
They were numbered 111 to 113 on the CFM, apparently not in the same order as their old SAR engine numbers, and were placed in service on the Ramal da Chibía, a 600mm (1ft11+5⁄8in) narrow-gauge branchline across 116 kilometres (72 miles) from Sá da Bandeira (now Lubango) to Chiange.[5]
CF Moçâmedes no. 111 (right) and possibly no. 113 (left), at the Sa da Bandeira shops, Angola, 7 August 1972
This branch was opened in two stages in 1949 and 1953. It is believed the three locomotives also worked on the mainline from Moçâmedes to Sá da Bandeira (now Lubango), until that line was regauged to Cape gauge in the mid-1950s.[5]
They were possibly retired at about this time, being replaced on the branchline by 60-Series 0-8-2T locomotives which were released by the regauging of the mainline. In later years, these 0-8-2T locomotives were equipped with the NG9 tenders to increase their wood and water carrying capacity.[5]
The Class NG9 locomotives were observed dumped at the Sá da Bandeira shops by 1969, without their tenders. At the time it appeared as if they had been in that condition for some time. The branchline itself was closed in 1970.[3][5]
Paxton, Leith; Bourne, David (1985). Locomotives of the South African Railways (1sted.). Cape Town: Struik. pp.104, 110. ISBN0869772112.
Espitalier, T.J.; Day, W.A.J. (1945). The Locomotive in South Africa - A Brief History of Railway Development. Chapter VII - South African Railways (Continued). South African Railways and Harbours Magazine, October 1945. p. 782.
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