LTM 51
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
DesignerIr. D. Verhoop
BuilderHenschel
Serial number22063
ModelLTM 51
Build date1931
Total produced1
Specifications
Configuration:
  Whyte0-6-0+0-6-0
  UICC-C
Gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
Driver dia.900 mm
Wheelbase14300 mm
  Engine3300 mm + 7700mm + 3300mm
Pivot centres9092 mm
Wheel spacing
(Asymmetrical)
2300 mm + 1000 mm + 7700 mm + 1000 mm + 2300 mm
Frame typeGarratt
Loco weight56700 kg (empty), 71500 kg (ready for service)
Fuel typeCoal
Fuel capacity3000 kg
Water cap.7000 l
Boiler:
  Diameter1665 mm
  Tube plates2500 mm
  Small tubes24 pieces, inside 37 mm, outside 41.5 mm
  Large tubes140 pieces, inside 64 mm, outside 70 mm
Boiler pressure13.5 kg cm−2
Heating surface:
  Tubes6.96 m2
  Arch tubes9.4 m2
  Flues70.34 m2
  Tubes and flues86.7 m2
  Firebox2.0 m2
Superheater:
  Typesuperheater pipe: inside 17 mm, outside 22 mm
  Heating area41.8 m2
Cylinders4
Cylinder size360 x 360 mm
Valve gearVerhoop
Loco brakeManual and steam
Train brakesAutomatic Knorr air pressure, Hardy vacuum system
Performance figures
Tractive effort9800 kg
Career
OperatorsLTM
Number in class1
Numbers51
LocaleMaastricht - Vaals, Limburg, The Netherlands
Delivered1931
First run1931
Last run1938
Retired1940

Locomotive 51 of the Limburgsche Tramweg Maatschappij was a Garratt locomotive. It was the only Garratt type locomotive in the Netherlands. The locomotive was designed for operation on the line Maastricht - Vaals, which required a locomotive with at least 5 coupled axles. A conventional locomotive of this size would experience too much rolling resistance in the many curves on this line, which were typical tramway curves of small radius.[1][2]

History

It was built by Henschel with builder number 22063 in 1931. It entered service in the same year. Ir. D. Verhoop, in collaboration with Hanomag, is the likely designer of the locomotive. Builder number 10758 was reserved by Hanomag. The locomotive was completed after the take-over of Hanomag by Henschel. After the Maastricht-Vaals line was closed the locomotive was sold to Dotremont in Maastricht in 1938. Technisch Bureau Groen (The Hague) bought the machine in 1940, and sold the machine to a client in Germany in 1941.[1]

Design considerations

A normal (rigid) locomotive would cause considerable wear on the line. A Garratt type locomotive, flexible by its articulated design, offered several further advantages: accommodation for a short and wide boiler, low center of gravity, and better accessibility for maintenance.[1][2]

Technology

In exception to the general type, this Garratt locomotive had internal cylinders, and is more in line with other tramway locomotives in The Netherlands. The water storage was located on the bogies. The water tanks were located below the running boards, to ensure pressure was applied to all axles even when running empty. Additionally, this allowed for unobstructed views from the cabin. The valve gear was of the Verhoop system. The two traction bogies, which were in fact locomotives without a boiler and cabin, shared - apart from one extra axle - their basic design and layout with B locomotives LTM 21-35. Pistons, valves and rods were identical.[1][2]

Coal storage was located at the rear of the cabin in two coal storage bins. In between these storage bins there were a door and a passage way that allowed easy access to the pivot point.[1][2]

Brakes

The locomotive had four types of brakes: an automatic Knorr air pressure brake system (for use with railroad equipment), a Hardy vacuum brake (used in combination with the Knorr system when pulling LTM equipment), a direct working air pressure switching brake controlled from two control points on both sides of the cabin, a hand brake to be operated together with a steam brake in case of emergencies.[1][2]

Reversing Gear

A servo motor controlled the steam valves instead of the more common manual reversing gear.[1] On the piston rod of a steam cylinder (the actual motor) a glycerine buffer was installed which was used to hold the reach rod in position. This buffer consisted of a second piston working in a liquid filled cylinder the halves of which could be connected through a bypass valve. In order to change direction and set cut-off, dipping the reversing lever (either forward or backward as required) would momentarily permit steam to the servo motor and at the same time open the bypass valve. On centering the lever the position reached would be arrested. An indicator hand was coupled to the reach rod showing the current setting to the driver.[2]

Trivia

Number 51 had previously been assigned to a small stock locomotive which was sold after the line had been completed.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Overbosch, Ir. S. (1957). De Stoomlocomotieven der Nederlandse Tramwegen. Haarlem: De Technische Uitgeverij H. Stam N.V. pp. 160–162.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Brunner, H (1932). De eerste Garratt-locomotief in Nederland. Den Haag: De Ingenieur (35). pp. 71–78.
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