GER Class L77
GER Class L77
LNER Class N7
N7/1 on a suburban train for Brentwood, c.1927 |
Type and origin |
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Power type |
Steam |
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Designer |
A. J. Hill |
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Builder |
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Build date |
1915–1928 |
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Total produced |
134 |
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Career |
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Operators |
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Class |
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Power class |
BR: 3MT |
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Number in class |
- 1 January 1923: 12
- 1 January 1948: 134
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Axle load class |
LNER/BR: Route availability 5 |
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Withdrawn |
1957–1962 |
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Disposition |
One preserved, remainder scrapped |
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The GER Class L77, LNER Class N7, is a class of 0-6-2T steam locomotives. They were designed by Alfred John Hill of the Great Eastern Railway and introduced in 1915. The design was perpetuated by Nigel Gresley of the LNER after the 1923 grouping. 134 were built; only one of them is preserved.
Overview
The N7s had superheaters and piston valves. They were unusual (for inside-cylinder locomotives) in having Walschaerts valve gear. They were, as London suburban locomotives, fitted with Westinghouse air brakes.
Some were fitted with condensing apparatus for working on the Metropolitan line and the East London Line but the condensing apparatus was removed between 1935 and 1938.
Numbering
The first 22 were allocated numbers in the 990–1011 range when ordered by the GER, but the last 10 did not emerge until the grouping. The LNER added 7000 to their GER numbers, and then built a further 112 locomotives between 1925 and 1928. In the 1946 renumbering scheme, they were renumbered 9600–9733, and upon nationalisation in 1948, British Railways added 60000 to their number (69600–69733).
Table of orders and numbers[1][2]
Year | Order | Manufacturer | Quantity | GER Nos. | LNER Nos. | 1946 Nos. | Notes |
1915 | L77 | Stratford Works | 2 | 1000–1001 | 8000–8001 | 9600–9601 | Renumbered 7978–7979 in 1944 |
1921 | K85 | Stratford Works | 10 | 1002–1011 | 8002–8011 | 9602–9611 | Renumbered 7980–7989 in 1944 |
1923–24 | K89 | Stratford Works | 10 | (990–999) | 7990–7999 | 9612–9621 | |
1925–26 | — | Gorton Works | 30 | — | 409, 421, 426, 456, 457, 460, 464, 471, 473, 475, 826–830, 832–834, 837, 838, 850–853, 865–868, 870, 873 | 9622–9651 | Class N7/1 |
1925–26 | — | Robert Stephenson & Co. 3897–3916 | 20 | — | 907, 912, 913, 916, 918, 919, 935, 940, 941, 947, 950, 952, 964, 966–968, 970, 971, 987, 988 | 9652–9671 | Class N7/1 |
1927–28 | — | Gorton Works | 10 | — | 2632–2641 | 9672–9681 | Class N7/2 |
1927 | — | Wm. Beardmore & Co. 305–324 | 20 | — | 2642–2661 | 9682–9701 | Class N7/2 |
1927–28 | — | Doncaster Works 1669–1692, 1696–1699, 1701/02/04/06 | 32 | — | 2600–2631 | 9702–9733 | Class N7/3 |
Sub-classes
N7/3 No. 69693 (with a round-top firebox) at St Margarets 4 April 1959
- N7 Introduced 1914, GER Class L77 with Belpaire firebox
- N7/1 Introduced 1925, LNER development of GER design with Belpaire firebox
- N7/2 Introduced 1926, LNER locos with Belpaire firebox and long-travel valves
- N7/3 Introduced 1927, LNER locos with round-top firebox, plus from 1943, rebuilds of N7/2 with round-top firebox
- N7/4 Introduced 1940, GER locos rebuilt with round-top firebox
- N7/5 Introduced 1943, N7/1 locos rebuilt with round-top firebox
Table of withdrawals
Year | Quantity in service at start of year | Quantity withdrawn | Locomotive numbers | Notes |
1957 | 134 | 1 | 69689 | |
1958 | 133 | 10 | 69601/06–09/24/28/41/43/95 | |
1959 | 123 | 41 | 69600/02–05/10/12/13/16/19/22/23/25–27/33–35/37–39/44/49/50/55/57/59–62/66/67/69/72/76, 69703/05/11/16/17/31 | |
1960 | 82 | 45 | 69611/14/15/17/20/29/30/36/42/45/47/48/52/54/63–65/77/80–85/87/88/91/94/99, 69700/01/04/06/09/12/15/18/18–22/26/27/29/33 | |
1961 | 37 | 28 | 69618/31/51/56/58/68/70/73–75/78/79/86/90/93/96/98, 69702/07/08/10/13/14/23/24/28/30/32 | |
1962 | 9 | 9 | 69621/32/40/46/53/71/92/97, 69725 | |
Accidents and incidents
- On 24 May 1954, locomotive No. 69638 ran into the turntable pit at Hatfield, Hertfordshire following the removal of the turntable.
Preservation
The preserved N7/4 No. 69621 (LNER 7999) at Dereham, Mid-Norfolk Railway, 2009
One, No. 7999 (BR No. 69621) has been preserved and is currently on static display pending overhaul at the East Anglian Railway Museum at Chappel & Wakes Colne. It is owned by the East Anglian Railway Museum. It was the last engine built by the Great Eastern Railway's Stratford Works in 1924 and was preserved in 1962. It was also named in honour of its designer A J Hill in 1989.
References
Sources
- Aldrich, C. Langley (1969). The Locomotives of the Great Eastern Railway 1862–1962 (7th ed.). Wickford, Essex: C. Langley Aldrich. OCLC 30278831.
- Boddy, M. G.; Brown, W. A.; Fry, E. V.; Hennigan, W.; Hoole, Ken; Manners, F.; Neve, E.; Platt, E. N. T.; Proud, P.; Yeadon, W. B. (March 1977). Fry, E. V., ed. Locomotives of the L.N.E.R., Part 9A: Tank Engines—Classes L1 to N19. Kenilworth: RCTS. ISBN 0-901115-40-1.
- Trevena, Arthur (1981). Trains in Trouble: Vol. 2. Redruth: Atlantic Books. ISBN 0-906899 03 6.
- Ian Allan ABC of British Railways Locomotives, 1948 edition, part 4, pp 54–55
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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