South Australian Railways F class (1869)

The two 4-4-0T steam locomotives that together comprised the first South Australian Railways F class were built in England in 1869 by the Avonside Engine Company of Bristol. No. 21 entered service on the South Australian Railways in September 1869; no. 22 followed in October.

South Australian Railways F class of 1869 ("1st F class")
Black and white photo of South Australian Railways "first F class" locomotive of 1869
SAR "first F class" locomotive no. 21 at Nairne station in the Adelaide Hills, about 1884
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
BuilderAvonside Engine Company
Order number773, 774
Build date1869
Total produced2
RebuilderSouth Australian Railways
Rebuild date1880
Number rebuilt2
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte4-4-0T
 • UIC2'B T
Gauge1600 mm (5 ft 3 in)
Driver dia.4 ft 11+12 in (1511 mm)
Loco weight30 long tons 16 cwt (69,000 lb or 31.3 t)
Fuel typeCoal
Boiler pressure130 psi (896 kPa)
Cylinders2
Cylinder size14 in × 22 in (356 mm × 559 mm)
Valve gearStephenson
Performance figures
Tractive effort9500 lbf (42 kN)
Career
OperatorsSouth Australian Railways
ClassF (distinguished from the 1902 2nd F class)
Number in class2
Numbers21, 22
First run1869
Withdrawn1892
DispositionBoth scrapped

The locomotives had a copper-capped chimney, a highly polished brass dome and brass boiler bands encircling the barrel and around the outer firebox corners. In keeping with other locomotives of this period, they would have been painted green with a black smokebox.[1]

The initial role of the F class was to take over the role of hauling goods trains from A class locomotives on the new line from Roseworthy to Forresters (later named Tarlee) and to Burra from August 1870. Subsequently they operated on the Port Adelaide and in the Adelaide hills, where they pulled passenger and goods trains. Near the end of their short working life they shunted in the Adelaide Yards. In 1892, the engines were being rebuilt when a workshop crane lifted them without using hornplates, dropping and seriously damaging them in the process; they were declared to be beyond repair and scrapped afterwards.[2][3][4]

Ten years later, in 1902, a second group of locomotives, a suburban tank with a 4-6-2 wheel arrangement, took on the "F" class classification. On the rare occasions when it was necessary to distinguish them, the latter locomotives were termed the "2nd F class".

References

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  1. ^ Eardley, Gifford (August 1973). "The F-class 4-4-0 tank locomotives of South Australia". Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin. XXIV (430). Australian Railway Historical Society, New South Wales Division: 195. ISSN 0005-0105.
  2. ^ Fluck, R. E.; Sampson, R.; Bird, K. J. (1986). Steam locomotives and railcars of the South Australian Railways. South Australia: Mile End Railway Museum (S.A.) Inc. p. 46. ISBN 0959-5073-37.
  3. ^ Turner, Jim (1998). Early Australian steam locomotives 1855-1895. South Australia: Kangaroo Press. p. 34. ISBN 0-86417-875-1.
  4. ^ Drymalik, Chris. "Broad Gauge F-class 4-4-0 tank locomotives". Chris's Commonwealth Railways Information (ComRails). Retrieved 30 July 2019.