EMD G26 explained

EMD G26
Powertype:Diesel-electric
Gauge:


South Korea, Hong Kong
:
Indonesia, Tasmania, Queensland
:
Brazil, Chile

Builder:General Motors Electro-Motive Division (USA),
General Motors Diesel (GMD), Canada
Clyde Engineering, Australia
Buildmodel:G26
Builddate:1969-2008
Aarwheels:C-C
Uicclass:Co'Co'
Primemover:EMD 16-645E
Cylindercount:V16
Cylindersize:9.0625x
Locoweight:98.8LT
106LT
Fuelcap:2840L
Poweroutput:2000-1NaN-1 net
2200-1NaN-1 gross
Tractiveeffort:247101NaN1
Length:16.94m (55.58feet)
Maxspeed:124km/h
Nicknames:"James",
"Sumatran Rhino" (Indonesia),
"Regan" (Yugoslavia/successor states)

The G26 is a diesel-electric locomotive built in the US by General Motors Electro-Motive Diesel for export and in Australia by Clyde Engineering under licence. The G26 was developed to increase traction capacities on the tracks which supported lesser axle loadings. They were intended for main line freight and passenger traffic.

Rail companies using the G26 locomotives in the past or present include Australian Railroad Group, Freight Australia, Croatian Railways, Slovenian Railways, Serbian Railways, PT Kereta Api in Indonesia, Islamic Republic of Iran Railways, Israel Railways, Korail, ONCF in Morocco, MTR Corporation, and others.

Australia

The Victorian Railways purchased 24 G26C locomotives built in Australia by Clyde Engineering, called the X class.[1] They are now operated by Pacific National and SCT Logistics.

Queensland Rail purchased 102 GL26C-2 locomotives in 1970, locally built by Comeng as sub-contractor for Clyde Engineering, and known as the 2100 class. Ten of the 2100 class have since been sold to FCAB, Chile.[2]

TasRail in Tasmania, operates four GL26C locomotives formerly of Queensland Rail. Known as the 2050 class. And two G26C locomotives known as the D class which are due to be retired late in 2014.

Former Yugoslavia

See main article: JŽ 664 locomotive. The JŽ 664 locomotives were originally acquired by the Yugoslav Railways; after the breakup of Yugoslavia the class were split between Serbia, Croatia, and Slovenia.

Brazil

Series 4500

36 G26CU were made by EMD at Illinois for the Rede Ferroviária Federal (Brazilian Federal Network) to operate on southern Brazil metre gauge lines and now, after privatisation, in ALL- América Latina Logística (Latin America Logistic). They have flexicoil trucks.

Hong Kong

Kowloon-Canton Railway purchased three G26 CU locomotives (60-62) in 1973. These were leased to MTR Corporation in 2007 due to the merger of the two railway networks. No.60 was named Peter Quick, after the CEO of KCRC in the 1980s.[3] After retirement, No. 60 was moved to Hong Kong Railway Museum for exhibition in October 2023.[4] [5]

Tunisia

5 G26CU 1972 060DH221 to 060DH225 SNCFT

Egypt

33 G26CW 1973-1976 Egyptian Rys 3412-3429 18 3430-3444 15

Israel

15 G26CW 1971-1978 Israeli Rys 601 to Israeli Rys 615

Turkey

86 G26CW-2 purchased by the Turkish Railways TCDD in 1989. These locos received road numbers DE22001 to DE22086.

South Korea

Korean National Railroad purchased 10 G26CW locomotives in 1969, numbered 6301–6310. Primarily used in passenger service, all were withdrawn from the roster by the end of the 1990s.

Indonesia

The Indonesian State Railways purchased 15 G26MC-2U locomotives in 1986, classified as CC202 and numbered from 01-15. Later orders arrived in 1990 (15 locomotives, CC202 16-30), 1995 (3 locomotives, CC202 31-33), 2001 (4 locomotives, CC202 34-37), 2002 (2 locomotives, CC202 38-39) and finally in 2008 (9 locomotives, CC202 40-48).

The locomotives have an axle loading of 18 tons, and were originally used for bulk coal traffic between Tanjungenim (South Sumatra) and Tarahan (Lampung) pulling 50-60 coal gondolas in multiple operation. They have since been supplanted by the more modern CC205.

Beginning in 2010 a new numbering system was introduced, inserting two final digits of the date of manufacture of the locomotive. The individual numbers are restarted for each batchHence the first batch (CC202 01-15) becomes CC202 86 01-86 15, and the second batch (CC202 16-30) becoming CC202 90 01-90 15.

Except for CC202 90 01, scrapped after a crash in 2012, all the locomotives remain in operation.

All of the CC202 in operation have distinctive 1990s Perumka livery, but with 2020 version of PT KAI logo. However, CC202 90 02 (CC202 17) and CC202 08 07 (CC202 46) have PJKA livery from 1980s. Formerly, CC202 86 09 (CC202 09) also wears the PJKA livery, but was returned to Perumka livery. This is smiliar to some CC201 on Java (CC201 77 17, 83 31/34 and 92 01).

The locomotives are based in the depot (Lampung).

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: V/Line: X/XR/XRB Class . locopage.railpage.org.au . 27 April 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080417021852/http://locopage.railpage.org.au/vline/x.html . 17 April 2008.
  2. Web site: QR: 2100 Class . locopage.railpage.org.au . 27 April 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080305084727/http://locopage.railpage.org.au/qr/2100.html . 5 March 2008.
  3. Kowloon-Canton Railway Continental Railway Journal issue 99 October 1994 page 27
  4. News: Hong Kong Railway Museum reopens October 4 with new display of Diesel Electric Engine No. 60 (with photos) . www.info.gov.hk.
  5. News: Retired Diesel Electric Locomotive No. 60 Handed Over to Hong Kong Railway Museum for Permanent Collection and Display Sharing Valuable Memories with the Public . MTR Corporation . 3 October 2023.