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NZR WF class

New Zealand WF class
Type and origin
Power type Steam
Designer A. L. Beattie
Builder NZR Addington Workshops, Christchurch (10)
NZR Hillside Workshops, Dunedin (16)
A & G Price, Thames (15)
Serial number 59 - 68, 74 - 79, 84 - 93 (NZR)
1 - 12, 121 - 123 (A & G Price)
Build date 1904 - 1908, 1928
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte 2-6-4 T
Driver dia. 45 in (1.143 m)
Wheelbase 27 ft 0 in (8.23 m)
Length 34 ft 2 in (10.41 m)
Adhesive weight 26.9 long tons (27.3 t; 30.1 short tons)
Loco weight 43.7 long tons (44.4 t; 48.9 short tons)
Fuel type Coal
Fuel capacity 2.2 long tons (2.2 t; 2.5 short tons)
Water cap 950 imp gal (4,300 L; 1,140 US gal)
Firebox:
 • Firegrate area
15.4 square feet (1.43 m2)
Boiler pressure 200 psi (1,379 kPa)
Heating surface 729 square feet (67.7 m2)
Cylinders Two
Cylinder size 14 in × 22 in (356 mm × 559 mm)
Performance figures
Tractive effort 15,330 lbf (68.2 kN)
Career
Number in class 41
Numbers 62, 379 - 398, 400 - 405, 430 - 438, 467 - 468, 842 - 844
First run 20 December 1904
Last run March 1968
Retired May 1954 - March 1968
Preserved Three
Current owner Steam Incorporated, Canterbury Railway Society, Nelson Railway Society
Disposition 29 scrapped
8 sold to Tasmania (withdrawn)
3 preserved
Type and origin
Power type Steam
Designer A. L. Beattie
Builder NZR Addington Workshops, Christchurch (10)
NZR Hillside Workshops, Dunedin (16)
A & G Price, Thames (15)
Serial number 59 - 68, 74 - 79, 84 - 93 (NZR)
1 - 12, 121 - 123 (A & G Price)
Build date 1904 - 1908, 1928
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte 2-6-4 T
Driver dia. 45 in (1.143 m)
Wheelbase 27 ft 0 in (8.23 m)
Length 34 ft 2 in (10.41 m)
Adhesive weight 26.9 long tons (27.3 t; 30.1 short tons)
Loco weight 43.7 long tons (44.4 t; 48.9 short tons)
Fuel type Coal
Fuel capacity 2.2 long tons (2.2 t; 2.5 short tons)
Water cap 950 imp gal (4,300 L; 1,140 US gal)
Firebox:
 • Firegrate area
15.4 square feet (1.43 m2)
Boiler pressure 200 psi (1,379 kPa)
Heating surface 729 square feet (67.7 m2)
Cylinders Two
Cylinder size 14 in × 22 in (356 mm × 559 mm)
Performance figures
Tractive effort 15,330 lbf (68.2 kN)
Career
Number in class 41
Numbers 62, 379 - 398, 400 - 405, 430 - 438, 467 - 468, 842 - 844
First run 20 December 1904
Last run March 1968
Retired May 1954 - March 1968
Preserved Three
Current owner Steam Incorporated, Canterbury Railway Society, Nelson Railway Society
Disposition 29 scrapped
8 sold to Tasmania (withdrawn)
3 preserved

The New Zealand WF class were steam locomotives designed, built and used by New Zealand Railways Department. Their wheel arrangement is described by the Whyte notation 2-6-4T and the first members of the class entered service in 1904. The locomotives were tank engines designed by the Railways Department's Chief Mechanical Engineer A. L. Beattie, and were mainly built for suburban duties such as those between Christchurch and Lyttelton. They also saw main-line service in the Taranaki region, but most of the class members were assigned to branch line and local services throughout the country. Two were experimentally converted to oil burners in 1909-1910. The tests were satisfactory, but as coal was much cheaper than oil at the time, no further conversions took place.

There were 41 in the class; built by Addington Workshops (10), Hillside Workshops (16), and A & G Price of Thames (15).

In 1902, a drawing was made showing a 2-6-4T tank locomotive, based on a proposal to convert the NZR V class 2-6-2 tender locomotives to tank locomotives. It was noted that the tractive effort of the new engine was 10,260lbs, considerably less than the 12,890lbs of the slightly smaller NZR W class 2-6-2T, and that a new boiler with a greater working pressure of 140psi would be required to have made the conversion of any real use. It was considered uneconomic to fit new boilers to the old V class frames and running gear, which would have retained the obsolete Stephenson link motion and so the proposal lapsed in favour of developing the last three engines of the WA class 2-6-2T tank locomotives, nos. 50, 68, and 137.


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