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Thamshavn Line

The Thamshavn Line (Norwegian: Thamshavnbanen) was Norway's first electric railway, running from 1908 to 1974 in what is now Trøndelag county. Today it is operated as a heritage railway and is the world's oldest railway running on its original alternating current electrification scheme,[1] using 6.6 kV 25 Hz AC. It was built to transport pyrites from the mines at Løkken Verk to the port at Thamshavn, as well as passengers. There were six stations: Thamshavn, Orkanger, Bårdshaug, Fannrem, Solbusøy and Svorkmo. The tracks were extended to Løkken Verk in 1910.

Thamshavn Line
Norwegian: Thamshavnbanen
Passenger train at Bårdshaug Station in 1912
LocaleNorway
Commercial operations
Built bySalvesen & Thams
Original gauge1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) metre gauge
Original electrification6.6 kV 25 Hz AC
Preserved operations
Owned bySalvesen & Thams
Operated bySalvesen & Thams
Preserved gauge1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)
Preserved electrification6.6 kV 25 Hz AC
Commercial history
Opened1908
Closed1974

It is Scandinavia's only railway with a rail gauge of 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in), though the nearby Trondheim Tramway also features this gauge. It is the world's only railway with this combination of gauge and electrical equipment. The total length of the railway was 25.15 kilometres (15.6 mi). The transportation of passengers ended in 1963, but the transportation of ore continued until 1974. In 1983, parts of the railway were reopened as a heritage railway.

History edit

Christian Thams goes electric edit

 
Through Løkken

Mining at Løkken Verk had its roots back to 1633 when King Christian IV of Denmark–Norway had opened the mine.[clarification needed] At this time all mining was a privilege of the king. Later, in the 1800s, the mine was privatised and owned by Løkken Kobber og Kisværks Interessentskab. In 1868 the local farmer and sawmill owner Wilhelm A. Thams and his accountant Christian Salvesen from Leith, Scotland founded the mining company Ørkedals Mining Company and bought a number of small mines around Løkken. In the early 1880s Wilhelm's grandson, Christian Thams returned from Switzerland and took over the running of the mining company. He realized that to make money from mining, he had to purchase the largest mine of the all, but didn't succeed until 1896 when it no longer was feasible to manually pump out the water, and bought Løkken Mine.[2]

Christian Thams understood that for the mine to continue operation, there had to be built an electric water pump in the mines. He also understood that it would then be feasible to build an electric railway between the mine and the port at Thamshavn were the pyrites were shipped out, primarily to Germany. While Thams went abroad to get capital for the new mining company, Norwegian law required that permits to operate railways and power plants only were given to Norwegians. To solve this, a separate company, Chr. Salvesen & Chr. Thams's Communications Aktieselskab (Salvesen & Thams or S&T) was established in 1898 to build the railway, operate the steam ship SS Orkla between Thamshavn and Trondheim and build the power plant at Skjenaldfossen. By 1904 the mining company had acquired the majority of stocks in S&T and soon owned the entire company. The Orkla mining company has since evolved into the Orkla Group, a Forbes 500-company.[3]

Land was, after some conflicts, acquired or expropriated and construction was started. The construction was completed in 1908 and employed between 200 and 300 people. Originally the plans were to only build the line from Thamshavn to Svorkmo while the stretch from Svorkmo to Løkken was to be operated by a cable car. But Thams soon realised that this was a mistake and decided to extend the line to Løkken. This caused some problems since he needed to get permission from the Ministry of the Interior and was not allowed to operate passenger traffic all the way to Løkken before 1910. The line between Thamshavn and Svorkmo was opened on 10 July 1908 by King Haakon VII while the last section to Løkken was opened on 15. August 1910 by Prime Minister Wollert Konow.[4]

The railway got a unique combination of gauge and electric power. At the time of the construction standard gauge (1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)) was common in Norway, but still the most common gauge, especially on industrial and branch lines, was narrow gauge. But the Thamshavn Line chose to not build the normal 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) gauge, but instead metre gauge (1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)), a gauge only used one other place in Norway, on the Trondheim Tramway some 40 kilometres (25 mi) away. Since the railway was the first to be electrified in Norway there was no standard of electric current and so Thams chose the somewhat unusual 6.6 kV 25 Hz AC, while the rest of the Norwegian (and some other Northern European) railway networks chose 15 kV  16.7 Hz AC. Thams was venturing into an innovative area, since Benjamin G. Lamme had invented the alternating current electric locomotive in 1902 and there was no experience operating the system.[5]

 
A railcar at Orkanger Station

Growth 1910-1940 edit

The export of pyrites was a gigantic success for Orkla, with both production and prices exceeding the estimates. During the economic difficult World War I the company replaced the tracks used 22.5 kilograms (50 lb) tracks with new 35 kilograms (77 lb) track in 1915. In 1916, two new locomotives were bought. Also the passenger and cargo traffic increased in the period, and in 1910 two more railcars were delivered. In 1935 the new smelting plant at Thamshavn (now Elkem Thamshavn) opened. As a supplement to the steam ship and passenger rail service, Salvesen & Thams also started operating connecting bus services. The first attempts failed in 1909 to establish a route between Svorkmo and Rindal and Surnadal. In 1918, a new bus route opened between Løkken and Aune in Oppdal, but shortened to Berkåk in 1921 when the Dovre Line opened. During the 1920s Salvesen & Thams established Trondhjem-Orkladal Billag and started operating a bus route from Thamshavn to Trondheim.[6]

Sabotage edit

After the German invasion of Norway in 1940 during World War II the mines at Løkken became an important resource for the Germans. To avoid having to bomb the entire Thamshavn and Løkken areas, the Norwegian government-in-exile chose instead to sabotage key areas instead of large areas, of consideration the civilian population. While the mining company chose to cooperate with the Germans, but secretly not performed planned production increases, Company Linge performed a total of four sabotage actions against the Thamshavn Line, led by Peter Deinboll. The first targeted the transformer station that was successfully blown up on 4 May 1942. But it was quickly rebuilt by the Germans and a new sabotage was necessary. In the fall of 1943 the idea was to blow up the lift in the mine, but instead the group decided to blow up the locomotives on the railway. On 31 October, four locomotives and one rail car was blown up. This was not enough for the Deinboll, and an attempt to hijack a train at Klingliene and blow up part of the rail at the same stop failed, killing the saboteur Odd Nilsen.[7]

In the spring of 1944 the saboteurs returned and on 9 May blew up a train at Hongslomælen and again on 31 May at the same place when the last rail car was blown up. In response to this the Germans acquired two steam engines from Germany with the right gauge, but the saboteurs didn't succeed at blowing them up. To avoid a shortage of rolling stock, the Germans used slave labour from Fannrem concentration camp to rebuild the system to a dual gauge with both standard and meter gauge, in an attempt to use rolling stock from the Dovre Line (that used standard gauge) while keeping the cars that used meter gauge. Though the entire line was rebuilt, no standard gauge locomotives were acquired and the third rail was taken away after the war.[8]

The end of an era edit

The first part of the closing of the line was the attempt to get rid of the requirement to operate passenger trains. The original permit to operate the line included a requirement to operate passenger transport on the line, but as early as in the 1930s the company tried to get rid of this obligation. But it was not until 1963 that the passenger traffic was terminated. By then the company had managed to convince the authorities that a bus route would be more suitable on the stretch between Orkanger and Løkken.[9]

By the 1970s the production at the mine was falling so much that it had become uneconomical to operate the railway, and on 29 May 1974 the railway was taken out of service. Part of the reason was the need for new locomotives, but the small production at the mine couldn't defend the necessary investments.[10] In the 66 years of operation the Thamshavn Line carried 7,441,012 passengers, 1,069,750 tonnes of freight and 16,720,047 tonnes of ore.[11]

Heritage edit

In 1973, the Norwegian Railway Association tried to open a heritage railway, but failed as Orkla wanted to keep the railway in case of future reopening for industrial transportation; as a compromise the association was given one of the railcars. No reopening occurred, and in 1983 the Orkla Industrial Museum 2012-06-08 at the Wayback Machine and local enthusiasts opened the heritage railway, at first between Løkken and Svorkmo. In 1986, the trains were extended to Solbusøy, and four years later Fannrem. After 2006, it has been possible to ride the train down to Bårdshaug, and the current length of the railway is approximately 22 kilometres (14 mi). Only the last few kilometers of line have been removed. The vintage railway operates from May to September, with 11,812 passengers in 2008.[12]

Representatives for every locomotive generation are preserved on the heritage railway. Currently locomotive 2 (1908), 4 (1908), 5II (1950), 8 (1917) and 10II (1952) are in serviceable condition. The passenger car fleet consists of three of the four original carriages (9, 10 and 11) and one dinner car (built 1995).

Rolling stock edit

The first locomotive that was used on the line was Kvenna (the Coffee Grinder), a steam locomotive that had been bought from the Nesttun–Os Railway and converted from 750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in) to the 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) metre gauge. In 1918 it was attempted to sell the locomotive to the Trondheim Tramway, the only other metre gauge railway in Scandinavia, but it is not known if the sale was successful. One more steam engine was bought from the German manufacturer Borsig. The line initially bought three electric locomotives from Elektrisk Bureau, who also delivered the transformers and overhead lines. The locomotives were based on a design from British Westinghouse. At the same time there was delivered a rail car named the King's car since the king had ridden in it during the opening of the line.[5]

The next order came in 1910 for two new rail cars and in 1916 for two new locomotives from ASEA at 420 kW, with an additional 12 pyrites cars in 1929-31 and 20 during the war. The company also bought a used Orenstein & Koppel steam engine from the zink mines in Odda in 1939 and during the war two Germany steam engines were transferred from Deutsche Reichsbahn.[5]

During and after the war there was used a lot of energy on rebuilding the locomotives that had been sabotaged. The three Westinghouse locomotives were rebuilt to two. In addition three new locomotives were delivered from Skabo in 1950. The last steam engine was retired in 1953. In 1952 two diesel shunting engines were delivered from Ruston & Hornsby.[13]

Three of the original passenger cars delivered to the opening in 1908 are still in use on the heritage railway. The last one, nr. 12, has been regauged and used on the heritage Setesdal Line since the 1970s. Some freightcars are still existing, including a dozen ore cars, but none are in serviceable condition.

 
Electric locomotive No. 3 Ohma Electra. The locomotive was used on the Thamshavn Line from 1908 until the 1950s. In 1972 it was moved to Trondheim and displayed at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology
No. Built Delivered Retired Type Factory Axel
Kvenna 1893 1907 1917 Steam ? B 1'Tn2
1 1908 1908 1943 Electric British Westinghouse Bo' Bo'
2 1908 1908 1963 Electric British Westinghouse Bo' Bo'
3 1908 1908 1963 Electric British Westinghouse Bo' Bo'
4 1908 1908 Rail car United Electric Bo' 2'
9 1909 1909 1947 Steam Borsig C Tn2
5 1910 1910 1943 Rail car AEG/Skabo Bo' Bo'
6 1910 1910 1944 Rail car AEG/Skabo Bo' Bo'
7 1918 1918 Electric ASEA B' B'
8 1918 1918 Electric ASEA B' B'
10 1928 1939 1943 Steam Orenstein & Koppel B Tn2
11 1921 1942 1947 Steam Corpet-Louvet B Tn2
12 1921 1942 1947 Steam Corpet-Louvet B Tn2
13 1921 1942 1947 Steam Corpet-Louvet B Tn2
14 1921 1942 1947 Steam Corpet-Louvet B Tn2
15 1921 1942 1950 Steam Corpet-Louvet B Tn2
99.221 1930 1944 1953 Steam BMAG (Schwartzkopff) 1'E1'Th2
99.223 1930 1944 1947 Steam BMAG (Schwartzkopff) 1'E1'Th2
1 II 1950 1950 Electric Brown Boveri/Skabo Bo' Bo'
5 II 1950 1950 Electric Brown Boveri/Skabo Bo
6 II 1950 1950 Electric Brown Boveri/Skabo Bo
9 II 1952 1952 Diesel Ruston & Hornsby Cmd
10 II 1952 1952 Diesel Ruston & Hornsby Cmd

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Norsk Kulturarv. . Archived from the original on 2004-09-18. Retrieved October 27, 2006.
  2. ^ Mjøen, 1983: 8
  3. ^ Mjøen, 1983: 13
  4. ^ Mjøen, 1983: 20-26
  5. ^ a b c Mjøen, 1983: 28
  6. ^ Mjøen, 1983: 32
  7. ^ Mjøen, 1983: 48
  8. ^ Mjøen, 1983: 51
  9. ^ Mjøen, 1983: 62
  10. ^ Mjøen, 1983: 69
  11. ^ Orkla Industrimuseum. "Technical details". Retrieved 2008-06-02.
  12. ^ Thamshavnbanens Venner (2009). "Metersporet" (PDF) (in Norwegian).
  13. ^ Mjøen, 1983: 54

References edit

  • Mjøen, Marit (1983). Thamshavnbanen (in Norwegian). Orkanger: Kaare Grytten / Thamshavnbanens Venner.
  • Norsk Jernbaneklubb (1994). Banedata '94 (in Norwegian). ISBN 82-90286-15-5.

External links edit

  • Orkla Industrial Museum on Thamshavn Line
  • Friends of the Thamshavn Line (in Norwegian)
  • Image gallery, Friends of the Thamshavn Line
  • Norsk Jernbaneklubb entry

63°18′42″N 9°51′49″E / 63.3118°N 9.8637°E / 63.3118; 9.8637

thamshavn, line, norwegian, thamshavnbanen, norway, first, electric, railway, running, from, 1908, 1974, what, trøndelag, county, today, operated, heritage, railway, world, oldest, railway, running, original, alternating, current, electrification, scheme, usin. The Thamshavn Line Norwegian Thamshavnbanen was Norway s first electric railway running from 1908 to 1974 in what is now Trondelag county Today it is operated as a heritage railway and is the world s oldest railway running on its original alternating current electrification scheme 1 using 6 6 kV 25 Hz AC It was built to transport pyrites from the mines at Lokken Verk to the port at Thamshavn as well as passengers There were six stations Thamshavn Orkanger Bardshaug Fannrem Solbusoy and Svorkmo The tracks were extended to Lokken Verk in 1910 Thamshavn LineNorwegian ThamshavnbanenPassenger train at Bardshaug Station in 1912LocaleNorwayCommercial operationsBuilt bySalvesen amp ThamsOriginal gauge1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in metre gaugeOriginal electrification6 6 kV 25 Hz ACPreserved operationsOwned bySalvesen amp ThamsOperated bySalvesen amp ThamsPreserved gauge1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in Preserved electrification6 6 kV 25 Hz ACCommercial historyOpened1908Closed1974 vteThamshavn Line Legend km elev M or length m in metres SS Orkla 1908 49 MB Elna 1949 63 0 00 Port and smelter Thamshavn 0 15 Thamshavn 1908 63 2 8 M Orkanger 1 03 Orkanger 1908 63 14 6 M Trondheimsveien Hov 2 04 Hov 1919 63 16 0 M Hovsbakkveien E39 Bardshaug 3 14 Bardshaug 1908 632001 11 6 M 3 25 Sjukehusveien Myra Myraveien 4 41 Gymnaset 1927 63 6 4 M Gymnaset 4 41 Orkdalsveien 4 41 Follo 4 95 Follo 1908 63 6 9 M Fv65 new 2001 5 79 Johann Gjonnes vei Fannremsmoen 5 79 Fannremsmoen 1947 63 8 3 M Fannrem 6 83 Fannrem 1908 631990 15 7 M 6 95 Fv470Orkdalsveien footpath Grotte Fv471Gryttingveien Grustaket Grustaket 1990s Engbrua bridge removed 1980s Prestmoen Blasmoen Vel Blasmo 9 43 Blasmo 1939 63 14 9 M 9 43 Fv471Gryttingveien Ekli 10 19 Ekli 1927 39 15 7 M Solbusoy 12 76 Solbusoy 1908 631986 21 0 M 14 41 Oyum 1927 63 22 5 M Oyum Oyum Sor 1990 2007 Svorkmo HydroelectricPower Station Svorka Canal 52 4 M16 m 19 35 Svorkmo 1908 631983 55 0 M Plassen 19 55 Fv475 rebuilt 2002 Klinglia Klinglia Trolldalen Bridge 21 10 built 1944 45 151 m Klinghammar n 21 12 Klinghammar n 1983 Skjotskift 22 28 Skjotskift 1918 211926 63 141 1 M 22 28 Skulmoveien Amundmoen Jordhusmoen 23 95 Jordhusmoen 1936 63 152 3 M depot 152 3 M Raubekken 11 m Furulund Romundstadbygda Langenglia underpass 25 15 Lokken Verk 1910 631983 164 0 M Lokken Verk Fv700 bridge removed 1984 25 30 pyrite silo amp industrial area km elev M or length m in metres Key Track in use Track out of use Track removed It is Scandinavia s only railway with a rail gauge of 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in though the nearby Trondheim Tramway also features this gauge It is the world s only railway with this combination of gauge and electrical equipment The total length of the railway was 25 15 kilometres 15 6 mi The transportation of passengers ended in 1963 but the transportation of ore continued until 1974 In 1983 parts of the railway were reopened as a heritage railway Contents 1 History 1 1 Christian Thams goes electric 1 2 Growth 1910 1940 1 3 Sabotage 1 4 The end of an era 1 5 Heritage 2 Rolling stock 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksHistory editChristian Thams goes electric edit nbsp Through Lokken Mining at Lokken Verk had its roots back to 1633 when King Christian IV of Denmark Norway had opened the mine clarification needed At this time all mining was a privilege of the king Later in the 1800s the mine was privatised and owned by Lokken Kobber og Kisvaerks Interessentskab In 1868 the local farmer and sawmill owner Wilhelm A Thams and his accountant Christian Salvesen from Leith Scotland founded the mining company Orkedals Mining Company and bought a number of small mines around Lokken In the early 1880s Wilhelm s grandson Christian Thams returned from Switzerland and took over the running of the mining company He realized that to make money from mining he had to purchase the largest mine of the all but didn t succeed until 1896 when it no longer was feasible to manually pump out the water and bought Lokken Mine 2 Christian Thams understood that for the mine to continue operation there had to be built an electric water pump in the mines He also understood that it would then be feasible to build an electric railway between the mine and the port at Thamshavn were the pyrites were shipped out primarily to Germany While Thams went abroad to get capital for the new mining company Norwegian law required that permits to operate railways and power plants only were given to Norwegians To solve this a separate company Chr Salvesen amp Chr Thams s Communications Aktieselskab Salvesen amp Thams or S amp T was established in 1898 to build the railway operate the steam ship SS Orkla between Thamshavn and Trondheim and build the power plant at Skjenaldfossen By 1904 the mining company had acquired the majority of stocks in S amp T and soon owned the entire company The Orkla mining company has since evolved into the Orkla Group a Forbes 500 company 3 Land was after some conflicts acquired or expropriated and construction was started The construction was completed in 1908 and employed between 200 and 300 people Originally the plans were to only build the line from Thamshavn to Svorkmo while the stretch from Svorkmo to Lokken was to be operated by a cable car But Thams soon realised that this was a mistake and decided to extend the line to Lokken This caused some problems since he needed to get permission from the Ministry of the Interior and was not allowed to operate passenger traffic all the way to Lokken before 1910 The line between Thamshavn and Svorkmo was opened on 10 July 1908 by King Haakon VII while the last section to Lokken was opened on 15 August 1910 by Prime Minister Wollert Konow 4 The railway got a unique combination of gauge and electric power At the time of the construction standard gauge 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in was common in Norway but still the most common gauge especially on industrial and branch lines was narrow gauge But the Thamshavn Line chose to not build the normal 1 067 mm 3 ft 6 in gauge but instead metre gauge 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in a gauge only used one other place in Norway on the Trondheim Tramway some 40 kilometres 25 mi away Since the railway was the first to be electrified in Norway there was no standard of electric current and so Thams chose the somewhat unusual 6 6 kV 25 Hz AC while the rest of the Norwegian and some other Northern European railway networks chose 15 kV 16 7 Hz AC Thams was venturing into an innovative area since Benjamin G Lamme had invented the alternating current electric locomotive in 1902 and there was no experience operating the system 5 nbsp A railcar at Orkanger Station Growth 1910 1940 edit The export of pyrites was a gigantic success for Orkla with both production and prices exceeding the estimates During the economic difficult World War I the company replaced the tracks used 22 5 kilograms 50 lb tracks with new 35 kilograms 77 lb track in 1915 In 1916 two new locomotives were bought Also the passenger and cargo traffic increased in the period and in 1910 two more railcars were delivered In 1935 the new smelting plant at Thamshavn now Elkem Thamshavn opened As a supplement to the steam ship and passenger rail service Salvesen amp Thams also started operating connecting bus services The first attempts failed in 1909 to establish a route between Svorkmo and Rindal and Surnadal In 1918 a new bus route opened between Lokken and Aune in Oppdal but shortened to Berkak in 1921 when the Dovre Line opened During the 1920s Salvesen amp Thams established Trondhjem Orkladal Billag and started operating a bus route from Thamshavn to Trondheim 6 Sabotage edit Main article Thamshavn Line sabotage After the German invasion of Norway in 1940 during World War II the mines at Lokken became an important resource for the Germans To avoid having to bomb the entire Thamshavn and Lokken areas the Norwegian government in exile chose instead to sabotage key areas instead of large areas of consideration the civilian population While the mining company chose to cooperate with the Germans but secretly not performed planned production increases Company Linge performed a total of four sabotage actions against the Thamshavn Line led by Peter Deinboll The first targeted the transformer station that was successfully blown up on 4 May 1942 But it was quickly rebuilt by the Germans and a new sabotage was necessary In the fall of 1943 the idea was to blow up the lift in the mine but instead the group decided to blow up the locomotives on the railway On 31 October four locomotives and one rail car was blown up This was not enough for the Deinboll and an attempt to hijack a train at Klingliene and blow up part of the rail at the same stop failed killing the saboteur Odd Nilsen 7 In the spring of 1944 the saboteurs returned and on 9 May blew up a train at Hongslomaelen and again on 31 May at the same place when the last rail car was blown up In response to this the Germans acquired two steam engines from Germany with the right gauge but the saboteurs didn t succeed at blowing them up To avoid a shortage of rolling stock the Germans used slave labour from Fannrem concentration camp to rebuild the system to a dual gauge with both standard and meter gauge in an attempt to use rolling stock from the Dovre Line that used standard gauge while keeping the cars that used meter gauge Though the entire line was rebuilt no standard gauge locomotives were acquired and the third rail was taken away after the war 8 The end of an era edit The first part of the closing of the line was the attempt to get rid of the requirement to operate passenger trains The original permit to operate the line included a requirement to operate passenger transport on the line but as early as in the 1930s the company tried to get rid of this obligation But it was not until 1963 that the passenger traffic was terminated By then the company had managed to convince the authorities that a bus route would be more suitable on the stretch between Orkanger and Lokken 9 By the 1970s the production at the mine was falling so much that it had become uneconomical to operate the railway and on 29 May 1974 the railway was taken out of service Part of the reason was the need for new locomotives but the small production at the mine couldn t defend the necessary investments 10 In the 66 years of operation the Thamshavn Line carried 7 441 012 passengers 1 069 750 tonnes of freight and 16 720 047 tonnes of ore 11 Heritage edit In 1973 the Norwegian Railway Association tried to open a heritage railway but failed as Orkla wanted to keep the railway in case of future reopening for industrial transportation as a compromise the association was given one of the railcars No reopening occurred and in 1983 the Orkla Industrial Museum Archived 2012 06 08 at the Wayback Machine and local enthusiasts opened the heritage railway at first between Lokken and Svorkmo In 1986 the trains were extended to Solbusoy and four years later Fannrem After 2006 it has been possible to ride the train down to Bardshaug and the current length of the railway is approximately 22 kilometres 14 mi Only the last few kilometers of line have been removed The vintage railway operates from May to September with 11 812 passengers in 2008 12 Representatives for every locomotive generation are preserved on the heritage railway Currently locomotive 2 1908 4 1908 5II 1950 8 1917 and 10II 1952 are in serviceable condition The passenger car fleet consists of three of the four original carriages 9 10 and 11 and one dinner car built 1995 Rolling stock editThe first locomotive that was used on the line was Kvenna the Coffee Grinder a steam locomotive that had been bought from the Nesttun Os Railway and converted from 750 mm 2 ft 5 1 2 in to the 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in metre gauge In 1918 it was attempted to sell the locomotive to the Trondheim Tramway the only other metre gauge railway in Scandinavia but it is not known if the sale was successful One more steam engine was bought from the German manufacturer Borsig The line initially bought three electric locomotives from Elektrisk Bureau who also delivered the transformers and overhead lines The locomotives were based on a design from British Westinghouse At the same time there was delivered a rail car named the King s car since the king had ridden in it during the opening of the line 5 The next order came in 1910 for two new rail cars and in 1916 for two new locomotives from ASEA at 420 kW with an additional 12 pyrites cars in 1929 31 and 20 during the war The company also bought a used Orenstein amp Koppel steam engine from the zink mines in Odda in 1939 and during the war two Germany steam engines were transferred from Deutsche Reichsbahn 5 During and after the war there was used a lot of energy on rebuilding the locomotives that had been sabotaged The three Westinghouse locomotives were rebuilt to two In addition three new locomotives were delivered from Skabo in 1950 The last steam engine was retired in 1953 In 1952 two diesel shunting engines were delivered from Ruston amp Hornsby 13 Three of the original passenger cars delivered to the opening in 1908 are still in use on the heritage railway The last one nr 12 has been regauged and used on the heritage Setesdal Line since the 1970s Some freightcars are still existing including a dozen ore cars but none are in serviceable condition nbsp Electric locomotive No 3 Ohma Electra The locomotive was used on the Thamshavn Line from 1908 until the 1950s In 1972 it was moved to Trondheim and displayed at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology No Built Delivered Retired Type Factory Axel Kvenna 1893 1907 1917 Steam B 1 Tn2 1 1908 1908 1943 Electric British Westinghouse Bo Bo 2 1908 1908 1963 Electric British Westinghouse Bo Bo 3 1908 1908 1963 Electric British Westinghouse Bo Bo 4 1908 1908 Rail car United Electric Bo 2 9 1909 1909 1947 Steam Borsig C Tn2 5 1910 1910 1943 Rail car AEG Skabo Bo Bo 6 1910 1910 1944 Rail car AEG Skabo Bo Bo 7 1918 1918 Electric ASEA B B 8 1918 1918 Electric ASEA B B 10 1928 1939 1943 Steam Orenstein amp Koppel B Tn2 11 1921 1942 1947 Steam Corpet Louvet B Tn2 12 1921 1942 1947 Steam Corpet Louvet B Tn2 13 1921 1942 1947 Steam Corpet Louvet B Tn2 14 1921 1942 1947 Steam Corpet Louvet B Tn2 15 1921 1942 1950 Steam Corpet Louvet B Tn2 99 221 1930 1944 1953 Steam BMAG Schwartzkopff 1 E1 Th2 99 223 1930 1944 1947 Steam BMAG Schwartzkopff 1 E1 Th2 1 II 1950 1950 Electric Brown Boveri Skabo Bo Bo 5 II 1950 1950 Electric Brown Boveri Skabo Bo 6 II 1950 1950 Electric Brown Boveri Skabo Bo 9 II 1952 1952 Diesel Ruston amp Hornsby Cmd 10 II 1952 1952 Diesel Ruston amp Hornsby CmdSee also editNarrow gauge railways in NorwayNotes edit Norsk Kulturarv Thamshavnbanen Railway Archived from the original on 2004 09 18 Retrieved October 27 2006 Mjoen 1983 8 Mjoen 1983 13 Mjoen 1983 20 26 a b c Mjoen 1983 28 Mjoen 1983 32 Mjoen 1983 48 Mjoen 1983 51 Mjoen 1983 62 Mjoen 1983 69 Orkla Industrimuseum Technical details Retrieved 2008 06 02 Thamshavnbanens Venner 2009 Metersporet PDF in Norwegian Mjoen 1983 54References editMjoen Marit 1983 Thamshavnbanen in Norwegian Orkanger Kaare Grytten Thamshavnbanens Venner Norsk Jernbaneklubb 1994 Banedata 94 in Norwegian ISBN 82 90286 15 5 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Thamshavnbanen Orkla Industrial Museum on Thamshavn Line Friends of the Thamshavn Line in Norwegian Image gallery Friends of the Thamshavn Line Norsk Jernbaneklubb entry 63 18 42 N 9 51 49 E 63 3118 N 9 8637 E 63 3118 9 8637 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thamshavn Line amp oldid 1195829225, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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