Saxon IV T

The Royal Saxon State Railway designated four-coupled tank locomotives for passenger train service as class IV T (four-T), and the Deutsche Reichsbahn subsequently grouped these locomotives into DRG Class 71.3 in 1925.

Sächsische IV T
DR Baureihe 71.3
Number(s)IV T 1701–1791
DR 71 301–385
Quantity91
ManufacturerSächsische Maschinenfabrik
Year(s) of manufacture1897–1909
Retiredbis 1955
Axle arrangement1′B1′ n2t
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Length over buffers11,770 millimetres (38 ft 7 12 in)
Height4,150 millimetres (13 ft 7 38 in)
Wheelbase2,000 mm (6 ft 6 34 in)
Overall wheelbase6,800 mm (22 ft 3 34 in)
Service weight60.1 tonnes (59.2 long tons; 66.2 short tons)
Adhesive weight30.6 tonnes (30.1 long tons; 33.7 short tons)
Axle load15.4 tonnes (15.2 long tons; 17.0 short tons)
Top speed75 km/h (47 mph)
Driving wheel diameter1,590 mm (5 ft 2 58 in)
Carrying wheel diameter1,065 mm (3 ft 5 78 in)
Valve gearHeusinger
No. of cylinders2
Cylinder bore430 millimetres (16 1516 in)
Piston stroke600 millimetres (23 58 in)
Boiler length4,000 mm (13 ft 1 12 in)
Boiler Overpressure12 kg/cm2 (1.2 MPa; 170 psi)
No. of heating tubes171
Grate area1.56 m2 (16.8 sq ft)
Radiative heating area8.07 m2 (86.9 sq ft)
Tube heating area85.91 m2 (924.7 sq ft)
Evaporative heating area94.01 m2 (1,011.9 sq ft)
Water capacity5,600 or 7,500 litres (1,200 or 1,600 imp gal; 1,500 or 2,000 US gal)
Fuel1,600 kg (3,500 lb) of coal

History

In terms of design, the locomotives were based on the class T 5.1 of the Prussian State Railways. Despite the defects that emerged, such as the uneven running at high speed, which led to derailments, 91 copies of this locomotive were procured from 1897 to 1909 in several lots. On Saxon routes it is not so much a high top speed that matters, but rather good acceleration due to the relatively short distance between the stops.

The first locomotives were named after small towns in Saxony [1] and were listed as VIII bb T; in 1900 the designation was changed to IV T.[2]

Locomotive 1727 was the leading locomotive in the serious accident at Braunsdorf between Braunsdorf and Frankenberg on the Roßwein–Niederwiesa railway line on 14 December 1913. The lead locomotive was repaired – hard to believe, if you look at the accident – but not until 1933 when it became DRG 71 322.

The Deutsche Reichsbahn took over 85 locomotives of this type and gave them the numbers 71 301 to 71 385. Six locomotives were taken out of service shortly before the re-designation; another wave of retirement followed around 1930. After World War II, two locomotives remained with ČSD, while ten locomotives came to the Deutsche Reichsbahn. The locomotives were retired by the Deutsche Reichsbahn by 1955; none of them survived.[3]

Technical features

The two-ring boiler provided saturated steam to the two cylinders which had a bore of 430 mm (16 1516 in) and a stroke of 600 mm (23 58 in). The connecting rod drove the second axle via Heusinger (Walschaerts) valve gear. The driving wheels were of 1,590 mm (5 ft 2 12 in) diameter.

The fixed wheelbase of the coupled driving axles was 2,000 mm (6 ft 6 34 in), the total wheelbase was 6,800 mm (22 ft 3 34 in). The two carrying axles were designed as Adam axles.

The first delivery series had a 12-millimetre (12 in) thick riveted plate frame; from 1902, the plate frames were 20 millimetres (1316 in) thick. In the last series, cutouts were also left in the firebox area.

In addition to handbrake, the Westinghouse brake, which acted on both sets of coupling wheels, was available. The air pump required for this was arranged on the right-hand side of the smokebox.

Between the frames was a well tank with a capacity of 5,600 litres (1,200 imp gal; 1,500 US gal); from 1906 the locomotives were supplied with additional water tanks on the side, increasing the capacity to 7,500 litres (1,600 imp gal; 2,000 US gal). All previously delivered machines were later retrofitted in this way. The coal supply of 1,600 kilograms (3,500 lb) was subsequently increased in some locomotives and / or a coal box attachment was added so that a maximum of 2 cubic metres (71 cu ft) of coal could be loaded.

The first delivery series had a driver's cab with a large door cutout; from 1902, the locomotives were instead equipped with sliding windows on the side. The ventilation attachment on the driver's cab roof was subsequently supplemented by four ventilation hoods.

References

  • Näbrich, Fritz; Preuß, Erich; Meyer, Günter (1984). Lokomotiven sächsischer Eisenbahnen – Güterzug- und Tenderlokomotiven, Triebwagen (in German). Berlin: transpress Verlag.
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