South African Class 7 4-8-0

The South African Railways Class 7 4-8-0 of 1892 is a steam locomotive from the pre-Union era in the Cape of Good Hope.

CGR 7th Class 4-8-0 1892
South African Class 7 4-8-0
Midland System no. 344, SAR no. 975, with type ZA tender, Bloemfontein, 6 April 2006
Type and origin
Type ZA tender (2-axle bogies, Dübs)
Type ZB tender (3-axle, Neilson)
♣ Original locomotive, as built
Locomotive equipped with superheating
Power typeSteam
DesignerCape Government Railways
(H.M. Beatty)
BuilderDübs and Company
Neilson and Company
Serial numberDübs 2882-2887
Neilson 4446-4477
ModelCGR 7th
Build date1892
Total produced38
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte4-8-0 (Mastodon)
 • UIC2'Dn2
Driver2nd coupled axle
Gauge3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) Cape gauge
Leading dia.28+12 in (724 mm)
Coupled dia.42+34 in (1,086 mm)
Tender wheels33+12 in (851 mm) as built
♠ 34 in (864 mm) retyred
37 in (940 mm)
Wheelbase41 ft 4+38 in (12,608 mm)
46 ft 2 in (14,072 mm) ​
 • Engine21 ft 3+12 in (6,490 mm)
 • Leading5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm)
 • Coupled12 ft (3,658 mm)
 • Tender♠ 14 ft 7 in (4,445 mm)
10 ft (3,048 mm)
 • Tender bogie♠ 4 ft 7 in (1,397 mm)
Length:
 • Over couplers♠ 51 ft 7 in (15,723 mm)
50 ft 1 in (15,265 mm)
Height12 ft 4+12 in (3,772 mm)
12 ft 10 in (3,912 mm)
Frame typePlate
Axle load♣ 9 LT (9,144 kg)
9 LT 14 cwt (9,856 kg) ​
 • Leading♣ 10 LT 9 cwt (10,620 kg)
11 LT 2 cwt (11,280 kg)
 • 1st coupled♣ 8 LT 14 cwt (8,840 kg)
9 LT 8 cwt (9,551 kg)
 • 2nd coupled♣ 8 LT 11 cwt (8,687 kg)
9 LT 14 cwt (9,856 kg)
 • 3rd coupled♣ 9 LT (9,144 kg)
9 LT 10 cwt (9,652 kg)
 • 4th coupled♣ 8 LT 16 cwt (8,941 kg)
9 LT 8 cwt (9,551 kg)
 • Tender axle 9 LT 13 cwt 3 qtr (9,843 kg) av.
Adhesive weight♣ 35 LT 1 cwt (35,610 kg)
38 LT (38,610 kg)
Loco weight♣ 45 LT 10 cwt (46,230 kg)
49 LT 2 cwt (49,890 kg)
Tender weight 29 LT 1 cwt (29,520 kg)
Total weight♣ 74 LT 11 cwt (75,750 kg)
♦ 78 LT 3 cwt (79,400 kg)
Tender typeZA (2-axle bogies) or ZB (3-axle)
ZA, ZB, ZC, ZE permitted
Fuel typeCoal
Fuel capacity♠ 3 LT 10 cwt (3.6 t)
5 LT (5.1 t)
Water cap.♠ 2,220 imp gal (10,100 L)
2,370 imp gal (10,800 L)
Firebox:
 • TypeRound-top
 • Grate area♣ 17.5 sq ft (1.63 m2)
18 sq ft (1.7 m2)
Boiler:
 • Pitch♣ 6 ft 6 in (1,981 mm)
6 ft 10 in (2,083 mm)
 • Diameter♣ 4 ft 2 in (1,270 mm)
4 ft 6 in (1,372 mm)
 • Tube plates 10 ft 9 in (3,277 mm)
 • Small tubes185: 1+34 in (44 mm)
100: 1+78 in (48 mm)
 • Large tubes 18: 5+12 in (140 mm)
Boiler pressure♣ 160 psi (1,103 kPa) as built
♣ 170 psi (1,172 kPa) adjusted
180 psi (1,241 kPa)
Safety valveRamsbottom
Heating surface:
 • Firebox♣ 99 sq ft (9.2 m2)
113 sq ft (10.5 m2)
 • Tubes♣ 911 sq ft (84.6 m2)
806 sq ft (74.9 m2)
 • Total surface♣ 1,010 sq ft (94 m2)
919 sq ft (85.4 m2)
Superheater:
 • Heating area 206 sq ft (19.1 m2)
CylindersTwo
Cylinder size17 in (432 mm) bore
23 in (584 mm) stroke
Valve gearStephenson
CouplersJohnston link-and-pin
Performance figures
Tractive effort♣ 18,660 lbf (83.0 kN) @ 75%
♣ 19,810 lbf (88.1 kN) @ 75% adjusted
22,240 lbf (98.9 kN) @ 75%
Factor of adh.4.20
Career
OperatorsCape Government Railways
Imperial Military Railways
South African Railways
Zambesi Saw Mills
ClassClass 7
Number in class38
NumbersCGR 315-352
17 renumbered 701-717
IMR C520, C521 & C524
SAR 950-987
Delivered1892-1893
First run1892
Withdrawn1972
The leading coupled axle had flangeless wheels

In 1892, the Cape Government Railways placed six 7th Class steam locomotives with a 4-8-0 Mastodon type wheel arrangement in service and, until 1893, another 32 were acquired. They were initially placed in service on the Midland System, but were later distributed between the Midland and Eastern Systems. The locomotives were renumbered in 1912, when they were assimilated into the South African Railways, but retained their Class 7 classification.[1][2][3][4]

Manufacturers

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In 1890, Michael Stephens, then Chief Locomotive Superintendent of the Cape Government Railways (CGR), accompanied General Manager C.B. Elliot on a visit to Durban, to examine and report on the new Dübs A 4-8-2T (later NGR Class D) tank locomotives which had been placed in service by the Natal Government Railways (NGR) in 1888. In Elliot's subsequent report, he stated his conviction that locomotives with eight-coupled wheels should be adopted for the coastal sections of the Midland and Eastern Systems, where fog and the damp atmosphere were detrimental to tractive adhesion at night in the summer months.[1][4][5]

 
H.M. Beatty
 
CGR Number plate
 
Works plate, no. 345

Following this report, a complete design for such a locomotive was prepared at the Salt River works, under the supervision of Western System Locomotive Superintendent H.M. Beatty. The last six of an order for 36 Cape 5th Class 4-6-0 locomotives from Dübs and Company were cancelled and substituted with an order for six of these new 7th Class locomotives. They were delivered in 1892, numbered in the range from 315 to 320 for the Midland System. Two of them, numbers 318 and 320, were later renumbered to 701 and 702 and re-allocated to the Eastern System.[1][4][5]

These six locomotives were equipped with type ZA tenders which rode on two two-axle bogies, the first proper bogie tenders to enter service in South Africa. They had a capacity of 3 long tons 10 hundredweight (3.6 tonnes) coal and 2,220 imperial gallons (10,100 litres) water.[6][7]

The first six locomotives were followed by an order for another 32 of these engines, which were delivered from Neilson and Company in 1892 and 1893. These engines were initially numbered in the range from 321 to 352 for the Midland System. Fifteen of them were later renumbered in the range from 703 to 717 and re-allocated to the Eastern System. They were equipped with type ZB tenders, which rode on three-axle bogies. They had a larger capacity of 5 long tons (5.1 tonnes) coal and 2,370 imperial gallons (10,800 litres) water, with an average maximum axle load of 9 long tons 13 hundredweight 3 quarters (9,843 kilograms).[1][4][8][6][7]

While the Cape 6th Class, which was designed and ordered at the same time as the 7th Class, was conceived as a fast passenger locomotive, the 7th Class was conceived as its heavy goods locomotive counterpart. The 7th Class turned out to be a most useful and well liked locomotive type. It continued the attractive appearance of the Cape's locomotives, with a strong construction and sound design. Some remained in service for nearly eighty years.[1]

Characteristics

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The 7th Class represented a considerable advance in design and power. They were the first South African locomotives to be equipped with sight feed lubricators which allowed a sight glass to be positioned in the cab, where the rate of oil feed to the cylinders could be observed. The reversing gear was of the quick-threaded screw type instead of the reversing lever which had earlier been used.[5]

 
SAR no. 984 at Walvisbaai with the stoker's seat swung out, c. 1955

The seats of the driver and stoker were mounted on poles which allowed them to be swung around to outside the cab. This was popular amongst crews, who could often be seen riding outside the engine when working in the hotter areas of the country and in South West Africa.[9]

In his report for 1892, Stephens compared the hauling power of the 7th Class to that of older locomotives working between Port Elizabeth and Cradock on the Midland System as 22 to 14. Their even distribution of weight and flexibility rendered them very easy on the permanent way, while the crews declared them to be the steadiest engines they had yet had on the System, in spite of their height. Stephens regarded the 7th Class as maximum-power goods-train engines, although he believed that the limit of power on Cape gauge had not yet been reached.[5]

Class 7 sub-classes

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When the Union of South Africa was established on 31 May 1910, the three Colonial government railways (CGR, NGR and Central South African Railways) were united under a single administration to control and administer the railways, ports and harbours of the Union. Although the South African Railways and Harbours came into existence in 1910, the actual classification and renumbering of all the rolling stock of the three constituent railways was only implemented with effect from 1 January 1912.[2][10]

 

When these 38 locomotives were assimilated into the SAR in 1912, they were renumbered in the range from 950 to 987, but they retained their Class 7 designation.[2][11]

The rest of the CGR's 7th Class locomotives, together with 7th Class locomotives from the Central South African Railways (CSAR), Pretoria-Pietersburg Railway (PPR), Rhodesia Railways (RR), the NGR and, in 1925, the New Cape Central Railways (NCCR), were grouped into six different sub-classes by the SAR and designated Classes 7A to 7F.[6][7]

Modifications

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During the 1930s and later, many of the Class 7 series locomotives were equipped with superheated boilers and piston valves. On the Class 7B and Class 7C, this conversion was sometimes indicated with an "S" suffix to the class number on the locomotive's number plates, but on the rest of the Class 7 family this distinction was rarely applied.[6][7]

The superheated versions could be visually identified by the position of the chimney on the smokebox, the chimney having been displaced forward to provide space behind it in the smokebox for the superheater header. They were equipped with larger type ZE tenders, which rode on two two-axle bogies and had a capacity of 8 long tons (8.1 tonnes) coal and 2,850 imperial gallons (13,000 litres) water.[3][6][7]

Service

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South Africa

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The 7th Class became the main goods locomotive during the last twenty years of the existence of the CGR. The Class has been described as the Class 15F of its generation. For thirty years they handled most trains between Port Elizabeth and Cradock and on many other SAR mainlines. Three of them also saw service with the Imperial Military Railways (IMR) during the Second Boer War from 1899 to 1902, having been allocated to the IMR for the duration of the war. In SAR service, the Class 7 family did duty on every system in the country.[3][4][12]

South West Africa

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In 1915, shortly after the outbreak of the First World War, the German South West Africa colony was occupied by the Union Defence Forces. Since a large part of the territory's railway infrastructure and rolling stock was destroyed or damaged by retreating German forces, an urgent need arose for locomotives for use on the Cape gauge lines in that territory. In 1917, numbers 950, 952, 954, 957, 962, 967 to 969, 973, 979 and 984 were transferred to the Defence Department for service in South West Africa. One of the engines was lost at sea in the process and was subsequently replaced with Class 7A number 1000. The lost locomotive had been documented as being no. 984 but, since no. 984 was photographed in service at Walvisbaai c. 1955, this was an error.[3][4][13]

These eleven locomotives remained in South West Africa after the war. They proved to be so successful in that territory, that more were gradually transferred there in later years. By the time the Class 24 locomotives arrived in SWA in 1949, 53 locomotives of the Class 7 family were still in use there.[3][4]

Most remained there and were only transferred back to South Africa when the Class 32-000 diesel-electric locomotives replaced them in 1961. In South Africa, they remained at work in branchline service, particularly at Tarkastad and Ladysmith and also on the Touws River-Ladismith branchline, until they were finally withdrawn in 1972.[3]

Industrial service

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In 1966, two Class 7 locomotives, numbers 955 and 956, as well as four Class 7A and two Class 7B, were sold to the Zambesi Saw Mills (ZSM) in Zambia. The company worked the teak forests which stretched 100 miles (160 kilometres) to the north-west of Livingstone in Zambia, where it built one of the longest logging railways in the world to serve its sawmill at Mulobezi. These eight locomotives joined eight ex Rhodesia Railways 7th Class locomotives which had been acquired by the ZSM between 1925 and 1956.[4]

Railway operations ceased at Mulobezi around 1972, whilst operation of the line to Livingstone was taken over by the Zambia Railways in 1973. While most of the Class 7 locomotives remained at Mulobezi out of use, no. 955 was preserved at the Livingstone Railway Museum.[14]

Preservation

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Number Works nmr THF / Private Leaselend / Owner Current Location Outside South Africa ?
950 DUBS 2882 THF Plinth Upington (Station) sole surviving Dübs example
955 NEILSON 4447 Private Zambia Railways Livingstone Railway Museum Zambia
970 NEILSON 4450 Private Municipality Riversdale (Town Centre)
975 NEILSON 4469 Private Anglo Boer War Museum Anglo Boer War Museum (Plinth)
980 NEILSON 4457 THF/PRASA Plinth Klerksdorp (Station)
981 NEILSON 4458 THF Bloemfontein Locomotive Depot
982 NEILSON 4472 THF Plinth Aliwal North (Station)
987 NEILSON 4477 Private Matjiesfontein Village Matjiesfontein Village

Renumbering

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During their long service lives, some of the Class 7 locomotives were renumbered multiple times. All were initially numbered onto the Midland System roster. Some were later renumbered onto the Eastern System roster, three saw service with the IMR and were temporarily renumbered accordingly, and all were eventually renumbered onto the SAR's roster in 1912. The table lists their renumbering as well as their builders and works numbers.[1][2][11]

Illustration

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The main picture shows ex Midland System Class 7 no. 344, later SAR Class 7 no. 975, plinthed at the Women's Memorial in Bloemfontein. Of the plinthed locomotives illustrated, CGR no. 345 (SAR no. 976) at Klerksdorp is actually Midland no. 332, later Eastern no. 707 and eventually SAR no. 980. It was restored bearing the CGR number plate and builder's works plate of CGR no. 345.[15]

The main picture shows an engine with a type ZA tender. All the locomotives illustrated below are equipped with type ZC tenders

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Holland, D.F. (1971). Steam Locomotives of the South African Railways. Vol. 1: 1859–1910 (1st ed.). Newton Abbott, England: David & Charles. pp. 40–41, 61. ISBN 978-0-7153-5382-0.
  2. ^ a b c d Classification of S.A.R. Engines with Renumbering Lists, issued by the Chief Mechanical Engineer's Office, Pretoria, January 1912, pp. 8, 12, 15, 37 (Reprinted in April 1987 by SATS Museum, R.3125-6/9/11-1000)
  3. ^ a b c d e f Paxton, Leith; Bourne, David (1985). Locomotives of the South African Railways (1st ed.). Cape Town: Struik. pp. 46–48. ISBN 0869772112.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Pattison, R.G. (1997). The Cape Seventh Class Locomotives (1st ed.). Kenilworth, Cape Town: The Railway History Group. pp. 4–7, 22–23, 38–39. ISBN 0958400946.
  5. ^ a b c d Espitalier, T.J.; Day, W.A.J. (1944). The Locomotive in South Africa - A Brief History of Railway Development. Chapter II - The Cape Government Railways (Continued). South African Railways and Harbours Magazine, January 1944. pp. 9-12.
  6. ^ a b c d e South African Railways & Harbours/Suid Afrikaanse Spoorweë en Hawens (15 Aug 1941). Locomotive Diagram Book/Lokomotiefdiagramboek, 3'6" Gauge/Spoorwydte. SAR/SAS Mechanical Department/Werktuigkundige Dept. Drawing Office/Tekenkantoor, Pretoria. p. 41.
  7. ^ a b c d e South African Railways & Harbours/Suid Afrikaanse Spoorweë en Hawens (15 Aug 1941). Locomotive Diagram Book/Lokomotiefdiagramboek, 2'0" & 3'6" Gauge/Spoorwydte, Steam Locomotives/Stoomlokomotiewe. SAR/SAS Mechanical Department/Werktuigkundige Dept. Drawing Office/Tekenkantoor, Pretoria. pp. 6a-7a, 41-42.
  8. ^ Neilson, Reid works list, compiled by Austrian locomotive historian Bernhard Schmeiser
  9. ^ Soul of A Railway, System 7, Western Transvaal, based in Johannesburg, Part 7. Germiston Steam and Diesel Running Sheds (2nd section) by Les Pivnic. Caption 2. Archived 24 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine (Accessed on 7 April 2017)
  10. ^ The South African Railways - Historical Survey. Editor George Hart, Publisher Bill Hart, Sponsored by Dorbyl Ltd., Published c. 1978, p. 25.
  11. ^ a b Holland, D. F. (1972). Steam Locomotives of the South African Railways. Vol. 2: 1910-1955 (1st ed.). Newton Abbott, England: David & Charles. pp. 138–139. ISBN 978-0-7153-5427-8.
  12. ^ Soul of A Railway - System 3 – Part 10: The Midland Main Line - Part 2: Paterson to Alicedale - Caption 3 (Accessed on 15 February 2017)
  13. ^ Espitalier, T.J.; Day, W.A.J. (1947). The Locomotive in South Africa - A Brief History of Railway Development. Chapter VII - South African Railways (Continued). South African Railways and Harbours Magazine, December 1947. p. 1033.
  14. ^ Pattison, R.G. (2005). Thundering Smoke, (1st ed.). Sable Publishing House. p42-48. ISBN 0-9549488-1-5
  15. ^ Middleton, John N. (2002). Railways of Southern Africa Locomotive Guide - 2002 (as amended by Combined Amendment List 4, January 2009) (2nd, Dec 2002 ed.). Herts, England: Beyer-Garratt Publications. p. 18.