GER Class F48
GER Class F48
LNER Class J16
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Specifications |
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Configuration |
0-6-0 |
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UIC class |
C n2 |
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Gauge |
4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) |
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Driver diameter |
4 ft 11 in (1.499 m) |
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Loco weight |
44 long tons 11 cwt (99,800 lb or 45.3 t) |
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Tender weight |
38 long tons 5 cwt (85,700 lb or 38.9 t) |
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Fuel type |
Coal |
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Firebox: • Firegrate area |
21.3 sq ft (1.98 m2) |
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Boiler pressure |
180 lbf/in2 (1.24 MPa) |
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Heating surface |
1,630.5 sq ft (151.48 m2) |
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Cylinders |
Two, inside |
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Cylinder size |
19 in × 26 in (483 mm × 660 mm) |
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Career |
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Operators |
GER » LNER |
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Class |
GER: F48 LNER: J16 |
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Power class |
BR: 4F |
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Axle load class |
LNER/BR: Route availability 4 |
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Disposition |
All rebuilt to LNER Class J17 |
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The GER Class F48 was a class of sixty 0-6-0 steam tender locomotives designed by James Holden for the Great Eastern Railway in Great Britain. They passed to the London and North Eastern Railway at the grouping in 1923 and received the LNER classification J16.
History
The F48 class, of which there were sixty, were built between 1900 and 1903 at Stratford Works, and had round-top fireboxes of the same type as used on the Class S46 Claude Hamilton 4-4-0s.[1] No. 1189 was built instead with a Belpaire firebox, being the first Great Eastern locomotive to be so fitted.[1] This was done as a comparative experiment against the regular round-top firebox.[2] The experiment was a success and a further thirty locomotives constructed later were fitted with Belpaire fireboxes and termed the G58 class.
Reboilering
From 1921, all the round-top boilers were replaced by the Belpaire type, the majority being superheated. Sixteen had been reboilered by the Great Eastern before the grouping of 1923. The remaining forty-three were reboilered by the London and North Eastern Railway and were re-classified J17. All had been dealt with by 1932, whereupon the Class J16 ceased to exist.
Blastpipes
At first Macallan blastpipes were fitted, but later the Stone's variable blastpipe was substituted. Plain blastpipes were substituted between 1924 and 1929.[3]
LNER ownership
The former Class F48 locomotives were renumbered 5500–5559 in the LNER's 1946 renumbering scheme. The exception was 8200, which had been damaged beyond repair in a V-2 attack in November 1944.[1]
BR ownership
All the remaining locomotives passed to British Railways in 1948, and had 60000 added to their number. They were withdrawn between 1953 and 1962.[4]
Table of orders and numbers
Table of orders and numbers[5]
Year | Order No. | Quantity | GER No. | LNER No. | 1946 No. | Notes |
1900 | F48 | 10 | 1150–1159 | 8150–8159 | 5500–5509 | |
1900–01 | H50 | 10 | 1160–1169 | 8160–8169 | 5510–5519 | |
1901 | L52 | 10 | 1170–1179 | 8170–8179 | 5520–5529 | |
1901–02 | P52 | 10 | 1180–1189 | 8180–8189 | 5530–5539 | |
1902 | B54 | 10 | 1190–1199 | 8190–8199 | 5540–5549 | |
1902–03 | P54 | 10 | 1200–1209 | 8200–8209 | —, 5551–5559 | |
References
- Aldrich, C. Langley (1969). The Locomotives of the Great Eastern Railway 1862–1962 (7th ed.). Wickford, Essex: C. Langley Aldrich. OCLC 30278831.
External links
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| Pre-grouping railway designs: | | |
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- D38
- D39
- D40
- D41
- D42
- D43
- D44
- D45
- D46
- D47
- D48
- G10
- J90
- J91
- Z4
- Z5
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| LNER designs: | |
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| Other designs: | |
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| Proposed designs: |
- P10 2-8-2T (Nov 1929)
- B 4-6-0 (Nov 1936)
- ? 4-8-2 (1939)
- Q 0-8-0 (June 1930)
- D 4-4-0 (1943)
- ? 4-8-4 (Feb 1946)
- ? 4-8-2 (Feb 1946)
- K 2-6-0 (Aug 1947)
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