Victorian Railways R class

Victorian Railways R class
Victorian Railways publicity photograph of R 701, 1951
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
BuilderNorth British Locomotive Company, Glasgow
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte4-6-4
Gauge5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm) 766 converted from 5' 3" (Broad Gauge) to 4' 8.5" (Standard Gauge)
Driver dia.73 in (1,854 mm)
Length77 ft 3+14 in (23.55 m)
Axle load19 long tons 10 cwt (43,700 lb or 19.8 t)
Adhesive weight50 long tons 10 cwt (113,100 lb or 51.3 t)
Loco weight107 long tons 12 cwt (241,000 lb or 109.3 t)
Tender weight79 long tons 16 cwt (178,800 lb or 81.1 t)
Total weight187 long tons 8 cwt (419,800 lb or 190.4 t)
Tender cap.6 long tons 0 cwt (13,400 lb or 6.1 t) coal
9,000 imp gal (40,915 L; 10,809 US gal) water
Firebox:
 • Grate area42 sq ft (3.9 m2)
Boiler pressure210 psi (1.45 MPa)
Heating surface2,705 sq ft (251.3 m2)
Cylinders2
Cylinder size21.5 in × 28 in (546 mm × 711 mm)
Performance figures
Power output1,840 hp (1,372 kW) at 37.5 mph (60.4 km/h)
Tractive effort32,080 lbf (142.7 kN) at 85% boiler pressure
Career
Number in class70
Preserved7

The R class was an express passenger steam locomotive that ran on Australia's Victorian Railways (VR) from 1951 to 1974. A long overdue replacement for the 1907-era A2 class 4-6-0, their development and construction was repeatedly delayed due to financial constraints caused by the Great Depression and later the manpower and materials shortages of World War II and the immediate postwar period.

Orders eventually totalling 70 locomotives were placed with the North British Locomotive Company of Glasgow. Once initial teething problems were overcome, R class locomotives proved to be a success and their power and speed enabled faster timetabled services. However, they were almost immediately superseded by mainline diesel-electric and electric locomotives on the Victorian Railways from 1952 onwards. With successive orders of diesel-electric locomotives through the 1950s and 1960s gradually displacing them, all but seven of the class were withdrawn and cut up for scrap.

Four of the remaining locomotives were later restored to operating condition between 1984 and 1998. These have seen use ranging from hauling special heritage train services through to substituting for modern diesel-electric locomotives on regular intercity rail services run by V/Line and West Coast Railway. Another surviving example, number R 704, was originally displayed at the Festival of Britain in 1951 and is now on permanent display at the Newport Railway Museum in Newport, Victoria.


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