Everything about Steam Locomotive totally explained
A
steam locomotive is a
locomotive powered by
steam. The term usually refers to its use on
railways, but can also refer to a "road locomotive" such as a
traction engine or
steamroller.
Steam locomotives dominated rail traction from the mid 19th century until the mid 20th century, after which they were superseded by
diesel and
electric locomotives.
Origins
See also: History of rail transport,
The earliest railways employed horses to draw carts along
railed tracks.
As the development of
steam engines progressed through the 1700s, various attempts were made to apply them to road and railway use. The first attempts were made in
Great Britain; the earliest steam rail locomotive was built in 1804 by
Richard Trevithick and
Andrew Vivian. It ran with mixed success on the
narrow gauge "
Penydarren tramroad" at
Merthyr Tydfil in
Wales.. These early efforts culminated in 1829 with the
Rainhill Trials and the opening of the
Liverpool and Manchester Railway a year later making exclusive use of steam power for both passenger and freight trains.
The United States started developing steam locomotives in 1829 with the
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad's
Tom Thumb. This was the first locomotive to run in America, although it was intended as a demonstration of the potential of steam traction, rather than as a revenue-earning locomotive. The first successful steam railway in the US was the
South Carolina Railroad whose inaugural train ran in December 1830 hauled by the
Best Friend of Charleston. Many of the earliest locomotives for American railroads were imported from England, including the
Stourbridge Lion and the
John Bull, but a domestic locomotive manufacturing industry was quickly established, with locomotives like the
DeWitt Clinton being built in the 1830s.
Basic form
Boiler
The typical steam locomotive employs a horizontal
fire-tube boiler partially filled with water. A
firebox, its walls and roof constantly surrounded by water, is incorporated generally to the rear of the boiler when the locomotive is travelling chimney-first; this is where a combustible is burnt, the heat generated thereby being transferred to the water in the
boiler in order to make the steam that constitutes working medium. The combustion gases flow from the firebox into a bundle of parallel tubes, also surrounded by water, which continue to transfer heat to the water. At the front of the boiler is the
smokebox, a chamber where the combustion gases are mixed with the jet of exhaust steam, the whole being ejected into a chimney (US: "smoke stack") voiding into the outside air.
Steam circuit
The generated steam is stored in the steam space above the water in the partially-filled boiler. Its working pressure is limited by spring-loaded safety valves. It is then collected either in a perforated tube fitted above the water level or from a dome that often houses the regulator valve, or throttle, the purpose of which is to control the amount of steam leaving the boiler. The steam then either travels directly along and down a steam pipe to the engine unit or may have first to pass into the wet header of a
superheater, the role of the latter being to eliminate water droplets suspended in the "saturated steam", the state in which it leaves the boiler. On leaving the superheater, the "dried" steam exits the dry header of the superheater and passing down a steam pipe enters the steam chests adjacent to the cylinders of a reciprocating engine. Inside each steam chest is a sliding valve that distributes the steam via ports that connect the steam chest to the ends of the cylinder space. The role of the valves is twofold: admission of each fresh dose of steam and exhaust of the used steam once it has done its work.
The cylinders are double acting, with steam admitted to each side of the piston in turn. In a two-cylinder locomotive, one cylinder is located on each side of the locomotive. The cranks are set 90° out of phase with each other. During a full rotation of the driving wheel, steam provides four power strokes per revolution; that's to say each cylinder receives two injections of steam. The first stroke is to the front of the piston and the second stroke to the rear of the piston; hence two working strokes. Consequently two deliveries of steam onto each piston face in two cylinders generates a full revolution of the driving wheel. The driving wheels are connected on each side by
coupling rods (US: "connecting rods") to transmit power from the main driver to the other wheels. At the two "
dead centres", when the connecting rod is on the same axis as the crankpin on the driving wheel, it'll be noted that no turning force can be applied. If the locomotive were to come to rest in this position it would be impossible for it to move off again, so the cylinders and crankpins are arranged such that the dead centres occur out of phase with each other. This precaution is unnecessary on most other reciprocating engines (such as an internal combustion engine) which are never expected to start from rest under their own power, and employ a flywheel to overcome the dead centres.
Each
piston transmits power directly through a
connecting rod (US: main rod) and a crankpin (US: wristpin) on the
driving wheel (US "main driver) or to a
crank on a driving axle. The movement of the valves in the steam chest is controlled through a set of rods and linkages called the
valve gear, actuated from the driving axle or else from the crankpin; the valve gear includes devices that combine the roles of reversing the engine, adjusting valve travel and the timing of the admission and exhaust events. The cut-off point determines the moment when the valve obturates a steam port, "cutting off" admission steam and thus determining the proportion of the stroke, during which steam is admitted into the cylinder; for example a 50% cut-off admits steam for half the stroke of the piston. The remainder of the stroke is driven by the expansive force of the steam. Careful use of cut-off provides economical use of steam and, in turn, reduces fuel and water consumption. The reversing lever (US:
Johnson bar), or screw-reverser, (if so equipped) which controls the cut-off therefore performs a similar function to a
gearshift in an
automobile.
Exhaust steam is directed upwards to the atmosphere through the chimney, by way of a nozzle called a
blastpipe that gives rise to the familiar "chuffing" sound of the steam locomotive. The blastpipe is placed at a strategic point inside the smokebox that's at the same time traversed by the combustion gases drawn through the boiler and grate by the action of the blast. The combining of the two streams is crucial to the efficiency of any steam locomotive and the internal profiles of the chimney, (or more strictly speaking, the
ejector) require careful design and adjustment. This has been the object of intensive studies by a number engineers (and almost totally ignored by others with sometimes catastrophic effect). The fact that the draught depends on the exhaust pressure means that power delivery and power generation are automatically self-adjusting and among other issues, a balance has to be struck between obtaining sufficient draught for combustion whilst giving the gases and particles sufficient time to be consumed. In the past, fierce draught could lift the fire off the grate, or cause the ejecting of unburnt particles leading to the dirt and pollution for which steam locomotives had an unenviable reputation in the past. Moreover, the pumping action of the exhaust has the counter effect of exerting
back pressure on the side of the piston receiving steam, thus somewhat reducing cylinder power. Designing the exhaust ejector has become a specific science in which
Chapelon,
Giesel and Porta were successive masters, and was largely responsible for spectacular improvements in thermal efficiency but drastic reduction in maintenance time and pollution.
Chassis
With European locomotives, the chassis is the principle structure onto which the boiler is mounted and which incorporates the various elements of the running gear.The chassis consists of two mainframes kept apart and square by spacers and “buffer beams”. For many years, in America practice, the boiler was the main structural element, with built-up bar frames, ‘’smokebox saddle/cylinder’’ structure and drag beam integrated therein; but from the late 1920s with the introduction of ‘’superpower’’, the ‘’cast-steel locomotive bed’’ became the norm, incorporating frames, spring hangers, motion brackets, smokebox saddle and cylinder blocks incorporated into a single complex, sturdy but heavy casting. André Chapelon developed a similar welded structure with around 30% saving in weight for the still-born 2-10-4 locomotives the construction of which was begun then abandoned in 1946.
Running gear
This includes the brake gear, wheel sets, axleboxes, springing and the "motion" that includes connecting rods and valve gear. The transmission of the power from the pistons to the rails and the behaviour of the locomotive as a vehicle, able to negotiate curves, points and irregularities in the track are issues of paramount importance. Because reciprocating power has to be directly applied to the rail from 0 rpm upwards, this poses unique problems of ‘’adhesion’’ of the driving wheels to the smooth rail surface. Adhesive weight is the portion of the locomotive’s weight bearing on the driving wheels. This is made more effective if a pair of driving wheels is able to make the most of its ‘’axle load’’ for example its individual share of the adhesive weight. Locomotives with ‘’compensating levers’’ connecting the ends of plate springs have often been deemed a complication but locomotives fitted with them have usually been less prone to loss of traction due to wheel-slip.
Locomotives with total adhesion, for example where all the wheels are coupled together, generally lack stability at speed. This makes desirable the inclusion of unpowered carrying wheels mounted on two-wheeled trucks or 4-wheeled bogies centred by springs that help to guide the locomotive through curves. These usually take the weight of the cylinders in front or of the firebox at the rear end when the width of this exceeds that of the mainframes. For multiple coupled wheels on a rigid chassis a variety of systems for controlled side-play exist.
Fuel and water
Generally, the largest locomotives are permanently coupled to a
tender that carries the water and fuel. Alternatively, locomotives working shorter distances carry the fuel in a bunker, and the water in tanks mounted on the engine, the latter placed either alongside the boiler or on top of it; these are called
tank engines.
The fuel source used depends on what is economically available locally to the railway. In the UK and parts of Europe, a plentiful supply of
coal made this the obvious choice from the earliest days of the steam engine. German, Russian, Australian and British railways experimented using
coal dust to fire locomotives. Up to around 1850 in the U.S.A the vast majority of locomotives burnt wood until most of the Eastern forests were cleared; from that time on coal burning became more widespread and wood burners were restricted to rural and logging districts. In Europe, this lasted well into the 20th century.
Bagasse, a waste by-product of the refining process, was burned in
sugar cane farming operations. In the USA, the ready availability of oil made this a popular steam locomotive fuel; the Southern Pacific, for example, went directly from wood to oil. equipment. In Victoria, Australia after
World War II, many steam locomotives were converted to heavy oil firing.
A number of tourist lines and heritage locomotives in Switzerland, Argentina and Australia have been using light diesel-type oil..
Water was supplied at stopping places and locomotive depots from a dedicated
water tower connected to
water cranes or gantries. In the UK, the USA and France,
water troughs (US track pans) were provided on some main lines to allow locomotives to replenish their water supply without stopping. This was achieved by using a 'water scoop' fitted under the tender or the rear water tank in the case of a large tank engine; the fireman remotely lowered the scoop into the trough, the speed of the engine forced the water up into the tank, and the scoop was raised again once it was full.
Water is an essential element in the operation of a steam locomotive; because as Swengel argued:
it has the highest specific heat of any common substance; that's more thermal energy is stored by heating water to a given temperature than would be stored by heating an equal mass of steel or copper to the same temperature. In addition, the property of vapourising (forming steam) stores additional energy without increasing the temperature...water is a very satisfactory medium for converting thermal energy of fuel into mechanical energy
Swengel went on to note that "at low temperature and relatively low boiler outputs" good water and regular boiler washout was an acceptable practise, even though such maintenance was high. As steam pressures increased, however, a problem of "foaming" or "priming" developed in the boiler, wherein dissolved solids in the water formed "tough-skinned bubbles" inside the boiler, which in turn were carried into the steam pipes and could blow off the cylinder heads. To overcome the problem, hot mineral concentrated water was deliberately wasted (blowing down) from the boiler from time to time. Higher steam pressures required more blowing down of water out of the boiler. Oxygen generated by boiling water attacks the boiler and with increased steam pressures the rate of rust (iron oxide) generated inside the boiler increases. One way to help overcome the problem was water treatment. Swengel suggested that the problems around water, contributed to the interest in electrification of railways.
In the 1970s
L.D. Porta developed a sophisticated heavy duty chemical water treatment that not only keeps the inside of the boiler clean and prevents corrosion, but modifies the foam in such a way as to form a compact "blanket" on the water surface that filters the steam as it's produced, keeping it pure and preventing carry-over into the cylinders of water and suspended abrasive matter.
Crew
A locomotive is controlled from the backhead of the firebox and the crew is usually protected by a cab. A crew of at least two people is normally required to operate a steam locomotive. One, the
driver (US: engineer), is responsible for controlling the locomotive and the fireman is responsible for the fire, steam pressure, and water.
Fittings and appliances
All locomotives are fitted with a variety of appliances. Some of these relate directly to the operation of the steam engine; while others are for signalling, train control, or other purposes. In the United States the
Federal Railroad Administration mandated the use of certain appliances over the years in response to safety issues. The most typical appliances are as follows:
Steam pumps and injectors
Water must be forced into the boiler, to replace that which is exhausted after delivering a working stroke to the pistons. Early engines used pumps driven by the motion of the pistons. Later
steam injectors replaced the pump, while some engines use
turbopumps. Standard practice evolved to use two independent systems for feeding water to the boiler. Vertical glass tubes, known as
water gauges or water glasses, show the level of water in the boiler.
Boiler lagging
Large amounts of heat are wasted if a boiler isn't insulated. Early locomotives used shaped wooden battens fitted lengthways along the boiler barrel and held in place by metal bands. Improved insulating methods included: applying a thick paste containing a porous mineral, such as
kieselgur or shaped blocks of insulating compound such as magnesia blocks were attached. In the latter days of steam, "mattresses" of stitched
asbestos cloth were fixed stuffed with asbestos fibre (but on separators so as not quite to touch the boiler); however in most countries, asbestos is nowadays banned for health reasons. The most common modern day material is
glass wool, or wrappings of aluminium foil.
The lagging is protected by a close fitted sheet-metal casing known as boiler clothing or cleading.
Effective lagging is particularly important for
fireless locomotives; however in recent times under the influence of L.D. Porta, "exaggerated" insulation has been practised for all types of locomotive on all surfaces liable to dissipate heat, such as cylinder ends and facings between the cylinders and the mainframes. This considerably reduces engine warmup time with marked increase in overall efficiency.
Safety valves
Early locomotives were fitted with a valve controlled by a weight suspended from the end of a lever, the steam outlet being stopped by a cone-shaped valve. As there was nothing to prevent the weighted lever from bouncing when the locomotive ran over irregularities in the track, thus wasting steam, the weight was replaced by a more stable spring loaded column, often supplied by Salter, a well-known
spring scale manufacturer. The danger of all these devices was that the driving crew could be tempted to add weight to the arm in order to increase pressure; most boilers were therefore from early times fitted with a tamper-proof "lockup" direct-loaded ball valve protected by a cowl. In the late 1850s,
John Ramsbottom introduced an ingenious safety valve that became very popular in Britain during the latter part of the 19th Century. Not only was this valve tamper-proof, but any intervention on the part of the driver could only have the effect of easing pressure. Richardson's "pop" valve was an American invention introduced in 1867 and was so designed as to release the steam only at the moment when the pressure attained the maximum permitted. This type of valve is in almost universal use at present. The British
Great Western Railway was a notable exception to this rule retaining the direct loaded type until the end of its separate existence because it was considered that such a valve lost less pressure between opening and closing.
Pressure gauge
The earliest locomotives didn't show the pressure of steam in the boiler, but it was possible to estimate this by the position of the safety valve arm which often extended onto the firebox back plate; gradations marked on the spring column gave a rough indication of the actual pressure. The promoters of the
Rainhill trials urged that each contender have a proper mechanism for reading the boiler pressure and
Stephenson devised a nine-foot vertical tube of mercury with a sight-glass at the top, mounted alongside the chimney, for the
Rocket. The
Bourdon tube gauge, in which the pressure straightens an oval-section, coiled tube of brass or bronze connected to a pointer, was introduced in 1849 and quickly gained acceptance. This is the device used today. Some locomotives have an additional pressure gauge in the steam chest. This helps the driver avoid wheel-slip at startup, by warning if the regulator opening is too great.
Spark arrestor and self cleaning smokebox
Wood-burners emit large quantities of flying sparks which necessitate an efficient spark arresting device generally mostly housed in the smokestack. Many types were fitted, the most common early type being the Bonnet stack that incorporated a cone-shaped deflector placed before the mouth of the chimney pipe plus a wire screen covering the wide stack exit; more efficient was the Radley and Hunter centrifugal type patented in 1850, (generally known as the diamond stack) incorporating baffles so orientated as to induce a swirl effect in the chamber that encouraged the embers to burn out and fall to the bottom as ash. In the self-cleaning smokebox the opposite effect was achieved: by allowing the flue gasses to strike a series of deflector plates, angled in such a way that the blast wasn't impaired, the larger particles were broken into small pieces that would be ejected with the blast, rather than settle in the bottom of the smokebox to be removed by hand at the end of the run. As with the arrestor, a screen was incorporated to retain any large embers. In Australia and South Africa, locomotives in drier regions operated with large oversized
tenders and some even had an additional water wagon, sometimes called a "canteen" or in Australia (particularly in New South Wales) a "water gin".
Steam locomotives working on underground railways (such as London's
Metropolitan Railway) were fitted with
condensing apparatus for a different, but obvious, reason. These were still being used between
King's Cross and
Moorgate into the early 1960s.
Braking
Locomotives have their own braking system, independent from the rest of the train. Locomotive brakes employ large shoes which press against the driving wheel treads. With the advent of
air brakes, a separate system also allowed the driver to control the brakes on all cars. These systems require steam-powered pumps, which are mounted on the side of the boiler or on the smokebox front. Such systems operated in the United States, Canada and Australia.
An alternative to the air brake is the vacuum brake. Where
vacuum brakes are used, a steam-operated
ejector is mounted on the engine instead of the air pump. A secondary ejector or crosshead vacuum pump is used to maintain the vacuum in the system. Vacuum systems existed on British, Indian and South African rail networks.
Steam locomotives are nearly always fitted with
sandboxes from which sand can be delivered to the rails to improve
traction and braking in wet weather. On American locomotives the sandboxes, or sand domes, are usually mounted on top of the boiler. In Britain, the limited
loading gauge precludes this, so the sandboxes are mounted just above, or just below, the running plate.
Lubrication
The pistons and valves on the earliest locomotives were
lubricated by the enginemen dropping a lump of
tallow down the
blast pipe.
As speeds and distances increased, mechanisms were developed that injected thick mineral oil into the steam supply. The first, a
displacement lubricator, mounted in the cab, uses a controlled stream of steam condensing into a sealed container of oil. Water from the condensed steam displaces the oil into pipes. The apparatus is usually fitted with sight-glasses to confirm the rate of supply. A later method uses a mechanical pump worked from one of the
crossheads. In both cases, the supply of oil is proportional to the speed of the locomotive.
Lubricating the frame components (axle bearings,
horn blocks and
bogie pivots) depends on
capillary action: trimmings of
worsted yarn are trailed from oil reservoirs into pipes leading to the respective component. The rate of oil supplied is controlled by the size of the bundle of yarn and not the speed of the locomotive, so it's necessary to remove the trimmings (which are mounted on wire) when stationary. However, at regular stops (such as a terminating station platform) oil finding its way onto the track can still be a problem.
Crank pin and crosshead bearings carry small cup-shaped reservoirs for oil. These have feed pipes to the bearing surface that start above the normal fill level, or are kept closed by a loose-fitting pin, so that only when the locomotive is in motion does oil enter. In United Kingdom practice the cups are closed with simple corks, but these have a piece of porous cane pushed through them to admit air. It is customary for a small capsule of pungent oil (aniseed or garlic) to be incorporated in the bearing metal to warn if the lubrication fails and excess heating or wear occurs.
Buffers
In British practice, the locomotive usually had
buffers at each end to absorb compressive loads ("buffets"). The tensional load of drawing the train (draft force) is carried by the
coupling system. Together these control slack between the locomotive and train, absorb minor impacts, and provide a bearing point for pushing movements.
In American practice all of the forces between the locomotive and cars are handled through the coupler and its associated
draft gear, which allows some limited slack movement. Small dimples called "poling pockets" at the front and rear corners of the locomotive allowed cars to be pushed on an adjacent track using a pole braced between the locomotive and the cars.
Pilots
In the United States, South Africa and Australia, locomotives had a
pilot at the front end. Plow-shaped, and called
cow catchers, they were quite large and were designed to remove obstacles from the track such as cattle, bison, other animals or tree limbs. Though unable to "catch" stray cattle these distinctive items remained on locomotives in those countries until the end of steam. Switching engines usually replaced the pilot with small steps. In places like Victoria, Australia, the cow catchers became a trade mark of that state's engines (Dee:1998).
Headlights
When night operations began, railway companies in some countries equipped their locomotives with lights to allow the driver to see what lay ahead of the train or to enable others to see the locomotive. Originally headlights were oil or
acetylene lamps, but when electric lights became available in the late 1880s, they quickly replaced the older types.
Britain used low intensity oil lamps and were not intended to allow the driver to see the way ahead (locomotive drivers were expected to have sufficient route knowledge) but were used to indicate the class of a train by their position on the front of the locomotive. Four lamp irons were provided: one below the chimney and three evenly spaced across the top of the buffer beam. The exception to this was the Southern Railway and its constituents, who added two lamp irons one each side of the smokebox, and the arrangement of lamps (or in daylight white circular plates) told railway staff the origin and destination of the train.
In some countries heritage steam operation continues on the national network. Some railway authorities have mandated powerful headlights on at all times, including during daylight. This was to further inform the public or track workers of any active trains.
Bells and whistles
Locomotives used bells and steam whistles from earliest days. In the United States and Canada bells warned of a train in motion. In Britain, where all lines are by law fenced throughout, bells were only a requirement on railways running on a road (for example not fenced off), for example a tramway along the side of the road or in a dockyard. Consequently only a minority of locomotives in the UK carried bells. Whistles are used to signal personnel and give warnings. Depending on the terrain the locomotive was being used in the whistle could be designed for long distance warning of impending arrival, or more for localised use.
Early bells and whistles were sounded through pull-string cords and levers. As the steam era approached the 1950s, automatic air-operated bells were made use of on locomotives such as the
Challenger (steam locomotive) and
Big Boy.
Automatic Train Control
From early in the twentieth century operating companies in such countries as Germany and Britain began to fit locomotives with
in-cab signalling which automatically applied the brakes when a signal was passed at "caution". In Britain these became mandatory in 1956.
Booster engines
In the United States and Australia the trailing truck was often equipped with an auxiliary steam engine which provided extra power for starting. This
booster engine was set to cut out automatically at a certain speed. On the narrow gauged New Zealand railway system, six Kb 4-8-4 locomotives had boosters; the only 3 ft 6 in (metre gauge) engines in the world to have such equipment.
Variations
Numerous variations to the simple locomotive occurred as railways attempted to develop more powerful, more efficient and fast steam locomotives.
Cylinders
Some locomotives received extra cylinders and experiments combined two locomotives in one (for example the
Mallet and
Garratt locomotives). Some locomotives carried their cylinders vertically alongside the boiler and drove the wheels through a system of shafts and gears (for example the
Shay locomotive; see "
geared steam locomotive").
From about 1930, most new British express passenger locomotives were 4-6-0 or 4-6-2 types with three or four cylinders. Examples include:
Cab forward
In the United States on the
Southern Pacific Railroad a series of
cab forward locomotives had the cab and the firebox at the front of the locomotive and the tender behind the smokebox, so that the engine appeared to run backwards. This was only possible by using oil-firing. Southern Pacific selected this design to provide smoke-free breathing for the locomotive's engineer as they went through the SP's numerous mountain tunnels and snow sheds. Another variation was the
Camelback locomotive with the cab half-way along the boiler.
Steam turbines
Steam turbines were one of the experiments in improving the operation and efficiency of steam locomotives. Experiments with
steam turbines using direct-drive and electrical transmissions, in different countries, proved mostly unsuccessful.
Articulated and Duplex types
Articulation itself proved very popular, and there were numerous variations, both compound and simple.
Duplex locomotives with two engines in one rigid frame were also tried, but were not notably successful.
Hybrid power
Mixed power locomotives, utilising steam and diesel propulsion, have been produced in Russia, Britain and Italy.
Manufacture
United States
With the notable exception of the
USRA standard locomotives, set during World War 1, in the United States, steam locomotive manufacture was always customised. Railroads ordered locomotives tailored to their specific requirements, though basic similarities were always present. Railroads developed specific characteristics; for example, the
Pennsylvania Railroad had a preference for the
Belpaire firebox, while the
Delaware and Hudson Railroad was famous for its elaborately flanged smokestacks. In the United States, specialised manufacturers constructed locomotives for all rail companies, although all railroads had shops capable of heavy repairs and some railroads (for example the
Norfolk and Western Railway) constructed locomotives in their own shops. Companies Manufacturing locomotives in the US included Baldwin Locomotive Works, American Locomotive Works (ALCO), and others. It wasn't uncommon for an entire group of locomotives to be sold from one railroad to another.
Steam locomotives required regular service and overhaul (often at government-regulated intervals). Many alterations occurred during overhauls. New appliances were added, unsatisfactory features removed, cylinders improved or replaced. Any part of the locomotive, including boilers were replaced or upgraded. On the
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad two
2-10-2 locomotives were dismantled; the boilers were placed onto two new Class T
4-8-2 locomotives and the residue wheel machinery made a pair of Class U
0-10-0 switchers with new boilers. Union Pacific's fleet of 3 cylinder
4-10-2 engines were converted into two cylinder engines in 1942, because of high maintenance problems.
United Kingdom
Before the 1923
Grouping, the picture in the UK was mixed. The larger railway companies built locomotives in their own workshops but the smaller ones and industrial concerns ordered them from outside builders. A large market for outside builders was abroad because of the home-build policy exercised by the main railway companies.
Between 1923 and 1947, the "Big Four" railway companies (the
Great Western Railway, the
London, Midland and Scottish Railway, the
London and North Eastern Railway and the
Southern Railway) all built most of their own locomotives. Generally speaking, they only bought locomotives from outside builders when their own works were fully occupied. From 1948,
British Railways adopted the same policy and continued to build new steam locomotives until 1960 (the last being named
Evening Star).
Some independent manufacturers produced steam locomotives for a few more years, the last British-built industrial steam locomotive being constructed by
Hunslet in 1971. Since then, a few specialised manufacturers have continued to produce small locomotives for narrow gauge and miniature railways, but as the prime market for these is the tourist and
heritage railway sector, the demand for such locomotives is limited.
Australia
In
Australia,
Clyde Engineering of
Sydney and also the
Eveleigh Workshops built steam locomotives for the
New South Wales Government Railways. These include the
C38 class 4-6-2, the first five were build at Clyde with
streamlining, the other 25 locomotives were built at Eveleigh (13) in Sydney, and Cardiff Workshops (12) near Newcastle. In Queensland, steam locomotives were locally constructed by Walkers. Similarly the South Australian state government railways also manufactured steam locomotives locally at Islington in Adelaide. The
Victorian Railways constructed most of their locomotives at their Newport Workshops and
Bendigo while in the early days locomotives were built in
Ballarat. Locomotives constructed at the Newport shops ranged from the nA class
2-6-2T built for the
narrow gauge, up to the H class 4-8-4, the largest conventional locomotive ever to operate in Australia, which weighed 260 tons. However, the title of largest locomotive in Australia goes to the 263 ton NSWGR AD60 class
4-8-4+4-8-4 Garratt (Oberg:1975), which were built by
Beyer-Peacock in the United Kingdom.
Categorisation
Steam locomotives are categorised by their wheel arrangement. The two dominant systems for this are the
Whyte notation and
UIC classification.
The Whyte notation, used in most English speaking and
Commonwealth countries, represents each set of wheels with a number. Different arrangements were given names which usually reflect the first usage of the arrangement; for instance the "Santa Fe" type (
2-10-2) is so called because the first examples were built for the
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad. These names were informally given and varied according to region and even politics.
The UIC classification is used mostly in European countries apart from the
United Kingdom. It designates consecutive pairs of wheels (informally "axles") with a number for non-driving wheels and a capital letter for driving wheels (A=1, B=2 etc). So a Whyte 4-6-2 designation would be an equivalent to a 2-C-1 UIC designation.
On many railroads, locomotives were organised into
classes. These broadly represented locomotives which could be substituted for each other in service, but most commonly a class represented a single design. As a rule classes were assigned some sort of code, generally based on the wheel arrangement. Classes also commonly acquired nicknames representing notable (and sometimes uncomplimentary) features of the locomotives.
Performance
Measurement
In the steam locomotive era, two measures of locomotive performance were generally applied. At first, locomotives were rated by
tractive effort This can be roughly calculated by multiplying the total piston area by 85% of the boiler pressure (a rule of thumb reflecting the slightly lower pressure in the steam chest above the cylinder) and dividing by the ratio of the driver diameter over the piston stroke. However, the precise formula is:
Tractive Effort is defined as the average force developed during one revolution of the driving wheels at the rail head. This is expressed as:
» .
where d is bore of cylinder (diameter) in inches,
s is cylinder stroke, in inches,
P is boiler pressure in pound per square inch,
D is driving wheel diameter in inches,
c is the effective
cutoff.
It is critical to appreciate the use of the term 'average', as not all effort is constant during the one revolution of the drivers for at some points of the cycle only one piston is exerting turning moment and at other points both pistons are working. Not all boilers deliver full power at starting and also the tractive effort decreases as the rotating speed increases. Mallet locomotives went through a similar transformation and evolved from bank engines into huge mainline locomotives with gargantuan fireboxes; their driving wheels being increased in size in order to allow faster running.
The end of steam in general use
The introduction of
electric locomotives at the turn of the 20th century spelled the beginning of the end for steam locomotives, although that end was long in coming. As Diesel power, more especially with electric transmission, became more reliable in the 1930s it gained a foothold in North America . The full changeover took place there during the 1950s. In continental Europe large-scale electrification had displaced steam power by the 1970s, Steam had in its favour familiar technology and adapted well to local facilities and consume a wide variety of fuels; this led to its continued use in many countries to the end of the 20th Century. They have considerably less thermal efficiency than modern diesels, requiring constant maintenance and labour to keep them operational. Water is required at many points throughout a rail network and becomes a major problem in desert areas, as are found in some regions within the United States, Australia and South Africa. In other localities the local water is unsuitable. The reciprocating mechanism on the driving wheels of a two-cylinder single expansion steam locomotive tended to pound the rails (see "
hammer blow"), thus requiring more
maintenance. Raising steam from coal was a matter of hours steam raising which brought serious pollution problems; coal-burning around depots; coal burning locomotives required fire cleaning and ash removal between turns of duty. This was all done in the open air by hand in deplorable working conditions. Diesel or electric locomotives, by comparison, drew benefit from new custom built servicing facilities. Finally, the smoke from steam locomotives was deemed objectionable; in fact, the first electric and diesel locomotives were developed to meet smoke abatement requirements although this didn't take into account the high level of invisible pollution in diesel exhaust smoke especially when idling. It should also be remembered that the power for most electric trains is, in fact, derived from steam, generated in a power station.
United States
Mainline diesel-electric locomotives first appeared on the
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, in 1935 as locomotive No. 50. The diesel reduced maintenance costs dramatically, while increasing locomotive availability. On the
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad the new units delivered over a year, compared with about 120,000–150,000 for a mainline steam locomotive.
United Kingdom
Trials of diesel locomotives and
railcars began in the United Kingdom in the 1930s but made only limited progress. One problem was that British diesel locomotives were often seriously under-powered, compared with the steam locomotives against which they were competing.
After 1945, problems associated with post-war reconstruction and the availability of cheap domestic-produced coal kept steam in widespread use throughout the two following decades. However the ready availability of cheap oil led to new dieselisation programmes from 1955 and these began to take full effect from around 1962. Towards the end of the steam era, which came about in 1968, steam motive power was allowed to fall into a dire state of repair; this along with the absence of attention given to the attendant staff working conditions could only accelerate the decline to such a degree that British Railways estimated that its steam locomotives accounted for around four times more in running costs than diesels. The use of steam locomotives in British
industry continued on an ever-reducing scale into the late 1980s, but the poor availability of replacement parts, coupled with the decline of the coal mining industry, led to the disappearance of steam power for commercial uses.
South Korea
In South Korea, the first steam locomotive was the Moga (Mogul?)
2-6-0, followed by; Sata, Pureo, Ame, Sig, Mika, Pasi, Hyeogi, Class 901, Mateo, Sori, and Tou. Used until 1967, that locomotive is now in the Railroad Museum.
Other countries
In other countries, the conversion from steam was slower. By March 1973 in
Australia, steam had vanished in all states. Diesel locomotives were more efficient and the demand for manual labour for service and repairs was less than steam. Cheap oil had cost advantages over coal.
In the
USSR, the last steam locomotive (serial number 251) was built in 1956; now in the Museum of Railway Machinery at former
Warsaw Rail Terminal,
Saint Petersburg, Russia. In the European part of the USSR, almost all steam locomotives were replaced by diesel and electrical ones in 1960s; in
Siberia with its cheap coal, steam locomotives were in active use till mid-1970s. However, some photographs exist of Russian steam locomotives at work into the 1980s, and many accurate historical records state that Russian Decapods, L-class 2-10-0s, and LV-class 2-10-2s were retired between 1980-1985, implying that the best of Russian steam, such as the P36 class, remained on the active rosters into the 1990s. Until 1994, Russia had at least 1,000 steam locomotives stored in operable condition in case of "national emergencies" - as a result, more than 200 steam locomotives are still in working condition.
In
Finland, the first diesels were introduced in the mid-1950s and they superseded the steam locomotives during the early '60s. The State Railways (
VR) operated steam locomotives until 1975.
In
Poland, on non-electrified tracks steam locomotives were superseded almost entirely by diesels by the early '90s. A few steam locomotives, however, operate still from
Wolsztyn. Although they're maintained operational rather as a means of preserving railway heritage and as a tourist attraction, they do haul regular scheduled trains (mostly to
Poznań). Apart from that, numerous railway museums and heritage railways (mostly
narrow gauge) own steam locomotives in working condition.
In
South Africa an oil
embargo combined with an abundance of cheap local coal and a cheap labour force, ensured steam locomotives survived into the 1990s. Locomotive engineer
L. D. Porta's designs appeared on a Class 19D engine in 1979, then a former Class 25 4-8-4 engine, became a Class 26, termed the "Red Devil" No. 3450, which demonstrated an improved overall performance with decreased coal and water consumption. The single class 26 locomotive operated until the end of steam. Another class 25NC locomotive, No. 3454, nicknamed the "Blue Devil" because of its colour scheme, received modifications including a most obvious set of double side-by-side exhaust stacks. In southern Natal, two former South African Railway gauge NGG16 Garratts operating on the privatised Port Shepstone & Alfred County Railway (ACR) received some L. D. Porta modifications in 1990 becoming a new NGG16A class.
China continued to build mainline steam locomotives until late in the century, even building a few examples for American tourist operations. Since China was the last main-line user of steam locomotives, ending officially at the beginning of 2006, it's plausible that many still exist in industrial operations or in more remote parts of China. Many coal mines and smaller cities, such as Pingdingshan and Hegang, maintain an active roster of JS, SY, or QJ steam locomotives bought secondhand from China Rail. The last steam locomotives built in China were of the SY 2-8-2 class, built until 1999. The last steam locomotive built in China was SY 1772, finished in 1999. As of 2007, at least four Chinese steam locomotives exist in the United States - 2 QJ's bought by RDC, a JS bought by the Boone Scenic Railway, and an SY bought by the NYSW for tourist operations, but re-painted and modified to represent a 1920s era US locomotive.
Hopes of revival
Dramatic increases in the cost of diesel fuel prompted several initiatives to revive steam power. None of these has progressed to the point of production, and in the early 21st century, the steam locomotives operate only in a few isolated regions and in
tourist operations.
In
Germany a small number of
fireless steam locomotives are still working in industrial service, for example at power stations.
The Swiss company Dampflokomotiv und Maschinenfabrik DLM AG delivered several new steam locomotives to
rack railways in
Switzerland and
Austria between 1992 and 1996. One was the
Brienz Rothorn Bahn.
Steam locomotives in numismatics
Steam locomotives have left such a legacy behind, that they've been the main topic for numerous collectors and bullion coins. On of the most recent ones is the famous 20 euro
Biedermeier Period coin, minted in
June 11 2003. The obverse of the coin shows a premature steam locomotive (the AJAX) on Austria's first railway line, the
Kaiser Ferdinand's Nordbahn. The AJAX can still be seen today in the
Austrian railway museum.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Steam Locomotive'.
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