Indian locomotive class WP
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The Indian locomotive class WP was a class of 4-6-2 "Pacific" steam locomotives used in India. It was introduced after World War II for passenger duties, marking the change from 'X' to 'W' as the classification code for broad gauge locomotives.
The class was designed specifically for low-calorie, high-ash Indian coal, by Railway Board designers in India.
WP class locomotives were capable of doing up to 110 km/h (68 mph) and were easily recognized by their cone-shaped bulging nose, usually with a silver star device painted on it.
History
A total of 755 WPs were built between 1947 and 1967, bearing fleet numbers 7000 to 7754. The first batch of sixteen, numbers 7200–7215, came from the Baldwin Locomotive Works, USA in 1947, and these were classed WP/P. (P for Prototype).
A main production batch of 300 locomotives followed in 1949, with production split between Baldwin (100), Montreal Locomotive Works (120), and Canadian Locomotive Company (80). The locomotives in this group were numbered 7216–7515, but the running numbers were issued in blocks as the locomotives were issued to the pre-nationalisation companies, and so bore no relation to the manufacturers' serial numbers, or even the manufacturer.[1]
A further 180 locomotives were built between 1955 and 1959, with production split between Canadian Locomotive Company (120), Fabryka Lokomotyw, of Chrzanów, Poland (30), and Lokomotivfabrik Floridsdorf of Vienna, Austria (30).
Between 1963 and 1966, 259 more were built, but these were ordered from Chittaranjan Locomotive Works (CLW), and were manufactured in India, and classified WP/I.[1] The WP/Is were 5 tonnes heavier.[citation needed]
The WP was Indian railways' crack locomotive in 1960s and 1970s. Before the widespread introduction of diesel and electric locomotives several prestigious trains, such as the Taj Express, the Grand Trunk Express, Howrah-Madras Mail, Frontier Mail and the AirConditioned Express were once hauled by WP class locomotives.
The entire WP class remained intact into the 1980s. Some WPs remained in service until the 1990s, and nine have been preserved. One constructed by Baldwin (7200) in 1947 and the other by Fablok in 1959 are a part of the collection of the National Rail Museum, New Delhi.[2]
WP7200 received a full heavy overhaul at Amritsar works in April 2015 and is now kept at Rewari shed near New Delhi for excursion service. asides from 7200, the remaining eight engines include (7278) constructed by Montreal Locomotive Works and preserved at Charbagh Loco Works, (7581) built by Canadian Locomotive Company is preserved at Sonepur DRM, (7656) built by Chittaranjan Locomotive Works is preserved at Jhansi Institute Railway, (7000) built by Fabryka Lokomotyw or in Charznow Poland is preserved in Bhusaval shed, (7411) however its builder is not identified as of yet for (7411) and yet it is not told whether or not was built by either Baldwin, Canadian Builders, Montreal, Fabryka, Lokomotivfabrik, or Chittaranjan itself, as the builders plate for (7411) was not identified, the engine is preserved in Burdwan and awaiting transfer to the Chennai Museum although however there are not wheels on its tender as a result, (7015) built by Fabryka Lokomotyw or Charznow Poland is another Polish preserved WP engine and is in good working order it is restored to full working order and is preserved and runs mainline heritage excursion special trains, it is preserved at Rewari shed, (7161) is another built by Chittaranjan and this engine is fully restored to full working order on mainline excursions along with Polish built (7015) as it well runs together as well, (7161) is preserved at Siliguri,
Technical specifications
- Boiler: 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m) diameter[citation needed]
- Heating Surface: 3,082 sq ft (286.3 m2)[citation needed]
- Maximum Train Load: 680 tonnes[citation needed]
Class table
Year | Manufacturer | Serial Nos. | Qty | First Nos. | All-India Nos. | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1947 | Baldwin | 73408–73423 | 16 | — | 7200–7215 | Prototypes |
1949 | Baldwin | 74294–74393 | 100 | 1–100 | In range 7216–7515 | |
1949 | Canadian | 2544–2623 | 80 | C251–C330 | In range 7216–7515 | |
1949 | Montreal | 77200–77259 77345–74399 77576–77580 |
120 | M1–M120 | In range 7216–7515 | |
1955–56 | Canadian | 2730–2849 | 120 | — | 7516–7635 | |
1958–59 | Fablok | 4997–5006 5031–5050 |
30 | 3000–3029 | 7000–7029 | |
1957 | Floridsdorf | 17827–17856 | 30 | 3030–3059 | 7030–7059 | |
1963 | Chittaranjan | — | 36 | — | 7060–7095 | |
1963–64 | Chittaranjan | — | 50 | — | 7096–7145 | |
1964–65 | Chittaranjan | — | 33 | — | 7146–7178 | |
1965 | Chittaranjan | — | 73 | — | 7179–7199 7636–7687 |
|
1966 | Chittaranjan | — | 37 | — | 7688–7724 | |
1966 | Chittaranjan | — | 30 | — | 7725–7754 |
See also
References
Notes
Bibliography
- Hughes, Hugh (1976). Steam in India. Truro, Cornwall: D. Bradford Barton Ltd. ISBN 0851532586.
- Hughes, Hugh (1996). Indian Locomotives: Part 4 – 1941–1990. Harrow, Middlesex: The Continental Railway Circle. ISBN 0-9521655-1-1. OCLC 35135033.
- Marshall, Lawrence G (2009). Indian Broad Gauge Steam Remembered. East Harling, Norfolk: Taverner Publications. ISBN 9781901470154.