South African Class B 0-6-4T
Encyclopedia
Between 1893 and 1898 one hundred and seventy-five 46 Tonner 0-6-4T tank steam locomotives were placed in service by the Nederlandsche-Zuid-Afrikaansche Spoorwegmaatschappij
Netherlands-South African Railway Company
The Netherlands-South African Railway Company or NZASM was established in August 1884 in the Transvaal, and funded by Dutch, German and Transvaal capitalists....

in the Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek.

In 1899 twenty more were ordered, of which only two were delivered by the time the Imperial Military Railways took over all railway operations in the ZAR during the Second Freedom War. The other eighteen locomotives in this order were delivered directly to the Imperial Military Railways, who diverted two of them to Lourenço Marques.

At the end of the war the survivors of these locomotives were taken onto the roster of the Central South African Railways
Central South African Railways
From 1902 to 1904, the area of power of Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Percy Girouard later also included the lines of The Netherlands-South African Railway Company; together this dominion covered all lines in the Transvaal that belonged to NZASM ....

, renumbered and reclassified to Class B, while the two in Mozambique were taken onto the roster of the Caminhos de Ferro de Mocambique. In 1912, when the remaining locomotives were assimilated into the South African Railways, they were renumbered again but retained their Class B classification.

Forerunners

In 1891 the Nederlandsche-Zuid-Afrikaansche Spoorwegmaatschappij (NZASM, usually shortened to ZASM) of the Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek (ZAR) placed an order with Emil Kessler
Emil Kessler
Emil Julius Carl Kessler was a German businessman and founder of the Maschinenfabrik Esslingen ....

’s firm, the Maschinenfabrik Esslingen
Maschinenfabrik Esslingen
Maschinenfabrik Esslingen , was a German engineering firm that manufactured locomotives, tramways, railway wagons, roll-blocks, technical equipment for the railways, , bridges, steel structures, pumps and boilers.-Founding:...

in Germany, for twenty 40 Tonner 0-6-2T tank steam locomotives. While these locomotives were satisfactory in service, the trailing wheels initially proved troublesome owing to insufficient sideways movement when traversing curves.

Manufacturers

To overcome this problem, the next order with the same supplier was for 0-6-4T tank steam locomotives that were practically identical in their main dimensions, but with a four-wheeled bogie at the rear. Because of the resultant increase in weight, these locomotives became known as the 46 Tonners. They had Walschaerts valve gear, outside plate frames and used saturated steam.

The first twenty of these were delivered between 1893 and 1894 and numbered 61 to 80, and were followed by another one hundred and fifty-five from the same manufacturer between 1894 and 1898, delivered in nine more batches and numbered 81 to 235.

In 1899 a further order for another twenty 46 Tonners was placed with the Nederlandse Fabriek van Werktuigen en Spoorwegmaterieel (Werkspoor) in Holland. They were to have been numbered 236 to 255, following on the last of the Esslingen locomotives, but since delivery only commenced just before the outbreak of the Second Freedom War (the Anglo-Boer War), only numbers 236 and 237 actually entered service with the NZASM.

The remainder were commandeered by the Imperial Military Railways (IMR), which took over the operation of the Oranje-Vrijstaat Gouwermentspoorwegen (OVGS) and the NZASM on behalf of the invading British forces as possession was obtained of their lines. Sixteen of them were landed and erected at East London and the IMR diverted the other two to the Caminhos de Ferro de Mocambique (CFM) in Lourenço Marques.

Design alteration

The original design for the 46 Tonner called for a straight-backed coal bunker, but the last sixteen Esslingen builts and the twenty Werkspoor builts had the bunkers sloping outwards towards the top to increase the coal capacity by 20%, while their water tanks were also enlarged to a 10% larger capacity.

NZASM

In NZASM service, all the Esslingen built 46 Tonners were given names as well as running numbers. The names are shown in Table 1 below.

The 46 Tonners became the standard main line locomotives of the NZASM and were used on all kinds of traffic between Pretoria
Pretoria
Pretoria is a city located in the northern part of Gauteng Province, South Africa. It is one of the country's three capital cities, serving as the executive and de facto national capital; the others are Cape Town, the legislative capital, and Bloemfontein, the judicial capital.Pretoria is...

 in the ZAR and Lourenço Marques
Lourenço Marques
Lourenço Marques was a 16th century Portuguese trader and explorer.-Biography:He explored the area that is now Maputo Bay in 1544. He settled permanently in present-day Mozambique, where he spent most of his life with his black wife and mixed-race children.By order of King John III the bay was...

 in Mozambique
Mozambique
Mozambique, officially the Republic of Mozambique , is a country in southeastern Africa bordered by the Indian Ocean to the east, Tanzania to the north, Malawi and Zambia to the northwest, Zimbabwe to the west and Swaziland and South Africa to the southwest...

. Since they did not have a leading bogie, they were found to be rough riding and it became the practice to run them bunker forward whenever possible. The bogies had a steadying effect when leading and the crew was not shaken up as much.

The builders, works numbers, names, original running numbers and renumberings onto the rosters of the CFM, Central South African Railways (CSAR) and South African Railways (SAR) are shown in the table.

Caminhos de Ferro de Moçambique

The CFM eventually had at least thirty 46 Tonners in service. Between 1897 and 1898 some of its 46 Tonners were sold by the NZASM to the CFM. The two locomotives that were delivered after the outbreak of the war and that were diverted to Lourenço Marques upon arrival, IMR 249 and 250, were also taken onto the CFM roster at the end of the war. Later, between 1911 and 1920 during the CSAR and SAR eras, six more were sold to the CFM.

Imperial Military Railways

All the NZASM 46 Tonners as well as sixteen of the eighteen that were not delivered to the NZASM as a result of the outbreak of the war, were taken onto the roster of the IMR when it took over all railway operations in the ZAR during the war. It would appear that the locomotives were not renumbered in IMR service.

Central South African Railways

Hostilities ceased on 1 June 1902. On 1 July 1902, when the IMR was transferred to civilian control and became the CSAR, the survivors of the NZASM 46 Tonners were taken onto its roster. They were reclassified as Class B and renumbered by the CSAR, but records of the renumbering details are scant. The available information on NZASM to CSAR renumberings are only about those locomotives that the CSAR had sold to the CFM between 1907 and 1910, as shown in Table 1 above and included in Table 2 below.

South African Railways

As a result of locomotive sales by the NZASM to the CFM before the war, wartime attrition and more sales by the CSAR to the CFM after the war, only fifty-five of the original one hundred and seventy-five locomotives remained to be taken onto the SAR roster by 1910. Their planned SAR number range was to be from 1 to 55, but from the several gaps in the actual number sequence it would appear that eleven of these locomotives were withdrawn or disposed of between 1910 and 1912. As a result, by the time the actual renumbering took place in 1912, only forty-four remained to be taken onto the SAR roster. They retained their Class B classification and were renumbered as shown in Table 2 below. The NZASM information about these locomotives that could be determined is included in the table.

In SAR service the Class B was used as shunters in the Transvaal and the Orange Free State, and towards the end of their service lives also in the Western Cape. They were all withdrawn from service by 1930.

Industrial

Several Class B locomotives were sold to mines and other industries by the CFM, CSAR and SAR when they began to be retired from government railways service, and some remained in industrial service well into the twentieth century. At least one, identified as ex NZASM 195, later CFM 27, was purchased by the Randfontein Estates Gold Mine (REGM). Another saw service with Dunn’s Locomotive Works in Witbank.

Preservation

Four of the 46 Tonner locomotives are known to have survived, of which only three have seen service as Class B in the SAR. The fourth, ex NZASM 230 Jan Wintervogel, was sold by the CSAR into industrial use in 1904 and therefore never entered SAR service. It was donated to the SAR for preservation in 1971, and in the Spoornet era it was steamed occasionally for enthusiast’s specials, filming and other activities. After restoration it was initially named “President Kruger”, which was the name carried by 40 Tonner number 42 in the NZASM days, but its original NZASM number and name was later reinstated.

Gallery

The main picture shows NZASM 46 Tonner 230 "Jan Wintervogel" at Witbank, Transvaal, in April 1993.


See also

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