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DRB Class 41

The German Class 41 steam locomotives were standard goods train engines (Einheitslokomotiven) operated by the Deutsche Reichsbahn (DRB) and built from 1937 to 1941.

DRB Class 41
BR 41 360
Type and origin
Builder
Build date1937–1941
Total produced366
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte2-8-2
 • GermanG 46.18/G 46.20
Gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
Leading dia.1,000 mm (39.37 in)
Driver dia.1,600 mm (62.99 in)
Trailing dia.1,250 mm (49.21 in)
Wheelbase:
 • incl. tender
20,175 mm (66 ft 2 in)
Length:
 • Over beams23,905 mm (78 ft 5 in)
Axle load19.7 t (19.4 long tons; 21.7 short tons)
Adhesive weight70.0 t (68.9 long tons; 77.2 short tons)
Empty weight92.6 t (91.1 long tons; 102.1 short tons)
Service weight101.9 t (100.3 long tons; 112.3 short tons)
Tender type2'2' T 34
Fuel capacity10.0 t (9.8 long tons; 11.0 short tons) coal
Water cap.34.0 m3 (1,200 cu ft)
Boiler:
 • ModelOriginal, old-style, boiler
No. of heating tubes85
No. of smoke tubes20
Heating tube length6,800 mm (22 ft 4 in)
Boiler pressure20 bar (2,000 kPa; 290 psi)
Heating surface:
 • Tubes
187.25 m2 (2,015.5 sq ft)
 • Firebox3.89 m2 (41.9 sq ft)
 • Radiative15.90 m2 (171.1 sq ft)
 • Evaporative203.65 m2 (2,192.1 sq ft)
Superheater:
 • Heating area72.22 m2 (777.4 sq ft)
Cylinders2
Cylinder size520 mm (20.47 in)
Piston stroke720 mm (28.35 in)
Train controlWalschaerts (Heusinger)
Train heatingSteam
Loco brakeKnorr
Auxiliary brakeyes
Performance figures
Maximum speed90 km/h (56 mph) forward
50 km/h (31 mph) reverse
Indicated power1,397 kW (1,873 hp)
Career
Numbers41 001–366
Retired1986

History Edit

In the search for a new, fast, goods train locomotive, the Deutsche Reichsbahn-Gesellschaft (DRG) in 1934 was attracted by the proposal from the Berliner Maschinenbau (BMAG, formerly Louis Schwartzkopff) for a 2-8-2 (1'D1'h2) engine. The design, produced by Friedrich Wilhelm Eckhardt (1892–1961), differed from the DRG's original requirement for a 2-8-0 (1'D) engine, because the required performance with an 18-ton axle load was easier to generate on a 2-8-2 engine rather than one with a 2-8-0 wheel configuration. Continued adherence to this instruction would in the end have given the new engine no significant advantage over the Prussian goods train locomotives which were to be withdrawn. The Reichsbahn Central Office Engineering Works (RZM) eventually agreed to this proposal; the BMAG was tasked to develop the proposed design and produce two prototypes.

In January 1937 the two prototype locomotives, 41 001 and 41 002, were delivered to the DRG, who subsequently tested them thoroughly and bought them. The prototypes soon proved themselves, with their power, performance and quiet riding qualities, as well as their exceptional acceleration.

In developing the Class 41, the principle of having standard locomotives (Einheitsloks) demonstrated the financial advantages of standardization. For example, the construction costs of the engine, through the use of components from the simultaneously developed Class 03, 06 and 45 engines, was under 10,000 Reichsmarks.

From October 1938, the first full-scale production Class 41 locomotives were ordered by the now renamed (since February 1937) Deutsche Reichsbahn (DRB). All the well-known locomotive manufacturers in Germany participated in the building of the locomotives, including BMAG, Borsig, Maschinenfabrik Esslingen, Henschel & Sohn, Arnold Jung Lokomotivfabrik, Krauss-Maffei, Krupp, Orenstein & Koppel and Schichau.

Unlike the prototype locomotives, corner valve pressure compensators were omitted from the production locos and Nicolai pressure compensating tubular valves (later Karl Schultz valves) were used to give a better ride when running light. On the valve gear, the normal lifting link (Hängeeisen) replaced the Kuhn slides of the prototypes which were expensive to manufacture.

As with Classes 03, 45 and 50, the 20-bar (290 psi) boiler made of St 47 K steel, which aged and embrittled rapidly, soon caused major problems. As early as 1941, the DRB decreed a reduction of the permissible operating pressure to 16 bars (230 psi). In this way the wear and tear on the boiler could at least be slowed.

The axle load of the locomotive could be switched between 18 t and 20 t by inserting bolts into different sockets in the equalising beams. This was supposed to enable the locomotive to be more versatile in its use. Little or no use was made of this flexibility however. The Deutsche Bundesbahn and East German DR later left the bolts in the 18 t setting.

The locomotives were, with the exception of the prototypes, coupled to 2'2'T34 tenders. The prototypes, 41 001 and 41 002, had 2'2'T32 tenders on delivery. From their use of 20m turntables, it is also known that some engines were running with 2'2T30 tenders.

The advent of war increasingly stifled the purchase of fast goods train locomotives until, in January 1941, the existing orders were cancelled completely. On 2 June 1941, MF Esslingen delivered the last Class 41 locomotive, no. 41 352, to the DRB. With that a total of 366 engines of this class had been built in just under four years.

Preserved locomotives Edit

After the Second World War, 216 engines went into the Deutsche Bundesbahn fleet and 122 were left in the hands of the DR in East Germany. There is evidence that, in addition, 22 locomotives were left in the former Reichsbahn railway division of Breslau in Poland and later incorporated into the Polish State Railways (PKP) as Ot 1-1 to Ot 1-19. Number 41 153 was listed on the books of the Czechoslovakian State Railways (CSD) after 1945. Number 41 034 as well as other locomotives (41 076, 41 082 and 41 312) from locomotive convoys (reparations) were left in the territory of the Soviet State Railway (SZD) and later transferred to the PKP. The fate of other locomotives is unknown.

As a result of the employment of the two prototype locomotives at Schneidemühl (present-day Piła) locomotive shed in heading express cattle trains to Berlin, the engines were unflatteringly christened Ochsenlok (Oxen loco).

DB rebuild Edit

DB Class 41
 
41 241 in Essen Main station in the 1980s
Type and origin
Build date1957–1961 (rebuilding)
Total produced107
Specifications
Axle load20.2 t (19.9 long tons; 22.3 short tons)
Adhesive weight74.5 t (73.3 long tons; 82.1 short tons)
Service weight101.5 t (99.9 long tons; 111.9 short tons)
Total weight175.7 t (172.9 long tons; 193.7 short tons)
Boiler:
 • ModelRebuilt to coal-firing
No. of heating tubes80
No. of smoke tubes42
Heating tube length5,200 mm (205 in)
Boiler pressure16 bar (1,600 kPa; 230 psi)
Heating surface:
 • Tubes
156.32 m2 (1,682.6 sq ft)
 • Firebox3.87 m2 (41.7 sq ft)
 • Radiative21.22 m2 (228.4 sq ft)
 • Evaporative177.54 m2 (1,911.0 sq ft)
Superheater:
 • Heating area95.77 m2 (1,030.9 sq ft)
Career
Retired1975
data only shown where it differs from the Einheitslok

Because the boiler of these engines suffered from metal fatigue, they began to be repaired in the 1950s. Between 1957 and 1961, 107 vehicles were fitted with fully welded boilers, like those installed on the Class 03.10. In addition the front part of the frame and the running plate were changed. Forty examples were converted to oil-firing with heavy oil. From 1968, these were designated as Class 042. The last Class 042 steam locomotives were retired in 1977 at Rheine locomotive shed. The photograph (right) shows one as a museum loco, now reclassified to Class 41 (the pre-1968 designation).

The former DB locomotives, 41 105 and 41 241, have been preserved as representatives of their class by Stoom Stichting Nederland in the Netherlands. Number 41 018, an operational loco owned by the Munich Steam Locomotive Company, is stabled at the Augsburg Railway Park and 41 113 is exhibited in the Technical Museum at Sinsheim. The Osnabrück Steam Engine Friends are working hard to restore 41 052 to operational status, after it had stood for a long time as a monument at Osnabrück-Schinkel. Number 41 096 is preserved as operational loco at Klein-Mahner. Number 41 360 is operated by the Dampflok-Tradition Oberhausen e.V. Since the end of ban on steam locomotives, she has provided a comprehensive programme of journeys on the Deutsche Bahn's railway network.

  • 41 018 oil-fired Dampflok-Gesellschaft München e.V.
  • 41 096 oil-fired Dampflok-Gemeinschaft 41 096 e.V.
 
Oil-burning 042 (=041) class 2-8-2 at Rheine shed, Easter 1974
 
Oil-burning 042 (=041) class 2-8-2 with tank wagons north of Rheine, Easter 1974
 
41 018 in Seefeld, Tirol, December 2011
 
41 018 climbing the Schiefe Ebene

DR Class 41 and DR Rekolok Edit

DR Class 41 (Rekolok)
 
41 1144-9 of the IGE „Werrabahn Eisenach e. V.“
Type and origin
BuilderRAW Zwickau
RAW Karl-Marx-Stadt
Build date1959–1960 (rebuilding)
Total produced80
Specifications
Axle load18.2 t (17.9 long tons; 20.1 short tons)
Adhesive weight70.9 Mp
Empty weight92.3 t (90.8 long tons; 101.7 short tons)
Service weight101.5 t (99.9 long tons; 111.9 short tons)
Total weight178.7 t (175.9 long tons; 197.0 short tons)
Boiler:
 • Model39E
No. of heating tubes112
No. of smoke tubes36
Heating tube length5,700 mm (18 ft 8 in)
Boiler pressure16 bar (1,600 kPa; 230 psi)
Heating surface:
 • Tubes
185.0 m2 (1,991 sq ft)
 • Firebox4.23 m2 (45.5 sq ft)
 • Radiative21.3 m2 (229 sq ft)
 • Evaporative206.30 m2 (2,220.6 sq ft)
Superheater:
 • Heating area83.80 m2 (902.0 sq ft)
data only shown where it differs from the Einheitslok
 
41 1144-9 leaves Eisenach station in the evening with the Thuringian train

The DR too had difficulties with boilers made of St 47 K steel. The reduction of boiler overpressure from 20 to 16 bar had certainly slowed their susceptibility to damage, but could not prevent it entirely. Of the 112 locomotives recorded in the DR fleet in 1955, only 12 had already been equipped with a '1943 Type' replacement boiler and were therefore safe. Problems with the St 47 K boilers, however, increased massively. Repair welding did not produce the desired effect, but made the material even more brittle and the danger of cracks developing and boiler explosions was greater than before. And it was not just the Class 41 that was affected. Classes 03, 03.10 and 50, with boilers made of non-aging St 47 K, were also prone to damage. As a result of increasing difficulties the DR had to withdraw over 300 locomotives from service in 1956 which abruptly led to an enormous shortage of engines. The urgent call for action which then resulted led at last to the development and subsequent ordering of a new boiler (later called the 39E) that, with a few minor alterations, was also usable on locomotive classe 03, 03.10 and 39.

Because the delivery of the new boilers kept being delayed, 21 Class 41 locomotives were simply fitted with replacement boilers to the old design by January 1959. Even the Meiningen repair shop made a complete copy of the old boiler for 41 075. Other damaged boilers were fully repaired and many parts replaced.

 
Combustion chamber boiler of type 39E (Meiningen, 2003)

Regardless of that, DR engineers worked on a "reconstruction programme for the recovery of the steam locomotive fleet." This envisaged, amongst other things, the modernisation of 102 Class 41 locomotives. The German term used for reconstruction was Rekonstrucktion or Reko for short, hence the subsequent designation of the locomotives as Rekolokomotiven or Rekoloks.

Demarcation disputes, disagreements over the detail of the reconstruction programme and the continued non-delivery of the Reko boiler, delayed the start of work still further. Only the explosion of 03 1046's St47K boiler in 1958 at Wünsdorf led to pressure from the then transport minister, Erwin Kramer (1902–1979), to get started on the Reko programme.

 
The mighty drive of a Reko 41, (2006)
 
Heating locomotive from Rekolokomotive 41 1303, (Röbel 2007)
 
Class 41 for scrapping, sidelined in Stendal, (1979)

From 1959 onwards, 80 Class 41 locomotives were to be given the new 39E Reko boilers in the Zwickau and Karl Marx Stadt Reichsbahn repair shops (Reichsbahnausbesserungswerke or RAW).

As part of the rebuild, IfS/DR mixer preheaters, pressure-compensating piston valves (Trofimoff valves) and new Stühren ash pans were installed. The wider outer firebox needed new front walls to the driver's cab, the front windows of which were equipped with demisting equipment. For the larger and heavier VMP 15-20 compounded mixer pump (Verbundmischpumpe) a new pump mount had to be built. This and the new mixer preheater apparatus required a different arrangement for the main air reservoir. The outside cylinders with a diameter of just 520 mm (20 in), originally designed for boiler pressures of 20 bar, were retained however. In the course of the rebuild, the brakes on the front carrying axle were removed.

The 39E Reko boiler fitted to the engines is a combustion chamber boiler and can generate 15 tons of steam per hour, thanks to the improved ratio of radiative to tube heating area. This is considerably higher than, for example, the new DB boiler which generates only 13.3 tons of steam per hour. Fitted with this boiler, the engine was able to exceed the performance requirements that it originally had for the 20 bar boilers, in spite of its small cylinders.

The engines rebuilt in this way are classified as Rekolokomotiven. Following their conversion, the DR gave all Class 41 locomotives the extra digit 1 under their 1970 renumbering scheme, so that e.g. number 41 122 became number 41 1122-5. In contrast to other classes, the Class 41 was not given a separate sub-class to distinguish Reko from non-Reko locomotives.

Class 41 Rekoloks could be seen in regular train service until 1988. The second oil crisis in 1979/80, and its effect on the GDR's economy, granted quite a number of Class 41 engines a short return to operational duties. Even several locomotives earmarked for scrapping were refurbished and were given a new general inspection service. The Meiningen repair shed refurbished a total of 23 locomotives of this class between 1980 and 1983. But by the end of September 1984, Oebisfelde shed withdrew the 41s and transferred its locomotives to Güsten shed. Göschwitz station, a satellite of Saalfeld shed was the next to send its 41s to the storage sidings in November 1986, and at the beginning of May 1988, Staßfurt (Bw Güsten) parted company with the last Class 41 locomotive, 41 1231, in regular service in the DR.

The Class 41 was the most versatile steam locomotive in the DR's engine fleet and hauled high-profile express and fast trains, as well as goods and passenger services.

Number 41 1185 was a DR heritage locomotive, now in the ownership of the Nuremberg Transport Museum.

As of 2009 the following are the only two operational locomotives remaining:

A further 8 Rekolokomotiven are in varying states of repair. See the list of preserved steam locomotives in Germany

Video Edit

41 018 climbing the Schiefe Ebene with 01 1066 as pusher locomotive (Video, 34,4 MB)

See also Edit

References Edit

  • Weisbrod, Manfred; Müller, Hans; Petznik, Wolfgang (1978). Dampflokomotiven deutscher Eisenbahnen, Baureihe 41–59 (EFA 1.2) (in German) (3rd ed.). Düsseldorf: Alba. pp. 10–18. ISBN 3-87094-082-4.

class, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, december, 2021, lear. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources DRB Class 41 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The German Class 41 steam locomotives were standard goods train engines Einheitslokomotiven operated by the Deutsche Reichsbahn DRB and built from 1937 to 1941 DRB Class 41BR 41 360Type and originBuilderBerliner Maschinenbau 25 Borsig 73 Maschinenfabrik Esslingen 35 Henschel amp Sohn 86 Arnold Jung Lokomotivfabrik 40 Krauss Maffei 18 Krupp 31 Orenstein amp Koppel 21 Schichau Werke 37 Build date1937 1941Total produced366SpecificationsConfiguration Whyte2 8 2 GermanG 46 18 G 46 20Gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in Leading dia 1 000 mm 39 37 in Driver dia 1 600 mm 62 99 in Trailing dia 1 250 mm 49 21 in Wheelbase incl tender20 175 mm 66 ft 2 in Length Over beams23 905 mm 78 ft 5 in Axle load19 7 t 19 4 long tons 21 7 short tons Adhesive weight70 0 t 68 9 long tons 77 2 short tons Empty weight92 6 t 91 1 long tons 102 1 short tons Service weight101 9 t 100 3 long tons 112 3 short tons Tender type2 2 T 34Fuel capacity10 0 t 9 8 long tons 11 0 short tons coalWater cap 34 0 m3 1 200 cu ft Boiler ModelOriginal old style boilerNo of heating tubes85No of smoke tubes20Heating tube length6 800 mm 22 ft 4 in Boiler pressure20 bar 2 000 kPa 290 psi Heating surface Tubes187 25 m2 2 015 5 sq ft Firebox3 89 m2 41 9 sq ft Radiative15 90 m2 171 1 sq ft Evaporative203 65 m2 2 192 1 sq ft Superheater Heating area72 22 m2 777 4 sq ft Cylinders2Cylinder size520 mm 20 47 in Piston stroke720 mm 28 35 in Train controlWalschaerts Heusinger Train heatingSteamLoco brakeKnorrAuxiliary brakeyesPerformance figuresMaximum speed90 km h 56 mph forward50 km h 31 mph reverseIndicated power1 397 kW 1 873 hp CareerNumbers41 001 366Retired1986 Contents 1 History 2 Preserved locomotives 3 DB rebuild 4 DR Class 41 and DR Rekolok 5 Video 6 See also 7 ReferencesHistory EditIn the search for a new fast goods train locomotive the Deutsche Reichsbahn Gesellschaft DRG in 1934 was attracted by the proposal from the Berliner Maschinenbau BMAG formerly Louis Schwartzkopff for a 2 8 2 1 D1 h2 engine The design produced by Friedrich Wilhelm Eckhardt 1892 1961 differed from the DRG s original requirement for a 2 8 0 1 D engine because the required performance with an 18 ton axle load was easier to generate on a 2 8 2 engine rather than one with a 2 8 0 wheel configuration Continued adherence to this instruction would in the end have given the new engine no significant advantage over the Prussian goods train locomotives which were to be withdrawn The Reichsbahn Central Office Engineering Works RZM eventually agreed to this proposal the BMAG was tasked to develop the proposed design and produce two prototypes In January 1937 the two prototype locomotives 41 001 and 41 002 were delivered to the DRG who subsequently tested them thoroughly and bought them The prototypes soon proved themselves with their power performance and quiet riding qualities as well as their exceptional acceleration In developing the Class 41 the principle of having standard locomotives Einheitsloks demonstrated the financial advantages of standardization For example the construction costs of the engine through the use of components from the simultaneously developed Class 03 06 and 45 engines was under 10 000 Reichsmarks From October 1938 the first full scale production Class 41 locomotives were ordered by the now renamed since February 1937 Deutsche Reichsbahn DRB All the well known locomotive manufacturers in Germany participated in the building of the locomotives including BMAG Borsig Maschinenfabrik Esslingen Henschel amp Sohn Arnold Jung Lokomotivfabrik Krauss Maffei Krupp Orenstein amp Koppel and Schichau Unlike the prototype locomotives corner valve pressure compensators were omitted from the production locos and Nicolai pressure compensating tubular valves later Karl Schultz valves were used to give a better ride when running light On the valve gear the normal lifting link Hangeeisen replaced the Kuhn slides of the prototypes which were expensive to manufacture As with Classes 03 45 and 50 the 20 bar 290 psi boiler made of St 47 K steel which aged and embrittled rapidly soon caused major problems As early as 1941 the DRB decreed a reduction of the permissible operating pressure to 16 bars 230 psi In this way the wear and tear on the boiler could at least be slowed The axle load of the locomotive could be switched between 18 t and 20 t by inserting bolts into different sockets in the equalising beams This was supposed to enable the locomotive to be more versatile in its use Little or no use was made of this flexibility however The Deutsche Bundesbahn and East German DR later left the bolts in the 18 t setting The locomotives were with the exception of the prototypes coupled to 2 2 T34 tenders The prototypes 41 001 and 41 002 had 2 2 T32 tenders on delivery From their use of 20m turntables it is also known that some engines were running with 2 2T30 tenders The advent of war increasingly stifled the purchase of fast goods train locomotives until in January 1941 the existing orders were cancelled completely On 2 June 1941 MF Esslingen delivered the last Class 41 locomotive no 41 352 to the DRB With that a total of 366 engines of this class had been built in just under four years Preserved locomotives EditAfter the Second World War 216 engines went into the Deutsche Bundesbahn fleet and 122 were left in the hands of the DR in East Germany There is evidence that in addition 22 locomotives were left in the former Reichsbahn railway division of Breslau in Poland and later incorporated into the Polish State Railways PKP as Ot 1 1 to Ot 1 19 Number 41 153 was listed on the books of the Czechoslovakian State Railways CSD after 1945 Number 41 034 as well as other locomotives 41 076 41 082 and 41 312 from locomotive convoys reparations were left in the territory of the Soviet State Railway SZD and later transferred to the PKP The fate of other locomotives is unknown As a result of the employment of the two prototype locomotives at Schneidemuhl present day Pila locomotive shed in heading express cattle trains to Berlin the engines were unflatteringly christened Ochsenlok Oxen loco DB rebuild EditDB Class 41 41 241 in Essen Main station in the 1980sType and originBuild date1957 1961 rebuilding Total produced107SpecificationsAxle load20 2 t 19 9 long tons 22 3 short tons Adhesive weight74 5 t 73 3 long tons 82 1 short tons Service weight101 5 t 99 9 long tons 111 9 short tons Total weight175 7 t 172 9 long tons 193 7 short tons Boiler ModelRebuilt to coal firingNo of heating tubes80No of smoke tubes42Heating tube length5 200 mm 205 in Boiler pressure16 bar 1 600 kPa 230 psi Heating surface Tubes156 32 m2 1 682 6 sq ft Firebox3 87 m2 41 7 sq ft Radiative21 22 m2 228 4 sq ft Evaporative177 54 m2 1 911 0 sq ft Superheater Heating area95 77 m2 1 030 9 sq ft CareerRetired1975data only shown where it differs from the EinheitslokBecause the boiler of these engines suffered from metal fatigue they began to be repaired in the 1950s Between 1957 and 1961 107 vehicles were fitted with fully welded boilers like those installed on the Class 03 10 In addition the front part of the frame and the running plate were changed Forty examples were converted to oil firing with heavy oil From 1968 these were designated as Class 042 The last Class 042 steam locomotives were retired in 1977 at Rheine locomotive shed The photograph right shows one as a museum loco now reclassified to Class 41 the pre 1968 designation The former DB locomotives 41 105 and 41 241 have been preserved as representatives of their class by Stoom Stichting Nederland in the Netherlands Number 41 018 an operational loco owned by the Munich Steam Locomotive Company is stabled at the Augsburg Railway Park and 41 113 is exhibited in the Technical Museum at Sinsheim The Osnabruck Steam Engine Friends are working hard to restore 41 052 to operational status after it had stood for a long time as a monument at Osnabruck Schinkel Number 41 096 is preserved as operational loco at Klein Mahner Number 41 360 is operated by the Dampflok Tradition Oberhausen e V Since the end of ban on steam locomotives she has provided a comprehensive programme of journeys on the Deutsche Bahn s railway network 41 018 oil fired Dampflok Gesellschaft Munchen e V 41 096 oil fired Dampflok Gemeinschaft 41 096 e V Oil burning 042 041 class 2 8 2 at Rheine shed Easter 1974 Oil burning 042 041 class 2 8 2 with tank wagons north of Rheine Easter 1974 41 018 in Seefeld Tirol December 2011 41 018 climbing the Schiefe EbeneDR Class 41 and DR Rekolok EditDR Class 41 Rekolok 41 1144 9 of the IGE Werrabahn Eisenach e V Type and originBuilderRAW ZwickauRAW Karl Marx StadtBuild date1959 1960 rebuilding Total produced80SpecificationsAxle load18 2 t 17 9 long tons 20 1 short tons Adhesive weight70 9 MpEmpty weight92 3 t 90 8 long tons 101 7 short tons Service weight101 5 t 99 9 long tons 111 9 short tons Total weight178 7 t 175 9 long tons 197 0 short tons Boiler Model39ENo of heating tubes112No of smoke tubes36Heating tube length5 700 mm 18 ft 8 in Boiler pressure16 bar 1 600 kPa 230 psi Heating surface Tubes185 0 m2 1 991 sq ft Firebox4 23 m2 45 5 sq ft Radiative21 3 m2 229 sq ft Evaporative206 30 m2 2 220 6 sq ft Superheater Heating area83 80 m2 902 0 sq ft data only shown where it differs from the Einheitslok 41 1144 9 leaves Eisenach station in the evening with the Thuringian trainThe DR too had difficulties with boilers made of St 47 K steel The reduction of boiler overpressure from 20 to 16 bar had certainly slowed their susceptibility to damage but could not prevent it entirely Of the 112 locomotives recorded in the DR fleet in 1955 only 12 had already been equipped with a 1943 Type replacement boiler and were therefore safe Problems with the St 47 K boilers however increased massively Repair welding did not produce the desired effect but made the material even more brittle and the danger of cracks developing and boiler explosions was greater than before And it was not just the Class 41 that was affected Classes 03 03 10 and 50 with boilers made of non aging St 47 K were also prone to damage As a result of increasing difficulties the DR had to withdraw over 300 locomotives from service in 1956 which abruptly led to an enormous shortage of engines The urgent call for action which then resulted led at last to the development and subsequent ordering of a new boiler later called the 39E that with a few minor alterations was also usable on locomotive classe 03 03 10 and 39 Because the delivery of the new boilers kept being delayed 21 Class 41 locomotives were simply fitted with replacement boilers to the old design by January 1959 Even the Meiningen repair shop made a complete copy of the old boiler for 41 075 Other damaged boilers were fully repaired and many parts replaced Combustion chamber boiler of type 39E Meiningen 2003 Regardless of that DR engineers worked on a reconstruction programme for the recovery of the steam locomotive fleet This envisaged amongst other things the modernisation of 102 Class 41 locomotives The German term used for reconstruction was Rekonstrucktion or Reko for short hence the subsequent designation of the locomotives as Rekolokomotiven or Rekoloks Demarcation disputes disagreements over the detail of the reconstruction programme and the continued non delivery of the Reko boiler delayed the start of work still further Only the explosion of 03 1046 s St47K boiler in 1958 at Wunsdorf led to pressure from the then transport minister Erwin Kramer 1902 1979 to get started on the Reko programme The mighty drive of a Reko 41 2006 Heating locomotive from Rekolokomotive 41 1303 Robel 2007 Class 41 for scrapping sidelined in Stendal 1979 From 1959 onwards 80 Class 41 locomotives were to be given the new 39E Reko boilers in the Zwickau and Karl Marx Stadt Reichsbahn repair shops Reichsbahnausbesserungswerke or RAW As part of the rebuild IfS DR mixer preheaters pressure compensating piston valves Trofimoff valves and new Stuhren ash pans were installed The wider outer firebox needed new front walls to the driver s cab the front windows of which were equipped with demisting equipment For the larger and heavier VMP 15 20 compounded mixer pump Verbundmischpumpe a new pump mount had to be built This and the new mixer preheater apparatus required a different arrangement for the main air reservoir The outside cylinders with a diameter of just 520 mm 20 in originally designed for boiler pressures of 20 bar were retained however In the course of the rebuild the brakes on the front carrying axle were removed The 39E Reko boiler fitted to the engines is a combustion chamber boiler and can generate 15 tons of steam per hour thanks to the improved ratio of radiative to tube heating area This is considerably higher than for example the new DB boiler which generates only 13 3 tons of steam per hour Fitted with this boiler the engine was able to exceed the performance requirements that it originally had for the 20 bar boilers in spite of its small cylinders The engines rebuilt in this way are classified as Rekolokomotiven Following their conversion the DR gave all Class 41 locomotives the extra digit 1 under their 1970 renumbering scheme so that e g number 41 122 became number 41 1122 5 In contrast to other classes the Class 41 was not given a separate sub class to distinguish Reko from non Reko locomotives Class 41 Rekoloks could be seen in regular train service until 1988 The second oil crisis in 1979 80 and its effect on the GDR s economy granted quite a number of Class 41 engines a short return to operational duties Even several locomotives earmarked for scrapping were refurbished and were given a new general inspection service The Meiningen repair shed refurbished a total of 23 locomotives of this class between 1980 and 1983 But by the end of September 1984 Oebisfelde shed withdrew the 41s and transferred its locomotives to Gusten shed Goschwitz station a satellite of Saalfeld shed was the next to send its 41s to the storage sidings in November 1986 and at the beginning of May 1988 Stassfurt Bw Gusten parted company with the last Class 41 locomotive 41 1231 in regular service in the DR The Class 41 was the most versatile steam locomotive in the DR s engine fleet and hauled high profile express and fast trains as well as goods and passenger services Number 41 1185 was a DR heritage locomotive now in the ownership of the Nuremberg Transport Museum As of 2009 the following are the only two operational locomotives remaining 41 1144 IGE Werrabahn Eisenach e V 41 1150 Bavarian Railway Museum Nordlingen A further 8 Rekolokomotiven are in varying states of repair See the list of preserved steam locomotives in GermanyVideo Edit source source source source source source source source source source track 41 018 climbing the Schiefe Ebene with 01 1066 as pusher locomotive Video 34 4 MB See also EditList of DRG locomotives and railbusesReferences EditWeisbrod Manfred Muller Hans Petznik Wolfgang 1978 Dampflokomotiven deutscher Eisenbahnen Baureihe 41 59 EFA 1 2 in German 3rd ed Dusseldorf Alba pp 10 18 ISBN 3 87094 082 4 Wikimedia Commons has media related to DRG Class 41 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title DRB Class 41 amp oldid 1172370084, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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