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DRB Class 50

The DRB Class 50[1] is a German class of 2-10-0 locomotive, built from 1939 as a standard locomotive (Einheitsdampflokomotive) for hauling goods trains. It had one leading axle and five coupled axles and was one of the most successful designs produced for the Deutsche Reichsbahn.

DRB Class 50
Deutsche Bundesbahn (DB) 052 740-8 in Mayen, May 2006
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
Builder
Build date1939–1948
Total produced3160
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte2-10-0
 • UIC1E h2
 • GermanG 56.15
Gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
Leading dia.0,850 mm (33+12 in)
Driver dia.1,400 mm (55+18 in)
Tender wheels1,000 mm (39+38 in)
Wheelbase:
 • Axle spacing
(Asymmetrical)
  • 2,600 mm (8 ft 6+38 in) +
  • 1,650 mm (5 ft 5 in) +
  • 1,650 mm (5 ft 5 in) +
  • 1,650 mm (5 ft 5 in) +
  • 1,650 mm (5 ft 5 in) =
 • Engine9,200 mm (30 ft 2+14 in)
 • Tender
  • 1,900 mm (6 ft 2+34 in) +
  • 1,900 mm (6 ft 2+34 in) +
  • 1,900 mm (6 ft 2+34 in) =
  • 5,700 mm (18 ft 8+38 in)
 • incl. tender18,890 mm (61 ft 11+34 in)
Length:
 • Over headstocks21,640 mm (71 ft 0 in)
 • Over buffers22,940 mm (75 ft 3+18 in)
Height4,500 mm (14 ft 9+18 in)
Axle load15.3 t (15.1 long tons; 16.9 short tons)
Adhesive weight76.6 t (75.4 long tons; 84.4 short tons)
Empty weight78.6 t (77.4 long tons; 86.6 short tons)
Service weight88.1 t (86.7 long tons; 97.1 short tons)
Tender type22 T 26
Fuel typeCoal
Fuel capacity8 t (7.9 long tons; 8.8 short tons)
Water cap.26 m3 (5,720 imp gal; 6,870 US gal)
Firebox:
 • Grate area3.9 m2 (42 sq ft)
Boiler:
 • Pitch3,050 mm (10 ft 18 in)
 • Tube plates5,200 mm (17 ft 34 in)
 • Small tubes54 mm (2+18 in), 113 off
 • Large tubes133 mm (5+14 in), 35 off
Boiler pressure16 bar (16.3 kgf/cm2; 232 psi)
Heating surface:
 • Firebox15.9 m2 (171 sq ft)
 • Tubes90.4 m2 (973 sq ft)
 • Flues71.3 m2 (767 sq ft)
 • Total surface177.6 m2 (1,912 sq ft)
Superheater:
 • Heating area64.1 m2 (690 sq ft)
CylindersTwo, outside
Cylinder size600 mm × 660 mm (23+58 in × 26 in)
Valve gearHeusinger (Walschaerts) with lifting links
Train heatingSteam
Performance figures
Maximum speed80 km/h (50 mph) (both directions)
Indicated power1,625 PS (1,200 kW; 1,600 hp)
Career
Numbers50 001 – 50 3171 with gaps
Retired1987

This class was procured as part of the German Nazi party's preparations for war that led into the Second World War. Up to 1948, 3,164 Class 50 engines were built by almost all the European locomotive factories – towards the end as so-called provisional war locomotives (Übergangskriegslokomotiven) and classified as 50 ÜK.

At the end of the steam locomotive era, they became virtually a universal class of mixed-traffic steam engine that, thanks to their low axle load, could even be employed on branch lines with light track beds. The Deutsche Bundesbahn grouped the locomotives into Classes 050, 051, 052 and 053 from 1968 so that the numbers were computer-compatible.

Some of the class were used by the Polish State Railways as type Ty5.

General edit

 
50 1724 at Köln-Gereon (26 May 1990)
 
DB No. 050 915-8 on a Hof-Marktredwitz passenger train, Easter 1972

In spite of wartime losses, a large number of engines still remained in 1945. No fewer than 2,159 working locomotives were taken over by the Deutsche Bundesbahn alone and, for a long time, they formed the backbone of goods traffic operations together with the larger DRG Class 44. They were also used for passenger services.

To protect the engine crew when running in reverse, the front of the tender (a 2'2' T 26) was furnished with a protective shield. On many locomotives the Wagner smoke deflectors were replaced by the Witte model after the war. On 735 of the DB machines the tender was fitted with a conductor's cab, which meant that the volume of the coal bunker had to be reduced.

1452 locomotives were included in the new DB classification scheme. That said, 88 of them were already earmarked for withdrawal. Because the class number now had to consist of 3 figures, the designations 051, 052 and 053 had to be introduced in addition to 050.

As a result, the old Class 50 was divided as shown in the table:

Designation Quantity Due for Retirement
050 521 36
051 413 22
052 450 23
053 77 7

The last DB locomotives were retired from Duisburg-Wedau in 1977.

Only 350 examples of Class 50 engines remained in with the DR in East Germany after the war. Because only a small number of the numerous Class 44 fleet went to East Germany, the DRB Class 52 was the predominant goods train locomotive in many areas there. Of the Class 50s, 208 units were rebuilt into Class 50.35-37 engines. The original locomotives ran mainly in the south. From the middle of the 1970s they were retired in large numbers, so that in the 1980s they were real rarities. Nevertheless, the last ones ended their active duties in 1987 together with the rebuilds (Rekoloks).

Some of the original locomotives are preserved, including 50 622 and 50 849. No. 50 622 is stabled in the Nuremberg Transport Museum, where, on the evening of 17 October 2005, it was badly damaged in the great fire at the locomotive shed. The engine should however be able to be repaired with the aid of donations. No. 50 849 belongs to the Glauchau Railway Society (Eisenbahnverein Glauchau) and has a Wagner smoke deflector.

After the Second World War many examples of Class 50 engines were left in the other European states and some were used until the end of the steam traction era. For example, they were in service with the PKP (55 redesignated PKP class Ty5), the ČSD (28 redesignated class 555.1), the ÖBB and the DSB.

DB Class 50.40 edit

DB Class 50.40
 
DB 50 4023 at Spich, August 1961
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
RebuilderHenschel & Sohn
Rebuild date1955
Number rebuilt31
Specifications
Axle load15.7 t (15.5 long tons; 17.3 short tons)
Adhesive weight78.4 t (77.2 long tons; 86.4 short tons)
Empty weight80.4 t (79.1 long tons; 88.6 short tons)
Service weight90.6 t (89.2 long tons; 99.9 short tons)
Firebox:
 • Grate area3.1 m2 (33 sq ft)
Boiler:
 • Tube plates4,700 mm (15 ft 5 in)
 • Small tubes60 mm (2+38 in), 39 off
 • Large tubes152 mm (6 in), 24 off
Heating surface:
 • Firebox17.3 m2 (186 sq ft)
 • Tubes125.3 m2 (1,349 sq ft) *
 • Flues50.8 m2 (547 sq ft)
 • Total surface193.5 m2 (2,083 sq ft)
Superheater:
 • Heating area48.8 m2 (525 sq ft)
Performance figures
Power output1,540 PS (1,130 kW; 1,520 hp)
Career
OperatorsDeutsche Bundesbahn
Numbers50 4001 – 50 4031
Retired1967
* includes 91.2 m2 (982 sq ft) in the 161-tube feedwater heater
Only changes from standard version shown

Because the Deutsche Bundesbahn had sufficient goods train locomotives, they could quickly phase out the DRB Class 52 engines, so that the ageing boilers on the Class 50s could be replaced by those of the Class 52s. Even the trough tender of the Kriegslokomotiven was used by the 50s amongst others. In the 1950s, several Class 50 locomotives served as trials engines. Thus 35 machines were given a boiler with mixer preheater and turbo feed pumps. Number 50 1503 was experimentally equipped with a Giesl ejector. In 1959 ten locomotives were given a boiler with smaller grate area in order to try to reduce the consumption of coal.

After experience with Franco-Crosti boilers on Class 52 locomotives (DB Class 42.90), Henschel rebuilt number 50 1412 in 1954 with such a boiler. This included a second preheater boiler underneath the actual locomotive boiler itself. After the smoke gases had flowed through the main boiler, they were turned around and passed through the preheater boiler. They escaped into the atmosphere through a side chimney along with the exhaust steam. The feed water was initially heated in a surface or mixer preheater, then in the preheater boiler before entering the main boiler. In this way the heat energy of the combustion gases could be better utilised and fuel consumption reduced. In 1958, 30 more engines were given Franco-Crosti smoke gas preheaters. These locos were redesignated as 50 4001 to 50 4031. Number 50 4011 was given oil firing. It was deployed in Münsterland and in the Rhineland. The locomotives were retired by 1967.

Adolph Giesl-Gieslingen describes in his book „Anatomie der Dampflokomotive" that the Sulfuric acid in the smoke condensed in the preheater and attacked the Heat exchanger. The conversion to Diesel and Electric locos led Italy and Germany both to abandon development of the Franco Crosti smoke pre-heater.

No locomotive was preserved.

DR Class 50.35-37 edit

DR Class 50.35
 
50 3648-8 in Dresden Altstadt shed
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
Rebuild date1957–1962
Number rebuilt208
Specifications
Axle load15.4 t (15.2 long tons; 17.0 short tons)
Adhesive weight77.0 t (75.8 long tons; 84.9 short tons)
Empty weight78.1 t (76.9 long tons; 86.1 short tons)
Service weight88.2 t (86.8 long tons; 97.2 short tons)
Firebox:
 • Grate area3.7 m2 (40 sq ft)
Boiler:
 • Tube plates4,700 mm (15 ft 5 in)
 • Small tubes51 mm (2 in), 124 off
 • Large tubes133 mm (5+14 in), 38 off
Heating surface:
 • Firebox17.9 m2 (193 sq ft)
 • Tubes84.2 m2 (906 sq ft)
 • Flues70.7 m2 (761 sq ft)
 • Total surface172.3 m2 (1,855 sq ft)
Superheater:
 • Heating area65.4 m2 (704 sq ft)
Performance figures
Indicated power1,760 PS (1,290 kW; 1,740 hp)
Career
OperatorsDeutsche Reichsbahn (GDR)
Numbers50 3501 – 50 3708
Retired1989
Only changes from standard version shown
 
50 3552 in steam as the "Teddybear Express" on the Nidder Valley Railway
 
A DRG 50 in Ilmenau towing a special train on the Rennsteigbahn
 
A DRG 50 3552 in Bischofsheim, Hesse

At the end of the 1930s, it was thought that a suitable boiler material had been found, in the form of St 47 K-Mo steel, that would allow boiler pressure to be increased to 20 bar without significantly raising the total weight of the boiler. The newly developed steel had a higher strength than the type of steel (St 34) used hitherto, but its disadvantage was that it had considerably worse conductivity. In the harsh everyday work of steam locomotives the material became very quickly fatigued, so that boilers made of the new steel had to be replaced after only a few years. The Class 50, too, was given such a boiler to begin with. Even though its condition was less critical than with other classes, it urgently needed replacing by the end of the 1950s. As a result, the DR in East Germany had the 50E replacement boiler developed on the basis of the new boilers equipping the Class 23.10 / 50.40, although because the locomotive frames were different it was given a 500 mm longer boiler barrel. This was later used on the rebuilds (the so-called Rekoloks), which saw the conversion of Class 23 engines, as well as conversions of the Class 52s into 52.80s and the Class 58s into 58.30s. Between 1958 and 1962, 208 Class 50 locomotives were given such a boiler, along with a mixer preheater, a larger radiative heating area and improved suction draught, which also raised its performance. Many engines were also equipped with Giesl ejectors. These Reko locomotives were allocated to sub-class 50.35 and given operating numbers 50 3501 to 50 3708. In their last years of operation these engines often ran with the new 2'2' T 28 tenders.

The engines were soon gathered together in the railway divisions of the northwest. After the conversion of engines to oil-fired Class 50.50, the remaining coal-fired ones were concentrated in the Magdeburg division. Replacing older locomotives as well as oil-fired ones, they returned to the Dresden and Schwerin divisions again by the end of the 1970s.

The last regular standard gauge steam train was hauled by a Class 50.35 locomotive. This was number 50 3559, which headed an official farewell service on 29 October 1988 on a round trip from Halberstadt to Magdeburg, Thale and back to Halberstadt. No. 50 3559 is used in Liblar as a restaurant.

There are several Class 50.35 locomotives, several of them still working, belonging to Deutsche Bahn AG and the many museum railways and railway museums, such as numbers 50 3501, 50 3539, 50 3564, 50 3576, 50 3616, 50 3648, 50 3654, 50 3695 and 50 3708.

DR Class 50.50 edit

 
No. 50 0072 at the 50th Anniversary of the Bayerisches Eisenbahnmuseum

Between 1966 and 1971, 72 Class 50.35 locomotives were converted to oil-firing. To distinguish them, they were re-designated as Class 50.50. From the introduction of EDP numbers in 1970 they were given operating numbers 50 0001 to 50 0072. They were stationed in the Reichsbahn divisions of Schwerin and Greifswald and used for heavy goods train duties. Their sudden withdrawal in 1981 was a political decision as a result of the cost of crude oil prices in the Eastern Bloc which had suddenly risen sharply. This meant that they could now chemically process Bunker oil D; with the result that it was not longer available for locomotive firing.

In the Bavarian Railway Museum (Bayerischen Eisenbahnmuseum) in Nördlingen the last representative of this class, number 50 0072, is preserved.

DR Class 50.40 edit

DR Class 50.40
 
50 4073 in partially restored state.
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
BuilderVEB Lokomotivbau Karl Marx, Babelsberg
Build date1956–1960
Total produced88
Specifications
Wheelbase:
 • incl. tender18,435 mm (725+34 in)
Length:
 • Over headstocks21,360 mm (841 in)
 • Over buffers22,600 mm (889+34 in)
Height4,550 mm (179+18 in)
Axle load14.7 t (14.5 long tons; 16.2 short tons)
Adhesive weight73.4 t (72.2 long tons; 80.9 short tons)
Empty weight77.1 t (75.9 long tons; 85.0 short tons)
Service weight85.9 t (84.5 long tons; 94.7 short tons)
Tender type22 T 28
Fuel capacity10 t (9.8 long tons; 11 short tons)
Water cap.28 m3 (6,160 imp gal; 7,400 US gal)
Firebox:
 • Grate area3.7 m2 (40 sq ft)
Boiler:
 • Pitch3,100 mm (122 in)
 • Tube plates4,200 mm (165+38 in)
 • Small tubes44.5 mm (1+34 in), 150 off
 • Large tubes133 mm (5+14 in), 38 off
Heating surface:
 • Firebox17.9 m2 (193 sq ft)
 • Tubes79.0 m2 (850 sq ft)
 • Flues62.7 m2 (675 sq ft)
 • Total surface159.6 m2 (1,718 sq ft)
Superheater:
 • Heating area68.5 m2 (737 sq ft)
Performance figures
Indicated power1,760 PS (1,290 kW; 1,740 hp)
Career
OperatorsDeutsche Reichsbahn (GDR)
Numbers50 4001 – 50 4088
Retired1980
Only changes from standard version shown

As well as modern passenger train locomotives, the DR in East Germany needed more goods train locomotives with a 15 t axle load. As a result, a parallel development, like those of the pre-war time, was initiated for a passenger train engine, the DR Class 23.10, and a goods train engine, the DR Class 50.40, in order that many of their components could be interchangeable. The running gear conformed broadly to that of the Einheitslok, but a plate frame had to be used, because bar frames could no longer be worked. The boiler was a new build to modern construction standards with a combustion chamber and a mixer preheater. In terms of performance it was roughly comparable to the standard boiler, but was somewhat more economic in its fuel consumption. The locomotives were also given new tenders, the 2'2' T 28. The 88 engines, which were renumbered from 50 4001 to 50 4088, were delivered between 1956 and 1960. Number 50 4088 was therefore the last standard gauge steam engine to be newly built in Germany. They were permanently stationed on the routes over the plains in the northern railway divisions. Because the plate frame soon proved to be the weakest link (with a high repair bill), the locos were taken out of traction service by 1980, but continued to be used as heating engines.

The Bavarian Railway Museum (Bayerische Eisenbahnmuseum) in Nördlingen has acquired the last preserved engine of this type, number 50 4073. It is currently in the Meiningen Steam Locomotive Works at and is awaiting external refurbishment.

Other railway companies edit

 
Romanian 150 class loco, DRG 50 class as copied by Resita; near Cluj-Napoca, 1972

After the Second World War several Class 50 locomotives were left in eastern Europe, where some of the railway administrations procured more of them. For example, the Romanian State Railway CFR produced 282 copies of Class 50 locomotives between 1947 and 1959. 40 Romanian 150s were supplied to China in 1958, became class DK5 in 1959 and were numbered 241–280. DK5-250 is preserved at the Shenyang Railway Museum. Some were also supplied to the Korean State Railway in North Korea, where they were numbered in the 150 series.

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Wartime locomotives classes are prefixed DRB (Deutsche Reichsbahn) to distinguish them from those introduced by the DRG (prefixed DRG), which became defunct in 1937, and those introduced later by the East German Deutsche Reichsbahn (prefixed DR).

References edit

  • Ebel, Jürgen U.; Wenzel, Hansjürgen (2007). Die Baureihe 50, Bd. 1 und 2. Freiburg: EK Verlag. ISBN 978-3-88255-545-5.
  • Endisch, Dirk (2007). Baureihen 50.35 und 50.50 - Die kohle- und ölgefeuerten Reko-50er der DR. Leonberg: Verlag Dirk Endisch. ISBN 978-3-936893-44-1.
  • Hütter, Ingo (2012). Die Dampflokomotiven der Baureihen 50 bis 53 der DRG, DRB, DB, und DR (in German). Werl: DGEG Medien. pp. 9–154. ISBN 978-3-937189-63-5.
  • Rotthowe, Ludwig (2003). "Ein letzter Versuch. Erinnerung an die 50.40 der DB". Lok Magazin. 42 (260). München: GeraNova Zeitschriftenverlag GmbH: 56–63. ISSN 0458-1822.
  • Vetter, Klaus-J (2002). Das große Handbuch deutscher Lokomotiven. München: Bruckmann Special. ISBN 3-7654-3764-6.
  • Weisbrod, Manfred; Müller, Hans; Petznik, Wolfgang (1978). Dampflokomotiven deutscher Eisenbahnen, Baureihe 41–59 (EFA 1.2) (in German) (3rd ed.). Düsseldorf: Alba. pp. 49–63. ISBN 3-87094-082-4.

External links edit

  • Photos of a typical original Class 50: 50 1002
  • 50 2988

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, 2014, 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 50 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2014 Learn how and when to remove this message The DRB Class 50 1 is a German class of 2 10 0 locomotive built from 1939 as a standard locomotive Einheitsdampflokomotive for hauling goods trains It had one leading axle and five coupled axles and was one of the most successful designs produced for the Deutsche Reichsbahn DRB Class 50Deutsche Bundesbahn DB 052 740 8 in Mayen May 2006Type and originPower typeSteamBuilderHenschel amp Sohn 650 Berliner Maschinenbau 370 Lokomotivfabrik Floridsdorf 368 Krupp 324 Krauss Maffei 317 Borsig 179 Maschienenbau und Bahnbedarf AG 170 Schichau Werke 135 Arnold Jung Lokomotivfabrik 105 Maschinenfabrik Esslingen 69 Skoda Works 140 CKD 35 Deutsche Waffen und Munitionsfabriken 72 Ostrowiece 26 SA des Usines Metallurgiques du Hainaut 24 SA la Metallurgique Tubize 38 John Cockerill 42 Ateliers de construction de La Meuse 26 Forges Usines et Fonderies Haine Saint Pierre 28 Anglo Franco Belge 26 SA l Energie 16 Build date1939 1948Total produced3160SpecificationsConfiguration Whyte2 10 0 UIC1 E h2 GermanG 56 15Gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in Leading dia 0 850 mm 33 1 2 in Driver dia 1 400 mm 55 1 8 in Tender wheels1 000 mm 39 3 8 in Wheelbase Axle spacing Asymmetrical 2 600 mm 8 ft 6 3 8 in 1 650 mm 5 ft 5 in 1 650 mm 5 ft 5 in 1 650 mm 5 ft 5 in 1 650 mm 5 ft 5 in Engine9 200 mm 30 ft 2 1 4 in Tender1 900 mm 6 ft 2 3 4 in 1 900 mm 6 ft 2 3 4 in 1 900 mm 6 ft 2 3 4 in 5 700 mm 18 ft 8 3 8 in incl tender18 890 mm 61 ft 11 3 4 in Length Over headstocks21 640 mm 71 ft 0 in Over buffers22 940 mm 75 ft 3 1 8 in Height4 500 mm 14 ft 9 1 8 in Axle load15 3 t 15 1 long tons 16 9 short tons Adhesive weight76 6 t 75 4 long tons 84 4 short tons Empty weight78 6 t 77 4 long tons 86 6 short tons Service weight88 1 t 86 7 long tons 97 1 short tons Tender type2 2 T 26Fuel typeCoalFuel capacity8 t 7 9 long tons 8 8 short tons Water cap 26 m3 5 720 imp gal 6 870 US gal Firebox Grate area3 9 m2 42 sq ft Boiler Pitch3 050 mm 10 ft 1 8 in Tube plates5 200 mm 17 ft 3 4 in Small tubes54 mm 2 1 8 in 113 off Large tubes133 mm 5 1 4 in 35 offBoiler pressure16 bar 16 3 kgf cm2 232 psi Heating surface Firebox15 9 m2 171 sq ft Tubes90 4 m2 973 sq ft Flues71 3 m2 767 sq ft Total surface177 6 m2 1 912 sq ft Superheater Heating area64 1 m2 690 sq ft CylindersTwo outsideCylinder size600 mm 660 mm 23 5 8 in 26 in Valve gearHeusinger Walschaerts with lifting linksTrain heatingSteamPerformance figuresMaximum speed80 km h 50 mph both directions Indicated power1 625 PS 1 200 kW 1 600 hp CareerNumbers50 001 50 3171 with gapsRetired1987 This class was procured as part of the German Nazi party s preparations for war that led into the Second World War Up to 1948 3 164 Class 50 engines were built by almost all the European locomotive factories towards the end as so called provisional war locomotives Ubergangskriegslokomotiven and classified as 50 UK At the end of the steam locomotive era they became virtually a universal class of mixed traffic steam engine that thanks to their low axle load could even be employed on branch lines with light track beds The Deutsche Bundesbahn grouped the locomotives into Classes 050 051 052 and 053 from 1968 so that the numbers were computer compatible Some of the class were used by the Polish State Railways as type Ty5 Contents 1 General 2 DB Class 50 40 3 DR Class 50 35 37 3 1 DR Class 50 50 4 DR Class 50 40 5 Other railway companies 6 See also 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 External linksGeneral edit nbsp 50 1724 at Koln Gereon 26 May 1990 nbsp DB No 050 915 8 on a Hof Marktredwitz passenger train Easter 1972 In spite of wartime losses a large number of engines still remained in 1945 No fewer than 2 159 working locomotives were taken over by the Deutsche Bundesbahn alone and for a long time they formed the backbone of goods traffic operations together with the larger DRG Class 44 They were also used for passenger services To protect the engine crew when running in reverse the front of the tender a 2 2 T 26 was furnished with a protective shield On many locomotives the Wagner smoke deflectors were replaced by the Witte model after the war On 735 of the DB machines the tender was fitted with a conductor s cab which meant that the volume of the coal bunker had to be reduced 1452 locomotives were included in the new DB classification scheme That said 88 of them were already earmarked for withdrawal Because the class number now had to consist of 3 figures the designations 051 052 and 053 had to be introduced in addition to 050 As a result the old Class 50 was divided as shown in the table Designation Quantity Due for Retirement 050 521 36 051 413 22 052 450 23 053 77 7 The last DB locomotives were retired from Duisburg Wedau in 1977 Only 350 examples of Class 50 engines remained in with the DR in East Germany after the war Because only a small number of the numerous Class 44 fleet went to East Germany the DRB Class 52 was the predominant goods train locomotive in many areas there Of the Class 50s 208 units were rebuilt into Class 50 35 37 engines The original locomotives ran mainly in the south From the middle of the 1970s they were retired in large numbers so that in the 1980s they were real rarities Nevertheless the last ones ended their active duties in 1987 together with the rebuilds Rekoloks Some of the original locomotives are preserved including 50 622 and 50 849 No 50 622 is stabled in the Nuremberg Transport Museum where on the evening of 17 October 2005 it was badly damaged in the great fire at the locomotive shed The engine should however be able to be repaired with the aid of donations No 50 849 belongs to the Glauchau Railway Society Eisenbahnverein Glauchau and has a Wagner smoke deflector After the Second World War many examples of Class 50 engines were left in the other European states and some were used until the end of the steam traction era For example they were in service with the PKP 55 redesignated PKP class Ty5 the CSD 28 redesignated class 555 1 the OBB and the DSB DB Class 50 40 editDB Class 50 40 nbsp DB 50 4023 at Spich August 1961Type and originPower typeSteamRebuilderHenschel amp SohnRebuild date1955Number rebuilt31SpecificationsAxle load15 7 t 15 5 long tons 17 3 short tons Adhesive weight78 4 t 77 2 long tons 86 4 short tons Empty weight80 4 t 79 1 long tons 88 6 short tons Service weight90 6 t 89 2 long tons 99 9 short tons Firebox Grate area3 1 m2 33 sq ft Boiler Tube plates4 700 mm 15 ft 5 in Small tubes60 mm 2 3 8 in 39 off Large tubes152 mm 6 in 24 offHeating surface Firebox17 3 m2 186 sq ft Tubes125 3 m2 1 349 sq ft Flues50 8 m2 547 sq ft Total surface193 5 m2 2 083 sq ft Superheater Heating area48 8 m2 525 sq ft Performance figuresPower output1 540 PS 1 130 kW 1 520 hp CareerOperatorsDeutsche BundesbahnNumbers50 4001 50 4031Retired1967 includes 91 2 m2 982 sq ft in the 161 tube feedwater heaterOnly changes from standard version shown Because the Deutsche Bundesbahn had sufficient goods train locomotives they could quickly phase out the DRB Class 52 engines so that the ageing boilers on the Class 50s could be replaced by those of the Class 52s Even the trough tender of the Kriegslokomotiven was used by the 50s amongst others In the 1950s several Class 50 locomotives served as trials engines Thus 35 machines were given a boiler with mixer preheater and turbo feed pumps Number 50 1503 was experimentally equipped with a Giesl ejector In 1959 ten locomotives were given a boiler with smaller grate area in order to try to reduce the consumption of coal After experience with Franco Crosti boilers on Class 52 locomotives DB Class 42 90 Henschel rebuilt number 50 1412 in 1954 with such a boiler This included a second preheater boiler underneath the actual locomotive boiler itself After the smoke gases had flowed through the main boiler they were turned around and passed through the preheater boiler They escaped into the atmosphere through a side chimney along with the exhaust steam The feed water was initially heated in a surface or mixer preheater then in the preheater boiler before entering the main boiler In this way the heat energy of the combustion gases could be better utilised and fuel consumption reduced In 1958 30 more engines were given Franco Crosti smoke gas preheaters These locos were redesignated as 50 4001 to 50 4031 Number 50 4011 was given oil firing It was deployed in Munsterland and in the Rhineland The locomotives were retired by 1967 Adolph Giesl Gieslingen describes in his book Anatomie der Dampflokomotive that the Sulfuric acid in the smoke condensed in the preheater and attacked the Heat exchanger The conversion to Diesel and Electric locos led Italy and Germany both to abandon development of the Franco Crosti smoke pre heater No locomotive was preserved DR Class 50 35 37 editDR Class 50 35 nbsp 50 3648 8 in Dresden Altstadt shedType and originPower typeSteamRebuild date1957 1962Number rebuilt208SpecificationsAxle load15 4 t 15 2 long tons 17 0 short tons Adhesive weight77 0 t 75 8 long tons 84 9 short tons Empty weight78 1 t 76 9 long tons 86 1 short tons Service weight88 2 t 86 8 long tons 97 2 short tons Firebox Grate area3 7 m2 40 sq ft Boiler Tube plates4 700 mm 15 ft 5 in Small tubes51 mm 2 in 124 off Large tubes133 mm 5 1 4 in 38 offHeating surface Firebox17 9 m2 193 sq ft Tubes84 2 m2 906 sq ft Flues70 7 m2 761 sq ft Total surface172 3 m2 1 855 sq ft Superheater Heating area65 4 m2 704 sq ft Performance figuresIndicated power1 760 PS 1 290 kW 1 740 hp CareerOperatorsDeutsche Reichsbahn GDR Numbers50 3501 50 3708Retired1989Only changes from standard version shown nbsp 50 3552 in steam as the Teddybear Express on the Nidder Valley Railway nbsp A DRG 50 in Ilmenau towing a special train on the Rennsteigbahn nbsp A DRG 50 3552 in Bischofsheim Hesse At the end of the 1930s it was thought that a suitable boiler material had been found in the form of St 47 K Mo steel that would allow boiler pressure to be increased to 20 bar without significantly raising the total weight of the boiler The newly developed steel had a higher strength than the type of steel St 34 used hitherto but its disadvantage was that it had considerably worse conductivity In the harsh everyday work of steam locomotives the material became very quickly fatigued so that boilers made of the new steel had to be replaced after only a few years The Class 50 too was given such a boiler to begin with Even though its condition was less critical than with other classes it urgently needed replacing by the end of the 1950s As a result the DR in East Germany had the 50E replacement boiler developed on the basis of the new boilers equipping the Class 23 10 50 40 although because the locomotive frames were different it was given a 500 mm longer boiler barrel This was later used on the rebuilds the so called Rekoloks which saw the conversion of Class 23 engines as well as conversions of the Class 52s into 52 80s and the Class 58s into 58 30s Between 1958 and 1962 208 Class 50 locomotives were given such a boiler along with a mixer preheater a larger radiative heating area and improved suction draught which also raised its performance Many engines were also equipped with Giesl ejectors These Reko locomotives were allocated to sub class 50 35 and given operating numbers 50 3501 to 50 3708 In their last years of operation these engines often ran with the new 2 2 T 28 tenders The engines were soon gathered together in the railway divisions of the northwest After the conversion of engines to oil fired Class 50 50 the remaining coal fired ones were concentrated in the Magdeburg division Replacing older locomotives as well as oil fired ones they returned to the Dresden and Schwerin divisions again by the end of the 1970s The last regular standard gauge steam train was hauled by a Class 50 35 locomotive This was number 50 3559 which headed an official farewell service on 29 October 1988 on a round trip from Halberstadt to Magdeburg Thale and back to Halberstadt No 50 3559 is used in Liblar as a restaurant There are several Class 50 35 locomotives several of them still working belonging to Deutsche Bahn AG and the many museum railways and railway museums such as numbers 50 3501 50 3539 50 3564 50 3576 50 3616 50 3648 50 3654 50 3695 and 50 3708 DR Class 50 50 edit nbsp No 50 0072 at the 50th Anniversary of the Bayerisches Eisenbahnmuseum Between 1966 and 1971 72 Class 50 35 locomotives were converted to oil firing To distinguish them they were re designated as Class 50 50 From the introduction of EDP numbers in 1970 they were given operating numbers 50 0001 to 50 0072 They were stationed in the Reichsbahn divisions of Schwerin and Greifswald and used for heavy goods train duties Their sudden withdrawal in 1981 was a political decision as a result of the cost of crude oil prices in the Eastern Bloc which had suddenly risen sharply This meant that they could now chemically process Bunker oil D with the result that it was not longer available for locomotive firing In the Bavarian Railway Museum Bayerischen Eisenbahnmuseum in Nordlingen the last representative of this class number 50 0072 is preserved DR Class 50 40 editDR Class 50 40 nbsp 50 4073 in partially restored state Type and originPower typeSteamBuilderVEB Lokomotivbau Karl Marx BabelsbergBuild date1956 1960Total produced88SpecificationsWheelbase incl tender18 435 mm 725 3 4 in Length Over headstocks21 360 mm 841 in Over buffers22 600 mm 889 3 4 in Height4 550 mm 179 1 8 in Axle load14 7 t 14 5 long tons 16 2 short tons Adhesive weight73 4 t 72 2 long tons 80 9 short tons Empty weight77 1 t 75 9 long tons 85 0 short tons Service weight85 9 t 84 5 long tons 94 7 short tons Tender type2 2 T 28Fuel capacity10 t 9 8 long tons 11 short tons Water cap 28 m3 6 160 imp gal 7 400 US gal Firebox Grate area3 7 m2 40 sq ft Boiler Pitch3 100 mm 122 in Tube plates4 200 mm 165 3 8 in Small tubes44 5 mm 1 3 4 in 150 off Large tubes133 mm 5 1 4 in 38 offHeating surface Firebox17 9 m2 193 sq ft Tubes79 0 m2 850 sq ft Flues62 7 m2 675 sq ft Total surface159 6 m2 1 718 sq ft Superheater Heating area68 5 m2 737 sq ft Performance figuresIndicated power1 760 PS 1 290 kW 1 740 hp CareerOperatorsDeutsche Reichsbahn GDR Numbers50 4001 50 4088Retired1980Only changes from standard version shown As well as modern passenger train locomotives the DR in East Germany needed more goods train locomotives with a 15 t axle load As a result a parallel development like those of the pre war time was initiated for a passenger train engine the DR Class 23 10 and a goods train engine the DR Class 50 40 in order that many of their components could be interchangeable The running gear conformed broadly to that of the Einheitslok but a plate frame had to be used because bar frames could no longer be worked The boiler was a new build to modern construction standards with a combustion chamber and a mixer preheater In terms of performance it was roughly comparable to the standard boiler but was somewhat more economic in its fuel consumption The locomotives were also given new tenders the 2 2 T 28 The 88 engines which were renumbered from 50 4001 to 50 4088 were delivered between 1956 and 1960 Number 50 4088 was therefore the last standard gauge steam engine to be newly built in Germany They were permanently stationed on the routes over the plains in the northern railway divisions Because the plate frame soon proved to be the weakest link with a high repair bill the locos were taken out of traction service by 1980 but continued to be used as heating engines The Bavarian Railway Museum Bayerische Eisenbahnmuseum in Nordlingen has acquired the last preserved engine of this type number 50 4073 It is currently in the Meiningen Steam Locomotive Works at and is awaiting external refurbishment Other railway companies edit nbsp Romanian 150 class loco DRG 50 class as copied by Resita near Cluj Napoca 1972 After the Second World War several Class 50 locomotives were left in eastern Europe where some of the railway administrations procured more of them For example the Romanian State Railway CFR produced 282 copies of Class 50 locomotives between 1947 and 1959 40 Romanian 150s were supplied to China in 1958 became class DK5 in 1959 and were numbered 241 280 DK5 250 is preserved at the Shenyang Railway Museum Some were also supplied to the Korean State Railway in North Korea where they were numbered in the 150 series See also editList of DRG locomotives and railbusesFootnotes edit Wartime locomotives classes are prefixed DRB Deutsche Reichsbahn to distinguish them from those introduced by the DRG prefixed DRG which became defunct in 1937 and those introduced later by the East German Deutsche Reichsbahn prefixed DR References editEbel Jurgen U Wenzel Hansjurgen 2007 Die Baureihe 50 Bd 1 und 2 Freiburg EK Verlag ISBN 978 3 88255 545 5 Endisch Dirk 2007 Baureihen 50 35 und 50 50 Die kohle und olgefeuerten Reko 50er der DR Leonberg Verlag Dirk Endisch ISBN 978 3 936893 44 1 Hutter Ingo 2012 Die Dampflokomotiven der Baureihen 50 bis 53 der DRG DRB DB und DR in German Werl DGEG Medien pp 9 154 ISBN 978 3 937189 63 5 Rotthowe Ludwig 2003 Ein letzter Versuch Erinnerung an die 50 40 der DB Lok Magazin 42 260 Munchen GeraNova Zeitschriftenverlag GmbH 56 63 ISSN 0458 1822 Vetter Klaus J 2002 Das grosse Handbuch deutscher Lokomotiven Munchen Bruckmann Special ISBN 3 7654 3764 6 Weisbrod Manfred Muller Hans Petznik Wolfgang 1978 Dampflokomotiven deutscher Eisenbahnen Baureihe 41 59 EFA 1 2 in German 3rd ed Dusseldorf Alba pp 49 63 ISBN 3 87094 082 4 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to DRB Class 50 Photos of a typical original Class 50 50 1002 50 2988 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title DRB Class 50 amp oldid 1218820515, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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