LCDR M2 class

LCDR M3 class
Type and origin
Power type Steam
Designer William Kirtley
Builder Dübs and Company and Longhedge Works
Build date 1884-1885
Total produced 8
Specifications
Configuration 4-4-0
Gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Driver diameter 6 ft 6 in (1.981 m)
Loco weight 72 long tons (73.1553774336 t)
Fuel type Coal
Boiler pressure 140 psi (0.97 MPa)
Cylinders Two,
Stephenson valve gear
Cylinder size 17.5 in × 26 in (444 mm × 660 mm)
Career
Operators LCDR  SECR 
Class M2
Number in class 1 January 1923: 1
Withdrawn 1912-1923
Disposition All scrapped

The LCDR M2 class was a class of 4-4-0 steam locomotives of the London, Chatham and Dover Railway. The class was designed by William Kirtley and introduced in 1884.[1]

History

The class were a development of Kirtley’s earlier M and M1 classes intended for the London-Dover boat trains. They proved to be moderately successful for these tasks but soon needed to superseded on the heaviest trains by the larger M3 class The locomotives passed to the South Eastern and Chatham Railway in 1899 and were considered to be sufficiently useful to be worth re-boilering between 1898 and 1903.[2] The class began to be withdrawn and scrapped from 1912. Only one example survived into Southern Railway ownership in 1923, but was withdrawn almost immediately thereafter.

References

  1. Bradley, D.L., The Locomotive History of the London Chatham and Dover Railway, page 110-2, Railway Correspondence and Travel Society, 1979, ISBN 0901115479
  2. Bradley (1979), p.112


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