South African Class GMA 4-8-2+2-8-4 explained

South African Class GMA & GMAM
Hatnote:♠ Configured as Class GMA
Configured as Class GMAM
Powertype:Steam
Designer:South African Railways
(L.C. Grubb)
Builder:Henschel and Son
Beyer, Peacock and Company
North British Locomotive Company
Serialnumber:Henschel 28680-28704, 29600-29629
BP 7550-7552, 7677-7681, 7750-7776, 7826-7855
NBL 27691-27702, 27769-27778, 27783-27792
Buildmodel:Class GMA
Builddate:1953-1958
Totalproduction:120
Whytetype:4-8-2+2-8-4 (Double Mountain)
Uicclass:2'D1'+1'D2'h4t
Driver:3rd & 6th coupled axles
Leadingdiameter:300NaN0
Coupleddiameter:540NaN0
Trailingdiameter:300NaN0
Tenderdiameter:340NaN0
Minimumcurve:2750NaN0
Wheelbase:86feet
Engine Total:30feet each
Leading:6feet each
Coupled:14feet each
Tender Total:35feet
Tenderbogie:5feet
Pivotcentres:450NaN0
Wheelspacing:1-2: 4feet each
2-3: 4feet each
3-4: 4feet each
Over Couplers:93feet engine
43feet tender
137feet total
Height:130NaN0
Frametype:Cast
Axleload:♠ 15lt
15lt
Leadingbogie/Pony:♠ 20lt front
20lt rear
21lt front
21lt rear
Coupled 1:♠ 14lt
14lt
Coupled 2:♠ 15lt
15lt
Coupled 3:♠ 15lt
15lt
Coupled 4:♠ 14lt
14lt
Coupled 5:♠ 14lt
15lt
Coupled 6:♠ 15lt
15lt
Coupled 7:♠ 15lt
15lt
Coupled 8:♠ 14lt
15lt
Trail Bogie/Pony:♠ 12lt front
12lt rear
12lt front
13lt rear
Tenderbogieload:25lt
Tenderaxle:12lt
Weightondrivers:♠ 119lt
122lt
Locoweight:♠ 187lt
191lt
Tenderweight:50lt
Locotenderweight:♠ 237lt
241lt
Tendertype:X-17 (2-axle bogies)
X-20 (2-axle bogies)
X-17, X-20 permitted
Fueltype:Coal
Fuelcap:♠ 11lt
141NaN1
Watercap:♠ 1650impgal
2100impgal
Tendercap:6790impgal
Fireboxtype:Round-top
Firearea:63.2square feet
Pitch:8feet
Diameterinside:6feet
Lengthinside:13feet
Smalltubediameter:282: 20NaN0
Largetubediameter:50: NaN0NaN0
Boilerpressure:2000NaN0
Safetyvalvetype:Ross-pop
Totalsurface:3211.2square feet
Tubearea:2974square feet
Archarea:25.2square feet
Fireboxarea:212square feet
Superheaterarea:747square feet
Cylindercount:Four
Cylindersize:NaN0NaN0 bore
260NaN0 stroke
Valvegear:Walschaerts
Valvetype:Piston
Coupling:AAR knuckle
Tractiveeffort:60700lbf @ 75%
Operator:South African Railways
Operatorclass:Class GMA & GMAM
Numinclass:120
Fleetnumbers:4051-4170
Deliverydate:1954-1958
Firstrundate:1954
Withdrawndate:1988

The South African Railways Class GMA 4-8-2+2-8-4 of 1954 is an articulated steam locomotive.

Between 1954 and 1958, the South African Railways placed 120 Class GMA Garratt articulated steam locomotives with a 4-8-2+2-8-4 Double Mountain type wheel arrangement in service. All the locomotives could be configured as either a Class GMA branch line or a Class GMAM mainline engine. This was the most numerous Garratt class in the world.[1]

Manufacturers

The light rail branch line Class GMA and mainline Class GMAM Garratt locomotive, a single Class which could be configured for either branch line or mainline working, was a development of the large Class GM branch line locomotive which was introduced on the South African Railways (SAR) in 1938. Like the Class GM, the Class GMA was a tank-and-tender Garratt which ran with a semi-permanently coupled auxiliary water tender to augment its meagre water capacity.[2]

The locomotive was designed in 1952 under the supervision of L.C. Grubb, Chief Mechanical Engineer (CME) of the SAR from 1949 to 1954. An order for the first 25 of these locomotives was placed with Henschel and Son in Germany. They were built in 1953 and were delivered and placed in service in 1954, numbered in the range from 4051 to 4075. These first 25 locomotives were equipped with Type X-17 water tenders, built by the SAR in its Pietermaritzburg shops in 1953.[3] [4] [5]

A second batch of 35 locomotives was delivered by Beyer, Peacock and Company (BP) in 1956. Of these, 23 were built by BP and numbered in the range from 4076 to 4098, while the other twelve, numbered in the range from 4099 to 4110, had been subcontracted by BP to the North British Locomotive Company (NBL). These twelve engines therefore bore works plates showing BP as well as NBL as builders.[6] [7]

This was followed by a third and final batch of sixty locomotives in 1958. Of these, thirty were delivered by BP, of which only ten, numbered in the range from 4121 to 4130, had actually been built by BP. The other twenty, numbered in the ranges from 4111 to 4120 and 4131 to 4140, had once again been subcontracted by BP to NBL. These twenty therefore also bore works plates showing BP as well as NBL as builders. Number 4140 turned out to be the last steam locomotive built by North British. The other thirty locomotives of the third batch, numbered in the range from 4141 to 4170, were again built by Henschel in Germany.[3] [6] [7]

The locomotives of the second and third batches were equipped with Type X-20 water tenders, built in the Pietermaritzburg shops between 1956 and 1958.[4] [8]

Characteristics

The light rail branch line Class GMA and the mainline Class GMAM were the same locomotive of which the water and coal capacities could be adjusted to suit by installing or removing plates in the coal and water spaces. As a result, it is virtually impossible to list the GMA and GMAM versions separately since they could easily be converted back and forth between the two versions and often were. Up until about 1962, for example, the division was 20 Class GMA and 100 Class GMAM, but by 1969 there were 69 Class GMA and 39 Class GMAM, two locomotives having by then been scrapped after accident damage. By 1975, on the other hand, there were only 25 Class GMA against 93 Class GMAM.

The locomotive was thoroughly modern in design, with a one-piece cast steel frame with Franklin spring-loaded wedge horns, manufactured by Commonwealth Steel Castings Corporation in the United States of America. Like the Class 25 locomotive, it had roller bearing axle boxes on all wheels, but not on the crank-pins, with cannon boxes on all axles, except those of the inner Bissel trucks which had outside bearings. It had mechanical lubrication throughout, self-adjusting pivots, a U-shaped foundation ring welded to the inner and outer firebox bottom edges, and an all-welded firebox. The engine units also had Commonwealth cast steel type frames.

The boiler's inside diameter was 6feet at the first ring and 7feet at the firebox end. The boiler had an inspection manhole, fitted to the top of the boiler aft of the dome. The locomotive was superheated, with a mechanical stoker and Walschaerts valve gear. It could negotiate curves of 2750NaN0 radius with a gauge widening of not more than NaN0NaN0 and a superelevation of NaN0NaN0.

Some of these locomotives, intended for working in areas where there were tunnels such as on the East London mainline, were initially equipped with steam-operated smoke deflecting cowls over their chimneys. When the smoke cowls were later removed, these specific locomotives could still be identified by their almost non-existent chimneys which had to be shorter in order to enable the cowls to fit within the loading gauge.

As was done with the predecessor Class GM, the new locomotive carried water only in its front tank, but with the capacity increased from the Class GM's 1600sigfig=3NaNsigfig=3 to either 1650sigfig=3NaNsigfig=3 for the Class GMA or 2100sigfig=3NaNsigfig=3 for the Class GMAM. Likewise, the rear bunker carried only coal, but with the capacity increased from the Class GM's 10sigfig=4NaNsigfig=4 to either 11lt for the Class GMA or 14sigfig=4NaNsigfig=4 for the Class GMAM.

As with the Class GM, the Class GMA's water supply was augmented by semi-permanently coupling a purpose-built auxiliary water tender. The first batch of 25 locomotives were tended by the same Type X-17 water tender which was used with the Class GM, with a capacity of between 6750and. The rest of the locomotives were tended by Type X-20 water tenders with a capacity of 6790sigfig=3NaNsigfig=3. The tenders were numbered for their engines and were painted black with red buffer beams.

The locomotive was designed to operate on 60lb/yd rail despite the maximum axle loading of 15lt of the Class GMAM. This had been accomplished by restricting the weight on the leading and trailing bogies to 22sigfig=4NaNsigfig=4 and balancing the coupled wheels so that the hammer blow was equal for all wheels and did not exceed one ton on any wheel at 450NaN0.

Although the SAR specifications called for a 15lt maximum axle loading, the Class GMAM spent its entire career running on track that could take 18sigfig=4NaNsigfig=4 or more. Without the restriction of the coal bunker and onboard water tank capacity to 14sigfig=4NaNsigfig=4 and 2100impgal respectively and the necessity to haul along a water tender, the class would have been much more useful and their service lives could possibly have been prolonged. Their shortcomings as traffic machines was possibly one of the root causes of the rapid mainline dieselisation of the SAR in the 1960s.[9]

Service

South African Railways

The 120 locomotives of this class made it the most numerous Garratt class in the world. The Class GMA and Class GMAM saw service on main- and secondary lines in many parts of South Africa. Prior to electrification, a number were employed in Transvaal on the Komatipoort line across the pass between Waterval Onder and Waterval Boven. Along with the Class GM, the Class GMA served on the line from Krugersdorp via Zeerust to Mafeking.[10] [11]

They also served temporarily on the coal line from Witbank to Germiston until the electrification between Witbank and Welgedag was completed. The second and third batches of locomotives were ordered from 1956 to assist with moving large volumes of traffic, mostly coal, from the Transvaal to destinations in the Free State and Cape Province. Until the Class DE-1, the SAR's first road diesels, took over this task late in 1958, they were employed on block coal workings from Witbank to Kroonstad, a distance of 2080NaN0. Since the track en route was built for 21sigfig=4NaNsigfig=4 axle loads, such a large order for locomotives with a 15lt axle loading was unusual.[11] [12]

In Natal, the bulk of the Class was based at Pietermaritzburg, from where they worked most trains on the two heavily graded branch lines to Greytown and Franklin. Others worked on the Natal North Coast line between Stanger and Empangeni, while some joined the Class GL on the coal line between Vryheid and Glencoe.

The Cape Western system's locomotives were stationed at Worcester, from where they worked the old New Cape Central Railway (NCCR) line via Riversdale to Mosselbaai until it was dieselised. Between 1981 and 1984, a number were allocated to the Cape Northern system to work the line from Vryburg to Mafeking, where they largely replaced the Class 19D locomotives which had earlier dominated on this line. This turned out to be their last term in mainline service since they were replaced by Class 25NC locomotives in 1984 when the line was relaid with heavier rail.

Most of the Class was then allocated to the Cape Midland System in 1984, with most of them initially stationed at Voorbaai where they replaced the Class GEA on trains from Mosselbaai to Riversdale and across the Montagu Pass to Oudtshoorn. Their allocation was later extended to the sheds at Sydenham in Port Elizabeth, Rosmead, Klipplaat and Graaff-Reinet, with the result that they worked most of the trains over the route from Port Elizabeth to Rosmead via Klipplaat and across the Lootsberg Pass from Graaff-Reinet.[13]

Towards the end of their service lives, the Eastern Transvaal system still had an allocation of them, where locomotives from the Waterval Boven and Breyten sheds worked the line down to Vryheid in Natal.[13]

They were the last class of Garratt to remain in service with the SAR. All but three were withdrawn from service by April 1988 and those three were also retired shortly afterwards.

4140 (BP 7855, NBL 27792) was the last of the class delivered and became the last steam locomotive built by the North British Locomotive Company.

Zimbabwe and Mozambique

During the period from August 1979 to September 1981, altogether 26 locomotives of the Class were hired to Zimbabwe-Rhodesia, but not all at the same time since they were rotated with Capital Park in Pretoria as their nominal home for the occasions when they had to return to South Africa for major repairs. On the Rhodesia Railways (RR), later the National Railways of Zimbabwe, they worked from Bulawayo to Gwelo and to Wankie and beyond to Victoria Falls.[13] [14] [15] [16]

Six of these locomotives were loaned by RR to the Caminhos de Ferro de Moçambique (CFM) for a short while to work the CFM Centro line from Beira to Umtali in Zimbabwe.[13] [14] [15]

In Zimbabwe-Rhodesia, these locomotives normally worked chimney first with the water tank at the rear. Since the Rhodesian bush war was still ongoing in 1979, the locomotives were equipped with armour plating around the cab. Since this obscured the number plates, the engine numbers were then usually stencilled on the cabsides. The Class GMAM was similar in size with a similar coal capacity to the Rhodesia Railways 20th class 4-8-2+2-8-4 Garratt, but it had a voracious appetite for coal and frequently ran low on fuel with the result that trains often had to be dumped. In an attempt to solve this problem, RR extended the height of the Class GMAM's coal bunker by a foot to increase the capacity.[14] [15] [16]

26 GMAM Garratts were hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe between August 1979 to December 1981

+ 4059 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 12/1979 to 07/1981

+ 4060 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 08/1979 to 09/1981

+ 4064 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 08/1979 to 05/1981

+ 4065 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 08/1979 to 03/1981

+ 4070 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 08/1980 to 02/1981

+ 4071 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 12/1979 to 09/1980

+ 4087 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 08/1979 to 09/1981

+ 4089 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 08/1979 to 10/1981

+ 4090 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 12/1979 to 09/1980

+ 4098 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 01/1980 to 09/1981

+ 4099 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 12/1979 to 03/1981

+ 4102 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 09/1980 to 05/1981

+ 4103 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 12/1979 to 02/1981

+ 4111 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 02/1980 to 02/1981

+ 4112 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 08/1979 to 10/1980

+ 4117 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 06/1980 to 02/1981

+ 4120 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 08/1979 to 10/1980

+ 4121 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 12/1979 to 09/1981

+ 4125 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 08/1979 to 04/1980

+ 4126 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 12/1979 to 01/1980

+ 4129 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 03/1979 to 10/1980

+ 4134 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 08/1979 to 10/1980

+ 4135 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 08/1979 to 02/1981

+ 4137 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 08/1979 to 09/1980

+ 4139 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 08/1979 to 08/1981

+ 4140 Hired to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe 12/1979 to 08/1981

Industrial, private ownership and preservation

Several locomotives of the class were sold into industrial service and some later were saved for preservation after being sold on into private ownership. The majority went to the Randfontein Estates Gold Mining Company (REGM). Two were sold to the Hotham Valley Railway in Western Australia where they were to haul tourists in ex SAR passenger coaches. These two locomotives, 4090 and 4129 however, never left South Africa and after standing at Bloemfontein loco for 20 years, they were scrapped in May 2016. 4074 was rebuilt after REGM service with the boiler cradle off 4126 and therefore is shown listed as such per the Beyer Peacock numbering and locomotive identification protocol.

Preservation

NUMBER BUILDER/WORKS THF / Private LEASELEND / OWNER CURRENT LOCATION OUTSIDE SOUTH AFRICA Notes
4056 Hensc 28685 THF THF WATERVAL BOVEN LOCOMOTIVE DEPOT
4070 Hensc 28699 THF THF GEORGE TRANSPORT MUSEUM Oil fired
4074 (4126) Hensc 28703 Private CREIGHTON MUNICIPALITY CREIGHTON Operational
4079 BP 7677 Private SANDSTONE ESTATE On display at the Sandstone Estate
4083 BP 7681 Private MAINLINE STEAM MERCER
4112 BP 7827 / NBL 27770 Private Coatbridge
4114 BP 7829 / NBL 27772 Private SANDSTONE ESTATE On display at the Sandstone Estate
4122 BP 7837 THF THF VOORBAAI LOCOMOTIVE DEPOT
4128 BP 7843 THF THF VOORBAAI LOCOMOTIVE DEPOT
4135 BP 7850 / NBL 27787 Private FarRail Hermanstad
4136 BP 7851 / NBL 27788 THF MAINLINE STEAM BLOEMFONTEIN LOCOMOTIVE DEPOT

Works numbers

The builders, works numbers and years built of these locomotives are listed in the table.[3] [6] [7]

Notes and References

  1. South African Railways and Harbours Locomotive Diagram Book, 2'0" & 3'6" Gauge Steam Locomotives, 15 August 1941, as amended
  2. https://sites.google.com/site/soulorailway/home/system-7-1/part-24-krugersdorp---zeerust---mafeking-home-signal-1 Soul of A Railway, System 7, Western Transvaal, based in Johannesburg, Part 24: Krugersdorp-Zeerust-Mafeking (Home Signal), Part 1 by Les Pivnic. Caption 29.
  3. Henschel-Lieferliste (Henschel & Son works list), compiled by Dietmar Stresow
  4. South African Railways (1985). Rolling Stock Diagrams. Reference CXG 6/4/2/3. Issued 1 April 1985. SAR Head Office, Johannesburg.
  5. Transnet (1991). Transnet Index and Diagrams of Goods Vehicles, Part II, Tank Wagons. Reference S/RM(WV) 15/8/5/5. 30 July 1991. Anker Building, Verwoerdburgstad. p. X-17.
  6. North British Locomotive Company works list, compiled by Austrian locomotive historian Bernhard Schmeiser
  7. North British Locomotive Co. (from J. Lambert)
  8. Transnet (1991). Transnet Index and Diagrams of Goods Vehicles, Part II, Tank Wagons. Reference S/RM(WV) 15/8/5/5. 30 July 1991. Anker Building, Verwoerdburgstad. p. X-20.
  9. https://sites.google.com/site/soulorailway/home/system-3-1/part-15---bethesda-road-to-rosmead-the-lootsberg-pass Soul of A Railway, System 3, Part 15: Bethesda Road to Rosmead, Lootsberg Pass. Caption 19.
  10. https://sites.google.com/site/soulorailway/home/system-7-1/system-7-part-6-germiston-the-steam-and-diesel-running-sheds Soul of A Railway, System 7, Western Transvaal, based in Johannesburg, Part 6. Germiston, the Steam and Diesel Running Sheds by Les Pivnic. Caption 11.
  11. https://sites.google.com/site/soulorailway/home/system-7-1/soul-of-a-railway-part-21-witbank-line-by-les-pivnic-eugene-armer-peter-stow-and-peter-micenko Soul of A Railway, System 7, Western Transvaal, based in Johannesburg, Part 21: Witbank Line by Les Pivnic, Eugene Armer, Peter Stow and Peter Micenko. Captions 9, 10.
  12. https://sites.google.com/site/soulorailway/home/system-7-1/natalspruit-to-vereeniging-part-1-by-les-pivnic Soul of A Railway, System 7, Western Transvaal, based in Johannesburg, Part 18: Natalspruit to Vereeniging, Part 1 by Les Pivnic. Caption 32.
  13. Durrant, A.E. (1981). Garratt Locomotives of the World. David & Charles. pp. 131-135. .
  14. Pattison, R.G. (2005). Thundering Smoke, (1st ed.). Ilminster, Somerset: Sable Publishing House. pp. 127-130. .
  15. Durrant, A.E. (1997). The Smoke that Thunders, (1st ed.). Harare: African Publishing Group. .
  16. Hamer, E.D. (2001). Locomotives Zimbabwe and Botswana, (1st ed.). Malmö: Frank Stenvalls Förlag. pp. 60-61. .