New South Wales 72 class locomotive
New South Wales 72 class
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Specifications |
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UIC class |
Bo-Bo |
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Gauge |
4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) |
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Wheel diameter |
37 in (940 mm) |
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Length |
Over coupler pulling faces: 45 ft 2 1⁄4 in (13.77 m) |
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Width |
9 ft 2 in (2.79 m) |
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Height |
12 ft 7 1⁄4 in (3.84 m) |
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Loco weight |
55 long tons 0 cwt (123,200 lb or 55.9 t) |
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Fuel type |
Diesel |
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Fuel capacity |
500 imp gal (2,300 l; 600 US gal) |
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Lubricant cap |
Engine: 20 imp gal (91 l; 24 US gal), Transmission: 40 imp gal (180 l; 48 US gal), Final Drives: 6 imp gal (27 l; 7.2 US gal) each |
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Coolant cap |
180 imp gal (820 l; 220 US gal) |
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Sandbox cap |
12 cu ft (0.34 m3) |
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Prime mover |
Cummins VT12-825-BI |
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RPM range |
600-2000 |
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Engine type |
Four-stroke diesel |
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Aspiration |
Turbocharged |
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Cylinders |
V12 |
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Cylinder size |
5.5 in × 6 in (140 mm × 152 mm) |
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Transmission |
Clark Model 16420 Reversing |
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Performance figures |
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Maximum speed |
45 mph (72 km/h) |
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Power output |
Gross: 705 hp (530 kW), For traction: 640 hp (477 kW) |
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Tractive effort |
Continuous: 32,500 lbf (144.57 kN) at 5 mph (8 km/h) |
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Career |
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Operators |
New South Wales Government Railways |
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Number in class |
1 |
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Numbers |
7201 |
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First run |
27 August 1965 |
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Last run |
2 March 1976 |
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Withdrawn |
August 1976 |
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Scrapped |
December 1976 |
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Disposition |
Scrapped |
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The 72 class was a class of diesel locomotive built by Chullora Railway Workshops for the New South Wales Government Railways in 1965.
Construction
Locomotive 7201 was a diesel-hydraulic locomotive, with B-B wheel arrangement. Built in the New South Wales Government Railways Water Supply Workshops at Chullora, it performed its first light engine trial on 27 August 1965.[1] It was built on the lengthened underframe of an unused 58 class locomotive tender, but using the bogies from a Standard Goods locomotive[2] turret tender. The cab was similar to that of an X200 class and the livery was similar to a 48 class.
The prime-mover was a Cummins VT 12-825-BI; V12 engine, developing 640 horsepower at 2,000 rpm. Power was distributed to the bogies through a Clark C 16911 torque converter with Clark 16421 transmission.[3]
Operations
Following some modifications, it entered service on 8 September 1965 as a shunter at Cooks River Goods Yard. Over the next 6 months, it spent time shunting in yards at Goulburn, Junee, Broadmeadow and Werris Creek. It even had a brief sojourn on the Yass Tramway. During this time, it re-entered the workshops for modifications and repairs. After this initial period, it spent extended periods at the Rozelle yards, however by 1970 it was regularly struggling with the loads. It was then trialed at the ACDEP carriage sheds where it shunted the carriages from air-conditioned carriages. It was deemed a success in this duty and remained there until 2 March 1976 when it suffered a seized engine.
Demise
Being a one-off and therefore non-standard, the decision was made not to repair the locomotive. On 4 August 1976 it was condemned and scrapped in December that year.[4]
References
- ↑ "7201 Finally" Railway Digest August 1985 page 243
- ↑ One of the 50, 53 or 55 classes
- ↑ Clark, Peter J. An Australian Diesel Locomotive Pocketbook. p. 54. ISBN 0-909650-02-0.
- ↑ "Photo Gallery – NSWGR's 7201". Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin: 246–248. June 2007.
Further reading
- New South Wales Rail System Locomotives. Sydney: Archives Section, State Rail Authority of New South Wales. 1984.
New South Wales Rail rolling stock |
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NSWGR steam locomotive | |
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NSW private steam locomotive | |
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Diesel locomotive | |
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NSW private diesel locomotive | |
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Electric locomotive | |
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Electric multiple unit | |
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Diesel railcar | |
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Passenger carriages (rigid wheelbase) | |
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Passenger carriages (radial & early bogie) |
- 6-Wheel Radial
- 8-Wheel Radial
- Russell (K Type)
- Ashbury (CB)
- Cleminson
- Redfern
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Passenger carriages (Thow & short bogie - 42'6" to 53'9") |
- Country Express (BC, AK, FX, HFE/HFX, CFE/CCX, AJ, HS, HCX, HA, HO, KL, HKL, KV/KS/HP
- American Suburban (A type)
- Suburban Express (I, O types)
- Suburban (BB/FA, TB/TF)
- Express Lavatory (BX, LFX, HCX)
- CUB sets (L Type & FG)
- SUB sets (R Type & ACM)
- Vans (EDH/HO/HX/PT/TP, IHO, HKB/L)
- Large Bogie Horse Boxes
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Medium bogie passenger carriages (63'3" to 68'4") |
- ACX
- SBX & SFX
- LHO, MHO/X & VHO
- KP
- SG
- AB90
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Long bogie passenger carriages (72'6") |
- E Type Sitting (MBE, MCE/ECM/XCM & MFE)
- T Type Sitting & Sleeping (TBC, TFX, TAM/EAM/XAM)
- X Type Sitting (MBX/MCX/MFX, RBX, MFX, RFX, CS, MCS)
- Composite Sleeping (CAM, KAM, MAL/M)
- E Type Branchline Sleeping (ACS & ACX)
- Dining Cars (AB, RMB, RFM 91 & 92)
- Intercity (V) Cars
- Supplementary Interurban (M)
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Steel passenger carriages | |
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Freight vehicles by type |
- Box vans
- Flat Wagons
- Hopper wagons
- Iced vans
- Louvre vans
- Open wagons
- Stock wagons
- Tank wagons
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Freight vehicles by traffic |
- Ballast, Sleepers and Spoil
- Black Coal, Brown Coal & Briquettes
- Cattle
- Cement Powder
- Coiled & Slab Steel
- Corpses
- Dolomite
- Explosives
- Fertiliser
- Flour, Grain & Rice
- Gypsum
- Horses
- Lime
- Mail vans
- Bitumen, Oil & Petroleum
- Quarry products
- Perishables
- Pigs
- Refrigerated Goods
- Sand
- Sheep
- Soda Ash
- Timber
- Vehicles & Vehicle Parts
- Water
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Vans |
- Power vans
- Bogie guards vans
- Mail vans
- LHO
- MHO
- SHO
- VHO
- Small Bogie Horse Boxes
- Prison vans
- Hearses
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Other |
- Rail tractors
- Crane locomotives
- Miscellaneous
- Special loads
- Way and Works stock
- Staff Accommodation
- NSWGR Tramcars
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Named or significant trains | |
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Classification system |
- Steam Locomotives
- Carriage sets
- BOB 22, 72-74
- BUB 75, 78-91
- CUB 81-86
- DAB, DEB, DOB
- DIB
- HUB
- NAB, NIB, NOB
- NCR 77-78
- LUB
- RUB
- SAB, SOB, SUB
- VUB 75, 76
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