VR Class Vk3

VR Class Vk3
Finnish Steam Locomotive Class I3

Class Vk3 steam locomotive (no. 490) at Kauklahti railway station in Espoo in the 1920s.
Type and origin
Power type Steam
Builder Tampella Tampereen Pellava- ja Rautateollisuus Oy
Serial number 456, 487–492
Build date 1906–1909
Total produced 7
Specifications
Configuration 2-6-4T
Gauge 1,524 mm (5 ft)
Length 11.33 m (37 ft 2 in)
Loco weight 53.5 t (52.7 long tons; 59.0 short tons)
Fuel type coal or wood
Fuel capacity Coal: 2.3 m3 (81.2 cu ft)
Wood: 4.5 m3 (158.9 cu ft)
Water cap 5.5 m3 (194.2 cu ft)
Firebox:
  Firegrate area
1.54 m2 (16.58 sq ft)
Feedwater heater 15.5 m2 (166.8 sq ft)
Heating surface 82.2 m2 (884.8 sq ft)
Performance figures
Maximum speed 64 km/h (40 mph)
Career
Nicknames "Iita"
First run 1906
Withdrawn 1964
Disposition One preserved (No. 489), at the Finnish Railway Museum
information from [1] and [2]

The VR Class Vk3 was originally called the Finnish Steam Locomotive Class I3. The Finnish State Railways ordered three similar classes of locomotives; The American-built Baldwin Class I1s, and the Class I2s and Class I3s, built at Tampella. All were tank locomotives, which did not have to be turned at terminal stations and could run in both directions at the same speed.

All the Class I locomotives were used for local transport until the mid-1920s. After the mid-1920s the more efficient Class N1 locomotives entered service and the Class I locomotives were transferred to the shunting duties.

Locomotive No. 456 was the first state railway locomotive to be fitted with a superheater; the results were successful and from then on, almost all the Finnish State Railways steam locomotives were fitted with superheaters.

Locomotive No. 489 was built in 1909, was equipped with a superheater, and was initially used for local traffic around Helsinki. It served for 55 years before being withdrawn from shunting duties in 1964. It is now preserved at the Finnish Railway Museum.

See also

External links

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, September 04, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.