Caledonian Railway 721 Class

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Caledonian Railway 721 Class
"Dunalastair"
For variations see Table 1 below
Type and origin
Power type Steam
Designer John F. McIntosh
Builder St. Rollox railway works
Build date 1896
Total produced 15
Specifications
Configuration 4-4-0
Gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Driver diameter 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
Loco weight 47 long tons (48 t)
Boiler pressure 160 psi (1,100 kPa)
Cylinders Two, inside
Cylinder size 18.25 in × 26 in (464 mm × 660 mm)
Valve gear Stephenson
Valve type Slide valves
Performance figures
Tractive effort 15,100 lbf (67 kN)
Career
Operators CR • LMS • British Railways
Class CR: 721
Power class LMS: 2P
Withdrawn 1930–35
Disposition All scrapped

The Caledonian Railway 721 Class (known as the "Dunalastair" class) was a class of 4-4-0 steam locomotives designed by John F. McIntosh for the Caledonian Railway (CR) and introduced in 1896.[1] All survived to be absorbed by the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) in 1923 and a few survived into British Railways (BR) ownership in 1948.

Development

The "Dunalastair" class marked a new era of development in late-Victorian British steam locomotive design.[2] The average weight of passenger trains had greatly increased in the 1880s and 1890s due to the demand for more comfortable, better-appointed and safer carriages.[3] Combined with continually rising passenger volumes and the competition between railway companies to offer faster services and locomotive engineers were faced with producing engines that could operate longer, heavier trains at faster speeds. The existing pattern of inside-cylinder 4-4-0 express engine was reaching the limits of its development and many railways were resorting to the inefficient practise of double heading to maintain schedules.[4]

McIntosh provided the solution with the original "Dunalastair" of 1896. In broad design this was identical to the conventional 4-4-0 engine drawn up by his predecessor Dugald Drummond[5] but it carried a boiler significantly larger than was usual for the time - almost to the full limits that the Caledonian's loading gauge would allow, operating at a relatively high pressure of 160psi (1100kPa). The boiler also contained more fire tubes of a greater diameter than its predecessors, greatly increasing its steam generating capacity and overall steam volume. While the top speed of the 721 Class and its developments was largely the same as other express 4-4-0s the more productive and capacious boiler meant the type offered a hugely improved ability to maintain high speeds with heavy loads on steep gradients, allowing the "Dunalastairs" to set high average speeds over the Caledonian's arduous main line over Beattock Summit.[6] So confident was McIntosh that his new engine would do away with the need for double heading that the "Dunalastairs" were originally built without brake hoses on their front buffer beam, meaning that a second engine could not be coupled to them.

The principles of the 721 Class and its boiler were adopted by many other locomotive engineers and railways in the 1890s and early 20th century, leading to the so-called 'big engine' period of design. Other engine classes such as the GNR Class C1 and the GWR 4100 Class were inspired by the success of the "Dunalastairs".[7]

The class was very successful and developed in four different versions:[8]

  • Dunalastair I (721 Class) built 1896
  • Dunalastair II (766 Class) built 1897 (some rebuilt with superheaters 1914)
  • Dunalastair III (900 Class) built 1899–1900 (some rebuilt with superheaters 1914–18)
  • Dunalastair IV (140 Class) built 1904–10 (some rebuilt with superheaters 1915–17)

The rebuilding with superheaters was accompanied by a reduction in boiler pressure and an increase in cylinder diameter.

There are two further classes of McIntosh 4-4-0 locomotives which some authors have included in the Dunalastair series. These are:

  • 139 Class, built 1910–12 with Schmidt superheaters
  • 43 Class, built 1913–14 with Robinson superheaters

Classes 766 and 900 were built with eight-wheel bogie tenders with capacities for 4,125 imperial gallons (18,750 L) of water and 4.5 tons of coal. In the 1930s newer and more powerful LMS locomotives took over their most long-distance duties and the company cascaded the 900 Class to other work. This made eight-wheel tenders superfluous so the company substituted smaller, lighter and simpler six-wheel tenders from scrapped Caledonian locomotives. Most members of the class received McIntosh tenders that had been built for classes 179, 600, 908 and 918. The six-wheel tenders had the same 4.5 ton coal capacity but carried only 3,570 imperial gallons (16,200 L) of water.[9]

Accidents and incidents

  • On 22 May 1915 three of these locomotives, no. 121 of the 139 Class, no. 140 of the Dunalastair IV Class and no. 48 of the 43 Class, were involved in the Quintinshill rail disaster. A down local train from Carlisle (hauled by no. 907, a 4-6-0 of the 903 Class) had been crossed from the down line to the up line in order to allow a late-running down express from London Euston to pass it. An up troop train from Larbert, hauled by no. 121, was incorrectly given clear signals and collided with the stationary local train, and the express from London, double-headed by nos. 140 and 48, then collided with the wreckage of the first collision.[10]
  • On 25 October 1928, locomotive No. 14435 was one of two hauling an express passenger train that was in a rear-end collision at 60 miles per hour (97 km/h) with a freight train at Dinwoodie, Dumfriesshire due to errors by the guard of the freight train and the Dinwoodie signalman. Four enginemen were killed and five people were injured.[11][12]

Dimensions

Table 1
Class Weight Boiler
pressure
Cylinders Driving
wheels
Tractive
effort
LMS
power
class
Dunalastair I 47 tons 160 psi 18.25" × 26" 6' 6" 15,100 lbf 2P
Dunalastair II 49 tons 175 psi 19" × 26" 6' 6" 17,900 lbf 2P
Dunalastair III 51.7 tons 180 psi 19" × 26" 6' 6" 18,411 lbf 2P
Dunalastair IV 56.5 tons 180 psi 19" × 26" 6' 6" 18,411 lbf 2P
Rebuilt II 52 tons 170 psi 19.5" × 26" 6' 6" 18,315 lbf 3P
Rebuilt III 54.5 tons 170 psi 19.5" × 26" 6' 6" 18,315 lbf 3P
Rebuilt IV 56.5 tons 170 psi 20.25" × 26" 6' 6" 19,751 lbf 3P
139 and 43 59 tons 170 psi 20.25" × 26" 6' 6" 19,751 lbf 3P

Numbering

Table 2
Class CR no. LMS no. BR no.
(Note 1)
Withdrawal
dates
Dunalastair I 721–735 14311–14325 1930–35
Dunalastair II 766–780 14326–14336 1936–47
Dunalastair III 900–902, 887–899 14337–14348 1932–47
Dunalastair IV 140–150, 923–927, 137, 138, 136 14349–14365 54363 1937–48
Rebuilt II various 14430–14433 1935–37
Rebuilt III various 14434–14437 54434 1928–48
Rebuilt IV various 14438–14439 54438–54439 1955–58
139 Class 139, 132–135, 117–122 14440–14449 54440–54449 1915–57 (2)
43 Class 43–48, 39–42, 123 14450–14460 54450–54460 1954–57

The 139 Class and 43 Class are included in the Dunalastair series by some authors. Some locomotives survived into British Railways (BR) ownership in 1948.[13][14][15][16]

Notes

  1. BR renumbered the engines by adding 40000 to the LMS numbers. The BR number series are not continuous because some engines were withdrawn before 1948.
  2. CR number 121 was withdrawn in 1915 after the Quintinshill disaster so did not receive an LMS number.

Belgian derivatives

Belgian State Railways (SNCB-NMBS) derived six series of steam locomotives (424 units) from the Dunalastair design between 1899 and 1913:[17]

  • Type 17 – regular 4-4-0 Dunalastair III design: driving wheel 1.98m, 52.5 tons (built 1899–1901, 90 units)
  • Type 18 – more powerful than Type 17: 53.3 tons (built 1902–05, 128 units)
  • Type 19 – (initially Type 18S): superheated version of type 18: 57.8 tons (built 1905, 6 units)
  • Type 20 – (initially Type 18bis): upgraded (superheated and more powerful) type 18: 60.0 tons (15 units)
  • Type 15 – regular 4-4-2 tender locomotive based on Dunalastair III design: driving wheel 1.80m, 62.0 tons (built 1900–01, 49 units)
  • Type 14 – same as Type 15, but with deeper firebox: 64.0 tons (built 1900–08, 73 units)
  • Type 16 – superheated version of Type 15: 69.4 tons (built 1907–13, 78 units)

Two of them are preserved in cosmetic state by SNCB: 4-4-2 tank locomotive 16.042 and express locomotive 18.051.[18][19]

Withdrawal

The first Dunalastair to be withdrawn from service, other than for accident damage, was 14343 in 1933. The reason for its withdrawal is unclear. The next withdrawal was not until 1937. By 1944 only five members of the 900 Class remained. The last 900 Class survivor received the British Railways number 54434 and was based at Aviemore until it was withdrawn in 1948.[20]

See also

References

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  2. Ellis (1959), pp. 195.
  3. Ellis (1959), pp. 169.
  4. Ellis (1959), pp. 194.
  5. Ellis (1959), pp. 195.
  6. Ellis (1959), pp. 195.
  7. Ellis (1959), pp. 195.
  8. Casserley & Johnston 1966, pp. 138–144.
  9. Smellie, p. 9.
  10. Nock & Cooper 1966, pp. 88–90, 92.
  11. Earnshaw 1991, p. 21.
  12. Smellie, p. 4.
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  14. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  16. Baxter & Baxter 1984, pp. 85–87.
  17. 4-4-0 Dunalastairs in Belgium Archived March 26, 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  18. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  19. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  20. Smellie, p. 5.

Sources and further reading

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External links

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