Friday, October 28, 2016

Friday Night Steam

We're off to Germany tonight!







The Saxon IV K were eight-wheeled, narrow gauge, Günther-Meyer type steam engines built for the Royal Saxon State Railways with a track gauge of 750 mm (2 ft 5 12 in). A total of 96 were built between 1892 and 1921, making the Saxon IV K the most numerous narrow gauge locomotive in Germany. In 1925 the Deutsche Reichsbahn grouped these engines into their DRG Class 99.51–60.

As a result of the constantly rising traffic on the Saxon narrow gauge railways towards the end of the 19th century, the power of the existing Saxon I K and III K soon proved insufficient. So the Sächsische Maschinenfabrik developed an engine with eight coupled wheels and which had a larger boiler and adhesive weight. Unlike its predecessors, it was given two driven bogies in order to be able to cope with winding routes despite its length.
Between 1892 and 1921 a total of 96 locomotives were built with running numbers 103 to 198. To begin with they were designated as class H M T K V, which meant that they were locomotives built by Hartmann (H) to a Meyer design (M) as a tank engine (T) with a 750mm rail gauge (K) and compound engine (V). From 1896 they were reclassified as K IV and from 1900 as IV K. The 'K' stood for Kleinspur or 'small gauge'.
The IV K was used both in front of passenger trains and also goods trains and proved itself so well that it ousted the other locomotive classes completely on several lines.
Five locomotives (123, 139, 147, 148 and 174) were deleted from the roster after World War I. Two had been left behind in Hungary, and three were handed over to Poland as reparations. In 1925 the Deutsche Reichsbahn-Gesellschaft took over the remaining 91 units allocating them the numbers 99 511–546, 99 551–558, 99 561–579 and 99 581–608.
99 568 heading a goods train in Oschatz (1988)
 
From the 1930s onwards the oldest engines were retired. After the Second World War there were still 57 working locomotives of this class on Saxon railways. Nine locomotives later went to the Rügen Kleinbahn and to the Prignitz district Kleinbahnen, where they were fitted with Knorr brakes and in conjunction with that an impressive air reservoir on the boiler.
The DR planned to replace them with the Neubau diesel locomotives of DR Class V 36.48. However, because trials with the two prototypes were not promising, 20 of the former Saxon engines underwent extensive modernisation in 1962. To begin with the locomotives were given new welded boilers, and later a new welded locomotive frame as well. External identification marks of the upgraded locomotives are the missing sandbox on the boiler and the flatter steam dome cover.
By 1973 the last unmodernised locomotives had been retired from duty. Locomotives 99 535 (Dresden Transport Museum), 99 579 (Museum Rittersgrün) und 99 604 (DGEG, today SSB Radebeul), still in their original design, were secured for museum purposes.
The retirement of the reconstructed locomotives did not begin until the mid-1970s, starting with those engines that still had their original rivetted frames.
In 1991 there were only 13 IV K left in the operational fleet of the Deutsche Reichsbahn. In the wake of the merger of the running numbers of the DR and DB these engines were given the new numbers 099 701 to 099 713 on 1 January 1992. Several locomotives were however already sold to railway societies, so that not all of the engines displayed their newly allocated numbers.
Some locomotives ended up on 1 January 1994 in the Deutsche Bahn AG, but from that point on they were no longer used in scheduled services.

Duties

Over the course of time the Saxon IV K locomotives were deployed to all Saxon narrow gauge lines. Even in the 1980s these engines were handling all the traffic on the WolkensteinJöhstadt und OschatzMügeln–Kemmlitz lines.
Saxon IV K
DRG Class 99.51–60

Saxon IV K
Number(s) see text
Quantity 96
Manufacturer Sächsische Maschinenfabrik, Chemnitz
Year(s) of manufacture 1892–1921
Wheel arrangement 0-4-4-0
Axle arrangement B’B’ n4v
Type K 44.7 / K 44.8 *
Gauge 750 mm (2 ft 5 12 in)
Length over couplers 9,000 mm (29 ft 6 in)
Height 3,150 mm (10 ft 4 in)
Width 1,980 mm (6 ft 6 in)
Overall wheelbase 6,200 mm (20 ft 4 in)
Empty weight 21.70–22.40 t
Service weight 26.8–29.3 t
Adhesive weight 26.8–29.3 t
Axle load 6.7–7.3 t
Top speed 30 km/h (19 mph)
Indicated Power 210 PSi / 154 kW
Starting tractive effort 36.28 kN / 42.17 kN **
Driving wheel diameter 760 mm (30 in)
Valve gear Walschaerts (Heusinger)
No. of cylinders 4
LP cylinder bore 370–400 mm (15–16 in)
HP cylinder bore 240 mm (9.4 in)
Piston stroke 380 mm (15 in)
Boiler Overpressure 12/14/15 bar
Grate area 0.97 m2 (10.4 sq ft)
Radiative heating area 4.07 m2 (43.8 sq ft)
Evaporative heating area 49.87 m2 (536.8 sq ft)
Water capacity 2.4 m3 (530 imp gal)
Fuel 0.85 t / 1.02 t ***
Auxiliary brake Counterweight brake
Locomotive brakes Vacuum brake
Train brakes Heberlein brake
Vacuum brake
* from 99 581
** from 99 551
*** from 99 561







2 comments :

  1. Neat narrowguage locomotives. Liked the old passenger coaches also. There were some other videos with some shots of the shops and several more locomotives but they were in German.
    I have also decided I need some coal so I can build a little coal fire and have the proper smell to go with FNS.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Such a neat engine, isn't it? You can get bags of coal in Tractor Supply!!! :o)

      Delete