British Rail Class D16/2 Explained

British Rail Class D16/2
Powertype:Diesel-electric
Ordernumber:SR Order 3441
Builddate:1950 (10201/10202)
1954 (10203)
Britishclass:1Co-Co1
Uicclass:(1′Co)(Co1′)
Minimumcurve:4.52NaN2
Wheelbase:55inchesft6inchesin (ftin)
Length:63feet
Width:9inchesft3inchesin (ftin)
Height:13inchesft1inchesin (ftin)
Locoweight:133LT
Fuelcap:1150impgal
Lubecap:16impgal
Coolantcap:280impgal
Primemover:English Electric 16SVT
Tractionmotors:English Electric 526A, 6 off
Cylindersize:10x
Maxspeed:90mph
Poweroutput:Engine:
10201/2: 1750bhp
1600bhp from 1957
10203: 2000bhp
At rail :
10201/2 1300bhp
Tractiveeffort:10201/2: 480001NaN1
Trainheating:Steam
Trainbrakes:Vacuum
Fleetnumbers:10201–10203
Axleloadclass:RA 6
Withdrawndate:1963
Disposition:All scrapped

British Railways Class D16/2 was a class of prototype diesel locomotives built by British Railways at Ashford Works and introduced in 1950–1951, with a third example being introduced in 1954. They had been designed by Oliver Bulleid for the Southern Railway and were authorised in February 1947[1] but did not appear until after nationalisation. The diesel engine and transmission were supplied by English Electric, but the Bulleid influence was obvious. The box-like body style closely resembled Bulleid's electric locomotives and was quite different from the usual English Electric style, typified by British Rail Class D16/1 which in turn was strongly influenced by contemporary American design.[2]

Unusually for pioneer British diesels, 10201 and 10202 were originally specified (prior to alteration of gear ratios to improve tractive effort when operating as mixed-traffic units) with a top speed of 110mph rather than the 90mph of 10203,[3] pre-dating the three-figure maximum speeds of the Deltic and Class 50 designs by some years.

Percy Bollen's bogie design[4] and the power train of 10203 were taken almost unmodified for the first ten production British Rail Class 40s but with a more traditional English Electric design of body with prominent noses and louvred side panels.

Operation

The original locomotives, numbered 10201 and 10202, worked services on the Southern Region of British Railways. They were transferred to Camden depot in the London Midland Region in April 1955.

Number 10203 was outshopped from Brighton railway works in March 1954, its modified engine giving a power output of 2000hp.[5] [6] It was trialled on the Southern Region before joining its sisters on the London Midland, being allocated to Willesden depot.

All three locomotives were non-standard with regard to spare parts and servicing, and they were withdrawn at the end of 1963. After spending some time on the scrap line at Derby Litchurch Lane Works, they were eventually scrapped at Cashmore's at Great Bridge in 1968.

Additional information

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Further reading

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Notes and References

  1. Book: Clough, David N . Hydraulic vs Electric: The battle for the BR diesel fleet . Ian Allan . Hersham . 2011 . 978-0-7110-3550-8 . 19–21 .
  2. Book: Dyer, Malcolm . BR Class 40 Diesels . Bradford Barton . Truro . 1982 . 0-85153-430-9 . 1.
  3. Web site: From 10202 To 50050: Waterloo - Exeter Diesel Operations . 23 April 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140708030219/http://www.southernelectric.org.uk/features/historical-features/watexdieselops.html . 8 July 2014 . dead .
  4. Web site: Brief Biographies of Major Mechanical Engineers . steamindex.com . 11 February 2017 . Bollen, Percy Walter.
  5. British Railways Diesel-Electric Main-Line Locomotive Railway Gazette 28 May 1954 pages 609/610
  6. British Railways 2,000 HP Locomotive Diesel Railway Traction August 1954 pages 181/182