This is the current revision of this page, as edited by 77.234.77.85(talk) at 08:02, 6 August 2023(I fixed a typo, It originally said the first Snaigow was withdrawn in 1934 while it was actually withdrawn in 1935). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.
Revision as of 08:02, 6 August 2023 by 77.234.77.85(talk)(I fixed a typo, It originally said the first Snaigow was withdrawn in 1934 while it was actually withdrawn in 1935)
They had 20-by-26-inch (510 mm × 660 mm) outside cylinders with Walschaerts valve gear, 6 ft 3 in (1.905 m) driving wheels and a boiler pressed to 175 lbf/in2 (1.21 MPa). Weight was a half-hundredweight short of 56 long tons (125,400 lb or 56.9 t).
Both survived into London, Midland and Scottish Railway ownership in 1923, but neither lasted until nationalisation, as both were withdrawn and scrapped as non-standard engines in the mid-1930s. The LMS had classed them as 3P.
Baxter, Bertram (1984). Baxter, David (ed.). British Locomotive Catalogue 1825–1923, Volume 4: Scottish and remaining English Companies in the LMS Group. Ashbourne, Derbyshire: Moorland Publishing Company.
Casserley, H. C. & Johnston, Stuart W. (1974) [1966]. Locomotives at the Grouping 3: London, Midland and Scottish Railway. Shepperton, Surrey: Ian Allan. p. 146. ISBN0-7110-0554-0.