Type YE1 tender on CGR Karoo Class of 1904
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Type and origin | |
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Locomotive | CGR Karoo Class of 1904 |
Designer |
Cape Government Railways (H.M. Beatty) |
Builder | Beyer, Peacock and Company |
In service | 1904 |
Specifications | |
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Configuration | 3-axle |
Gauge | 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) Cape gauge |
Length | 21 ft 4 3⁄8 in (6,512 mm) |
Wheel dia. | 37 in (940 mm) |
Wheelbase | 10 ft 6 in (3,200 mm) |
Axle load | 11 LT 6 cwt 3 qtr (11,520 kg) av. |
Weight empty | 34,470 lb (15,640 kg) |
Weight w/o | 34 LT (34,550 kg) |
Fuel type | Coal |
Fuel cap. | 6 LT (6.1 t) |
Water cap. | 2,825 imp gal (12,800 l) |
Stoking | Manual |
Couplers | Drawbar & Johnston link-and-pin |
Career | |
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Operators | Cape Government Railways South African Railways |
Numbers | SAR 723-726 |
The South African type YE1 tender was a steam locomotive tender from the pre-Union era in the Cape of Good Hope.
The Type YE1 tender entered service in 1904, as tenders to the second batch of four Karoo Class 4-6-2 Pacific type steam locomotives of the Cape Government Railways, which would be designated Class 5B on the South African Railways in 1912.
Type YE1 tenders were built by Beyer, Peacock and Company in 1904.
The Cape Government Railways (CGR) placed four more Karoo Class steam locomotives with a 4-6-2 Pacific type wheel arrangement in service in 1904. The original Karoo Class locomotive and tender had been designed at the Salt River works in Cape Town by Chief Locomotive Superintendent H.M. Beatty in 1903. This second batch of locomotives was built to a slightly modified design and would be designated Class 5B on the South African Railways (SAR) in 1912. The Type YE1 entered service as tenders to these four engines.
The Type YE1 tender had a coal capacity of 6 long tons (6.1 tonnes), a water capacity of 2,825 imperial gallons (12,800 litres) and an average maximum axle loading of 11 long tons 6 hundredweight 3 quarters (11,520 kilograms). The tender had the same dimensions and water capacity as the Type YE tender, but a 10 long hundredweight (0.5 tonnes) bigger coal capacity and a 6 inches (152 millimetres) longer wheelbase.
In the SAR years, tenders were numbered for the engines they were delivered with. In most cases, an oval number plate, bearing the engine number and often also the tender type, would be attached to the rear end of the tender. During the classification and renumbering of locomotives onto the SAR roster in 1912, no separate classification and renumbering list was published for tenders, which should have been renumbered according to the locomotive renumbering list.
Only Class 5B locomotives were delivered new with Type YE1 tenders. Bearing in mind that tenders could and did migrate between engines, they should have been numbered in the SAR number range from 723 to 726.
Since many tender types are interchangeable between different locomotive classes and types, a tender classification system was adopted by the SAR. The first letter of the tender type indicates the classes of engines to which it could be coupled. The "Y_" tenders could be used with the locomotive classes as shown.