SER Q class explained

SER Q class should not be confused with SR Q class.

SER Q class
Powertype:Steam
Designer:James Stirling
Builddate:1881–1897
Totalproduction:118
Whytetype:0-4-4T
Uicclass:B2′ n2
Driverdiameter:5feet
Trailingdiameter:3feet
Wheelbase:220NaN0
Axleload:16LT
Locoweight:48.65LT
Fueltype:Coal
Fuelcap:0.15LT
Firearea:160NaN0
Watercap:1050impgal
Boilerpressure:1402NaN2
Tubesandflues:922.5square feet
Cylindercount:Two, inside
Cylindersize:18x
Valvegear:Stephenson
Tractiveeffort:151892NaN2
Operatorclass:Q
Withdrawndate:1907–1929
Numinclass:1 January 1923: 32
Disposition:All scrapped

The SER Q class was a class of 0-4-4T steam locomotives of the South Eastern Railway. The class was designed by James Stirling and introduced in 1881.

Construction

Prior to the appointment of James Stirling as Locomotive Superintendent of the South Eastern Railway (SER) in 1878, that railway possessed only a small number of tank locomotives suitable for the London suburban passenger services. There were twelve 0-4-2WT of the 205 class (later G class) dating from 1863–64; seven 0-4-4WT of the 235 class (later J class) dating from 1866; six 0-4-2WT of the 73 class (later H class) dating from 1867–69; and nine 0-4-4T of the 58 class (later M class) dating from 1877–78.

The SER had opened a connection to the London, Chatham and Dover Railway in June 1878 giving access to Blackfriars station, the Widened Lines and thus the Great Northern Railway. Tender locomotives were not suitable for working this route, and nor were many of the existing tank engines which were not powerful enough. As a stop-gap pending the preparation of a new design, the SER purchased three newly-built Metropolitan Railway B Class 4-4-0T locomotives from that railway in April 1880, which were used on SER services from via Blackfriars and to . They were sold back to the Metropolitan Railway in November 1883.

In his previous post with the Glasgow and South Western Railway (G&SWR), Stirling had designed an 0-4-4T for suburban passenger services, the G&SWR 1 class. He kept copies of the drawings and used these as the basis for a new class for the SER, which became the SER Q class. One hundred and eighteen locomotives were built between 1881 and 1897, of which 60 were built by Neilson and Company; 48 by the SER at Ashford Works; and ten by Sharp, Stewart and Company.

Table of orders and numbers
Years Builder Quantity SER Nos.
1881 Neilson 10 303–312
1881–82 Ashford 12 177, 178, 158, 161, 162, 164, 5, 181, 27, 182, 180, 184
1882–83 Neilson 10 319–328
1885 Ashford 2 329, 330
1887 Ashford 10 129, 193, 237, 239, 40, 26, 12, 72, 200, 235
1888 Ashford 5 16, 81, 83, 141, 173
1889 Ashford 4 23, 85, 220, 82
1889 Neilson 10 343–352
1891 Neilson 15 354–368
1891 Ashford 6 58, 134, 146, 73, 115, 224
1892 Ashford 3 135, 136, 138
1893–94 Sharp Stewart 10 399–408
1894–95 Ashford 6 6, 50, 95, 76, 168, 169
1897 Neilson 15 410–424
Most were built with tall chimneys giving an overall height of 13feet and two injectors for the boiler feed. The 1881–82 Ashford series were built for working through the Snow Hill tunnel and the tunnels of the East London Railway, and so were provided with condensers and short chimneys giving an overall height of 12feet, one injector being omitted and a boiler feed pump fitted instead.

The first 34, built between 1881 and 1885, had bogies of wheelbase 4feet having wheels of 3abbr=onNaNabbr=on diameter. These bogies had a fixed centre pin and were troublesome, and so beginning in 1887 new locomotives had a better bogie design based upon that of the contemporary 4-4-0s of the F class. This had NaNinches side play, its wheelbase being 5feet; and after four of these had been built using the 3-foot wheel, subsequent locomotives had the bogie wheel diameter increased to 3feet to make them fully interchangeable with those of the F class.

Rebuilding

The locomotives passed to the South Eastern and Chatham Railway in 1899 and 55 were rebuilt by Harry Wainwright to class Q1 between 1903 and 1919.

Numbering

Thirty-two unrebuilt locomotives survived into Southern Railway ownership on 1 January 1923 with random numbers between 6 and 424. All had been withdrawn by 1929.

Table of withdrawals! Year !! Quantity in
service at
start of year !! Quantity
withdrawn !! Locomotive numbers !! Notes
1925 32 1 align=left A346 align=left
1926 31 15 align=left A40, A72, A73, A82, A135, A220, A237, A345, A352, A358, A360,
A405, A417, A418, A422
align=left
1927 16 11 align=left A6, A26, A136, A169, A235, A356, A399, A410, A414, A421, A424 align=left
1928 5 3 align=left A23, A173, A401 align=left
1929 2 2 align=left A349, A368 align=left

References

Bibliography