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Prussian G 12

The Prussian G 12 is a 1'E 2-10-0 goods train locomotive built for the Prussian state railways (Preußische Staatseisenbahnen).

Prussia, Alsace-Lorraine, Baden, Württemberg G 12
Saxon XIII H (1919 version)
DRG Class 58.2–5/10–21
ÖBB Class 658
PKP Class Ty1
SNCF 150 C
JŽ class 36
État-Belge Type 92
DR 58 261 in Potsdam (1993)
Type and origin
Builder
Build date1917–1924
Total produced1,479
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte2-10-0
 • GermanG 56.17
Gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
Leading dia.1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)
Driver dia.1,400 mm (4 ft 7+18 in)
Length:
 • Over beams18,495 mm (60 ft 8+14 in)
Axle load16.7 t (16.4 long tons; 18.4 short tons)
Adhesive weight82.5 t (81.2 long tons; 90.9 short tons)
Service weight95.7 t (94.2 long tons; 105.5 short tons)
Water cap.20.0 or 21.0 or 31.5 m3 (4,400 or 4,600 or 6,900 imp gal; 5,300 or 5,500 or 8,300 US gal)
Boiler pressure14 kgf/cm2 (1.37 MPa; 199 lbf/in2)
Heating surface:
 • Firebox
3.88 m2 (41.8 sq ft)
 • Evaporative192.43 m2 (2,071.3 sq ft)
Superheater:
 • Heating area68.42 m2 (736.5 sq ft)
Cylinder size570 mm (22+716 in)
Piston stroke660 mm (26 in)
Performance figures
Maximum speed65 km/h (40 mph)
Indicated power1,540 PS (1,130 kW; 1,520 hp)
Career
NumbersDRG 58 201–225, 231–272, 281–303, 311–318, 401–462, 501–543, 1002–2148
Retiredby 1976

It had been shown during the First World War that, from a servicing and maintenance point of view, it was a great disadvantage for each state railway to have its own locomotive classes with no standardization. Even spare parts for locos of the same class often did not fit their sister locos. In addition, the military railways needed a fast, powerful, goods locomotive that did not have a high axle load.

Einheitslokomotive G 12

In the advertisements placed by locomotive factories, G 12 engines were described as Einheitslokomotiven (standard locomotives). That caused a lot of confusion, because the term Einheitslokomotive had become synonymous with the Einheitslokomotive 1925, designed in that year by the DRG („Kunibald“ Wagner). The Deutsche Bundesbahn (DB) also called its steam locomotives Einheitslokomotive 1950 according to DV 939a "steam locomotives and tenders (standard gauge)" from 1953, and its AC electric locomotives E10, E11, E40, E42, E50 and E51 were designated as Einheits(elektro)lokomotiven.

The standardisation of locomotives began in Prussia in the 19th century with 'norms' (Normalien). Those designed by Robert Garbe used many common parts, as the P8, G10 (common boiler) and T18 (also same boiler apart from Smokebox). The Prussian G 8.3 is a shortened G 12, the Prussian G 8.2 eliminated the inner cylinder.

The G 12 was the first locomotive commonly in service with multiple German state railways and thus rightly carries the name Einheitslokomotive, apart from "Kunibald" Wagner continuing the tradition of Garbe, and, later, handing the torch over to Friedrich Witte of the DB and Max Baumberg of the Deutsche Reichsbahn (DB). However, it is a distinct machine from the Einheitslokomotive 1925 of the DRG.

In the 1920s, continuing well-constructed types (like the Bavarian S 3/6, Saxon XX HV, Prussian P 8 and others, including G 82 and G 12), came under serious consideration. Wagner prevailed by stating that none of those machines offered the crucial standardisation of parts needed for economic operation. The G 12/G 82 was also not used as template or first classes of the Einheitslokomotive 1925. Instead, the Einheitslok-1925 was a complete redesign, its genesis being described in detail by Alfred Gottwaldt, Geschichte der deutschen Einheits-Lokomotiven Franckh, Stuttgart 1978, ISBN 3-440-07941-4.

Design

The G 12 was based on the Prussian G 12.1 and a 2-10-0 locomotive built for the Chemins de fer Ottomans d'Anatolie (CFOA) of the Ottoman Empire by Henschel (see Prussian G 12 (CFOA type).

After Robert Garbe retired, the locomotives deviated in several ways from earlier principles for Prussian locomotive design. For example, they had a continuous bar frame and a wide, outer, Belpaire firebox, located above the frame with a large grate area. The same principles were applied to other, later, designs such as the Prussian T 20 or Prussian P 10.

Construction

Between August 1917 and 1921, a total of 1,168 G 12s were procured by Prussia. The Imperial Railways in Alsace-Lorraine ordered 118, the Grand Duchy of Baden State Railway 88, the Royal Saxon State Railways 42 and the Royal Württemberg State Railways 42. In addition, Baden bought 10 locomotives from the Prussian state railways. Even the Deutsche Reichsbahn received a batch of 20 locomotives in 1924 that, following the Saxon XIII H, were given the numbers 58 443-462.

The Saxon locomotives were, like their predecessors, designated as Class XIII H; Baden and Württemberg took on the Prussian designation of G 12. Only the Bavarian State Railways, the railways of Mecklenburg and Oldenburg did not buy any G 12s. As a result, the G 12 can be viewed as the precursor to the standard locomotives or Einheitsloks of Germany.

Deutsche Reichsbahn

The majority of locomotives of this class were taken over by the Deutsche Reichsbahn. There they were given the following operating numbers:

  • Baden G 12: 58 201–225, 231–272, 281–303, 311–318
  • Saxon XIII H: 58 401–462
  • Württemberg G 12: 58 501–543
  • Prussian G 12: 58 1002–2148.

Number 58 1001 was not a G 12, rather an engine for the CFOA left in Germany.

Coal dust firing

Around 1930, six engines were converted to coal dust firing and, after 1945, a number of other engines were similarly modified, of which 43 remained in service for a long time (up to 1968).

World War II and beyond

 
A G12 of Yugoslav Railways (JŽ) Class 36 on a southbound freight at Bled Jezero station in Slovenia, 1971

In World War II, 58 2144 from Poland and 58 2145-2148 from Luxembourg were incorporated.

The Deutsche Bundesbahn retired their units in 1953. The East German Deutsche Reichsbahn still had 300 machines in service in 1968. On the introduction of EDP numbers in 1970, a '1' was usually prefixed to three-digit operating numbers. The last locomotives were retired in 1976. 56 locomotives were converted by the Deutsche Reichsbahn to Class 58.30 Rekoloks between 1958 and 1962.

After World War II, locomotives 58 1669, 1746, 1767, 1904, 1917, 2122 and 2132 remained in Austrian national territory. Number 58 1669 was given back to the DB in 1949, 58 1904 was paid off in 1951 and 58 1917 ended up in the Soviet Union in 1949. The remaining four engines formed the Austrian ÖBB Class 658. All the engines had been retired by 1966. However, at least two examples (658.1746) and (658.2122) survived longer as heating locomotives at Linz depot. 658.1746 was seen dumped as 01033 in August 1972, along with 658.2122 as 01042. 01042 survived until at least February 1976.

The locomotives remaining in Poland after 1945 were given the Polish State Railways class Ty1. Those in Yugoslavia became class 36.

Tenders

 
Ty 1-76 with tender 20C1-76

The G 12 was mainly equipped with Prussian class 3 T 20 or 2'2' T 31.5 tenders. The Saxon XIII H, on the other hand, generally ran with the somewhat larger Saxon class 3 T 21 tenders, resulting in a greater overall length. Because the volume of the water tank was reduced when locomotives were converted to coal dust firing, only large Prussian 2'2' T 31.5 tenders or standard tenders were used after the war.

Preservation

As of the time of writing[when?], two former Baden locomotives of the older type, 58 261 (Bw Chemnitz-Hilbersdorf) and 58 311 (Ettlingen), a Prussian original, 58 1616 (formerly used as a steam generator (Dampfspender) (Bw Hermeskeil) and an example obtained by Yugoslavia after WW2, 36-013, notably with the rear steam dome removed (Železniški Muzej Ljubljana), remain preserved.[citation needed]

See also

References

  • Frister, Thomas; Wenzel, Hansjürgen (2010). Lokporträt Preußische G 12, Die Baureihen 58.2-3, 58.4, 58.5 und 58.10-21 (Eisenbahn-Bildarchiv Nr. 44) (in German). Freiburg: EK-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-88255-384-0.
  • Hütter, Ingo (2015). Die Dampflokomotiven der Baureihen 54 bis 59 der DRG, DRB, DB, und DR (in German). Werl: DGEG Medien. pp. 467–469, 470–472, 473–474, 487–516. ISBN 978-3-937189-85-7.
  • Vandenberghen, J (1989). La guerre 1914 - 1918 et les locomotives "Armistice", 2. Description des locomotives K.P.E.V. (PDF) (in French). Brussels: SNCB. pp. 285–290.
  • Wagner, Andreas; Bäzold, Dieter; Zschech, Rainer; Lüderitz, Ralph (1990). Lokomotiven preußischer Eisenbahnen, Güterzuglocomotiven (EFA 2.3.2) (in German). Düsseldorf: Alba. pp. 189–194. ISBN 3-87094-134-0.
  • Weisbrod, Manfred; Müller, Hans; Petznik, Wolfgang (1978). Dampflokomotiven deutscher Eisenbahnen, Baureihe 41–59 (EFA 1.2) (in German) (3rd ed.). Düsseldorf: Alba. pp. 177–185. ISBN 3-87094-082-4.

prussian, goods, train, locomotive, built, prussian, state, railways, preußische, staatseisenbahnen, prussia, alsace, lorraine, baden, württemberg, 12saxon, xiii, 1919, version, class, 21öbb, class, 658pkp, class, ty1sncf, class, État, belge, type, 92dr, potsd. The Prussian G 12 is a 1 E 2 10 0 goods train locomotive built for the Prussian state railways Preussische Staatseisenbahnen Prussia Alsace Lorraine Baden Wurttemberg G 12Saxon XIII H 1919 version DRG Class 58 2 5 10 21OBB Class 658PKP Class Ty1SNCF 150 C JZ class 36 Etat Belge Type 92DR 58 261 in Potsdam 1993 Type and originBuilderHenschel amp Sohn 433 Borsig 226 Linke Hofmann 230 Hanomag 164 Schichau Werke 85 AEG 10 Krupp 58 Rheinmetall 30 SACM 50 MBG Karlsruhe 76 Maschinenfabrik Esslingen 43 Sachsische Maschinenfabrik 62 Brown Boveri amp Cie 12 Build date1917 1924Total produced1 479SpecificationsConfiguration Whyte2 10 0 GermanG 56 17Gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in Leading dia 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in Driver dia 1 400 mm 4 ft 7 1 8 in Length Over beams18 495 mm 60 ft 8 1 4 in Axle load16 7 t 16 4 long tons 18 4 short tons Adhesive weight82 5 t 81 2 long tons 90 9 short tons Service weight95 7 t 94 2 long tons 105 5 short tons Water cap 20 0 or 21 0 or 31 5 m3 4 400 or 4 600 or 6 900 imp gal 5 300 or 5 500 or 8 300 US gal Boiler pressure14 kgf cm2 1 37 MPa 199 lbf in2 Heating surface Firebox3 88 m2 41 8 sq ft Evaporative192 43 m2 2 071 3 sq ft Superheater Heating area68 42 m2 736 5 sq ft Cylinder size570 mm 22 7 16 in Piston stroke660 mm 26 in Performance figuresMaximum speed65 km h 40 mph Indicated power1 540 PS 1 130 kW 1 520 hp CareerNumbersDRG 58 201 225 231 272 281 303 311 318 401 462 501 543 1002 2148Retiredby 1976It had been shown during the First World War that from a servicing and maintenance point of view it was a great disadvantage for each state railway to have its own locomotive classes with no standardization Even spare parts for locos of the same class often did not fit their sister locos In addition the military railways needed a fast powerful goods locomotive that did not have a high axle load Contents 1 Einheitslokomotive G 12 2 Design 3 Construction 4 Deutsche Reichsbahn 5 Coal dust firing 6 World War II and beyond 7 Tenders 8 Preservation 9 See also 10 ReferencesEinheitslokomotive G 12 EditIn the advertisements placed by locomotive factories G 12 engines were described as Einheitslokomotiven standard locomotives That caused a lot of confusion because the term Einheitslokomotive had become synonymous with the Einheitslokomotive 1925 designed in that year by the DRG Kunibald Wagner The Deutsche Bundesbahn DB also called its steam locomotives Einheitslokomotive 1950 according to DV 939a steam locomotives and tenders standard gauge from 1953 and its AC electric locomotives E10 E11 E40 E42 E50 and E51 were designated as Einheits elektro lokomotiven The standardisation of locomotives began in Prussia in the 19th century with norms Normalien Those designed by Robert Garbe used many common parts as the P8 G10 common boiler and T18 also same boiler apart from Smokebox The Prussian G 8 3 is a shortened G 12 the Prussian G 8 2 eliminated the inner cylinder The G 12 was the first locomotive commonly in service with multiple German state railways and thus rightly carries the name Einheitslokomotive apart from Kunibald Wagner continuing the tradition of Garbe and later handing the torch over to Friedrich Witte of the DB and Max Baumberg of the Deutsche Reichsbahn DB However it is a distinct machine from the Einheitslokomotive 1925 of the DRG In the 1920s continuing well constructed types like the Bavarian S 3 6 Saxon XX HV Prussian P 8 and others including G 82 and G 12 came under serious consideration Wagner prevailed by stating that none of those machines offered the crucial standardisation of parts needed for economic operation The G 12 G 82 was also not used as template or first classes of the Einheitslokomotive 1925 Instead the Einheitslok 1925 was a complete redesign its genesis being described in detail by Alfred Gottwaldt Geschichte der deutschen Einheits Lokomotiven Franckh Stuttgart 1978 ISBN 3 440 07941 4 Design EditThe G 12 was based on the Prussian G 12 1 and a 2 10 0 locomotive built for the Chemins de fer Ottomans d Anatolie CFOA of the Ottoman Empire by Henschel see Prussian G 12 CFOA type After Robert Garbe retired the locomotives deviated in several ways from earlier principles for Prussian locomotive design For example they had a continuous bar frame and a wide outer Belpaire firebox located above the frame with a large grate area The same principles were applied to other later designs such as the Prussian T 20 or Prussian P 10 Construction EditBetween August 1917 and 1921 a total of 1 168 G 12s were procured by Prussia The Imperial Railways in Alsace Lorraine ordered 118 the Grand Duchy of Baden State Railway 88 the Royal Saxon State Railways 42 and the Royal Wurttemberg State Railways 42 In addition Baden bought 10 locomotives from the Prussian state railways Even the Deutsche Reichsbahn received a batch of 20 locomotives in 1924 that following the Saxon XIII H were given the numbers 58 443 462 The Saxon locomotives were like their predecessors designated as Class XIII H Baden and Wurttemberg took on the Prussian designation of G 12 Only the Bavarian State Railways the railways of Mecklenburg and Oldenburg did not buy any G 12s As a result the G 12 can be viewed as the precursor to the standard locomotives or Einheitsloks of Germany Deutsche Reichsbahn EditThe majority of locomotives of this class were taken over by the Deutsche Reichsbahn There they were given the following operating numbers Baden G 12 58 201 225 231 272 281 303 311 318 Saxon XIII H 58 401 462 Wurttemberg G 12 58 501 543 Prussian G 12 58 1002 2148 Number 58 1001 was not a G 12 rather an engine for the CFOA left in Germany Coal dust firing EditAround 1930 six engines were converted to coal dust firing and after 1945 a number of other engines were similarly modified of which 43 remained in service for a long time up to 1968 World War II and beyond Edit A G12 of Yugoslav Railways JZ Class 36 on a southbound freight at Bled Jezero station in Slovenia 1971 In World War II 58 2144 from Poland and 58 2145 2148 from Luxembourg were incorporated The Deutsche Bundesbahn retired their units in 1953 The East German Deutsche Reichsbahn still had 300 machines in service in 1968 On the introduction of EDP numbers in 1970 a 1 was usually prefixed to three digit operating numbers The last locomotives were retired in 1976 56 locomotives were converted by the Deutsche Reichsbahn to Class 58 30 Rekoloks between 1958 and 1962 After World War II locomotives 58 1669 1746 1767 1904 1917 2122 and 2132 remained in Austrian national territory Number 58 1669 was given back to the DB in 1949 58 1904 was paid off in 1951 and 58 1917 ended up in the Soviet Union in 1949 The remaining four engines formed the Austrian OBB Class 658 All the engines had been retired by 1966 However at least two examples 658 1746 and 658 2122 survived longer as heating locomotives at Linz depot 658 1746 was seen dumped as 01033 in August 1972 along with 658 2122 as 01042 01042 survived until at least February 1976 The locomotives remaining in Poland after 1945 were given the Polish State Railways class Ty1 Those in Yugoslavia became class 36 Tenders Edit Ty 1 76 with tender 20C1 76 The G 12 was mainly equipped with Prussian class 3 T 20 or 2 2 T 31 5 tenders The Saxon XIII H on the other hand generally ran with the somewhat larger Saxon class 3 T 21 tenders resulting in a greater overall length Because the volume of the water tank was reduced when locomotives were converted to coal dust firing only large Prussian 2 2 T 31 5 tenders or standard tenders were used after the war Preservation EditAs of the time of writing when two former Baden locomotives of the older type 58 261 Bw Chemnitz Hilbersdorf and 58 311 Ettlingen a Prussian original 58 1616 formerly used as a steam generator Dampfspender Bw Hermeskeil and an example obtained by Yugoslavia after WW2 36 013 notably with the rear steam dome removed Zelezniski Muzej Ljubljana remain preserved citation needed See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Prussian G 12 Prussian state railways List of Prussian locomotives and railcarsReferences EditFrister Thomas Wenzel Hansjurgen 2010 Lokportrat Preussische G 12 Die Baureihen 58 2 3 58 4 58 5 und 58 10 21 Eisenbahn Bildarchiv Nr 44 in German Freiburg EK Verlag ISBN 978 3 88255 384 0 Hutter Ingo 2015 Die Dampflokomotiven der Baureihen 54 bis 59 der DRG DRB DB und DR in German Werl DGEG Medien pp 467 469 470 472 473 474 487 516 ISBN 978 3 937189 85 7 Vandenberghen J 1989 La guerre 1914 1918 et les locomotives Armistice 2 Description des locomotives K P E V PDF in French Brussels SNCB pp 285 290 Wagner Andreas Bazold Dieter Zschech Rainer Luderitz Ralph 1990 Lokomotiven preussischer Eisenbahnen Guterzuglocomotiven EFA 2 3 2 in German Dusseldorf Alba pp 189 194 ISBN 3 87094 134 0 Weisbrod Manfred Muller Hans Petznik Wolfgang 1978 Dampflokomotiven deutscher Eisenbahnen Baureihe 41 59 EFA 1 2 in German 3rd ed Dusseldorf Alba pp 177 185 ISBN 3 87094 082 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prussian G 12 amp oldid 1069475090, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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