NZASM 18 Tonner 0-6-0ST
NZASM no. 13, Delagoa Bay Railway no. 57
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
DesignerManning Wardle
BuilderManning Wardle
Serial number1177-1179, 1186-1188
Build date1890
Total produced6
Specifications
Configuration:
  Whyte0-6-0ST
  UICCn2t
Driver2nd coupled axle
Gauge3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) Cape gauge
Coupled dia.36 in (914 mm)
Wheelbase10 ft 10 in (3,302 mm)
  Coupled10 ft 10 in (3,302 mm)
Wheel spacing
(Asymmetrical)
1-2: 5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm)
2-3: 5 ft 7 in (1,702 mm)
Length:
  Over couplers21 ft 10 in (6,655 mm)
Width6 ft 8 in (2,032 mm)
Height10 ft 4+12 in (3,162 mm)
Frame typePlate
Axle load5 LT 18 cwt (5,995 kg)
  Coupled5 LT 18 cwt (5,995 kg)
Loco weight17 LT 14 cwt (17,980 kg)
Fuel typeCoal
Fuel capacity15 long hundredweight (0.8 t)
Water cap.460 imp gal (2,090 L)
Firebox:
  TypeRound-top
  Grate area6 sq ft (0.56 m2)
Boiler:
  Pitch4 ft 9+12 in (1,460 mm)
  Diameter2 ft 9 in (838 mm) outside
  Tube plates8 ft (2,438 mm)
  Small tubes97: 1+78 in (48 mm)
Boiler pressure140 psi (965 kPa)
Heating surface424 sq ft (39.4 m2)
  Tubes381 sq ft (35.4 m2)
  Firebox43 sq ft (4.0 m2)
CylindersTwo
Cylinder size12 in (305 mm) bore
17 in (432 mm) stroke
Valve gearStephenson
Valve typeSlide
CouplersJohnston link-and-pin
Performance figures
Tractive effort7,140 lbf (31.8 kN) @ 75%
Career
OperatorsDelagoa Bay Railway
NZASM
Imperial Military Railways
Central South African Railways
ClassNZASM 18 Tonner
Number in class6
NumbersDelagoa 53-58
NZASM 9-14
IMR 606-611
Official name18 Tonner
Delivered1890
First run1890

The NZASM 18 Tonner 0-6-0ST of 1890 was a South African steam locomotive from the pre-Union era in Transvaal.

In 1890, the Nederlandsche-Zuid-Afrikaansche Spoorweg-Maatschappij of the Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek (Transvaal Republic) placed six 0-6-0ST locomotives in service on construction work. Since the railway classified its locomotives according to their weight, these engines were known as 18 Tonners.[1][2]

The Delagoa Bay line

To have an outlet to a harbour, a railway from Delagoa Bay in the Portuguese colony of Mozambique to Pretoria had been proposed to the Volksraad of the Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek (ZAR) by President F.T. Burgers as far back as 1872. At that time, the Cape Government Railways had not yet begun with its inland expansion from Wellington and the Natal Government Railways had not yet been established.[2][3]

The Portuguese supported the idea, since it would open a trade route from Mozambique into the interior. In 1883, Major Joachim Machado was sent to Transvaal to report on a proposed route through the Komati river and Crocodile river valleys towards the Highveld and Pretoria. The resulting agreement was for the Portuguese to construct the section from Delagoa Bay (now Maputo) to the border at Komatipoort, while the ZAR would be responsible for the continuation of the railway to Pretoria.[2][3]

The Nederlandsche-Zuid-Afrikaansche Spoorweg-Maatschappij (NZASM) was established on 21 June 1887 and proposed to construct two railway lines simultaneously. One was a 16-mile long (26-kilometre) railway from Johannesburg to Boksburg, which became known as the Randtram line. The other was the first section of the Delagoa Bay railway from the Mozambique border, via Nelspruit to Pretoria.[1][2][3]

The Randtram line was officially opened on 17 March 1890. The Portuguese line from Delagoa Bay had already reached the Transvaal border on 14 December 1887, but the first train from Delagoa Bay only entered Komatipoort on 1 July 1891 when the NZASM's contractors completed the bridge across the Komati river. The section from Komatipoort to Nelspruit was completed by 20 June 1892. Waterval Boven was reached on 20 June 1894 and Balmoral, near Witbank, on 20 October 1894. Here, connection was made with the section which had simultaneously been built eastwards from Pretoria.[2][3]

Manufacturer

Six 0-6-0ST locomotives, built by Manning Wardle and Company, were placed in service by the NZASM in 1890 and were used mainly on construction work. Since the NZASM classified its locomotives according to their weight, they were known as 18 Tonners.[1]

As was often the practice at the time, the locomotives were purchased from the manufacturer and imported by agents acting on behalf of the end customer, the agent in the case of the 18 Tonners being Mynssen and Company. They were built in two batches of three and shipped from the factory between March and June 1890.[4]

Characteristics

The locomotives had inside cylinders, arranged at an incline, with slide valves which were actuated by Stephenson valve gear through rocker shafts. The cylinders and valve gear were placed between the plate frames and hidden from view by the wheels, which were coupled with external connecting rods. Together with the Cape Town Railway & Dock’s Blackie of 1859, these were the only two-cylinder locomotives with an inside cylinder and valve gear arrangement to see service in South Africa.[1][2]

There were minor differences between the locomotives of the two batches, the most notable being different footplate contours and buffer beams on the second batch. All six were equipped with 460 imperial gallons (2,090 litres) capacity water tanks.[4]

Numbering conundrum

The engine numbers on record for the 18 Tonners are a source of some confusion. They were rostered on the NZASM in the number range from 9 to 14, following on from the NZASM 10 Tonner engine numbers. The Manning Wardle works records, however, listed them as being numbered in the Delagoa Bay Railway number range from 53 to 58, following on from the engine numbers of the 10 Tonners which also served on the Delagoa Bay Railway. Furthermore, a Manning Wardle builder's picture of an 18 Tonner shows it with the Delagoa Bay Railway engine number 57.[1][4][5]

Similarly, in the works list of the Dutch manufacturer Machinefabriek Breda in respect of the 10 Tonners, those locomotives are also recorded with Delagoa Bay Railway engine numbers 50 to 52 instead of NZASM engine numbers 6 to 8.[6][7][8]

It appears, therefore, that the 10 Tonners and 18 Tonners entered service on, or were at least delivered to, the Delagoa Bay Railway and were only rostered on the NZASM at a later stage.[5]

The 10 Tonners and 18 Tonners were all delivered in 1890. At the time the first ones entered service in March and April 1890, the Randtram line, where the 10 Tonners were to be placed in service, had just been opened, with the first train being hauled by a 14 Tonner locomotive. However, the construction of the extensions of the Randtram line were still in progress towards the east to Springs and towards the west via Roodepoort to Krugersdorp. The extension from Germiston to Pretoria was only completed in December 1892, when a start was also made on the line from Pretoria to meet the approaching Delagoa Bay line, but Eerste Fabrieken in Pretoria East was only reached on 13 May 1894.[3]

18 Tonner at work during the construction of the Brinkspruit bridge

From the Mozambique end, the bridge across the Komati river was only completed in July 1891, Nelspruit was only reached in June 1892, Waterval Boven two years later in June 1894 and the link-up with Pretoria was only completed at Balmoral in October 1894, more than four years after the 18 Tonners entered service.[3]

Since they were used on construction work, it can therefore be considered most likely that the 18 Tonners were first placed in service on the Delagoa Bay Railway, hence the Delagoa Bay Railway engine numbers, from where they progressed towards Pretoria as the railway was being built.[1]

Whether this could have been the case with all six 18 Tonners as well as the 10 Tonners, or whether at least some of the 18 Tonners were used on construction work from the Pretoria end as well, is not known. The section from the Delagoa Bay end was completed all the way up to Waterval Boven on the Highveld at about the same time that the section from the Pretoria end reached Eerste Fabrieken in Pretoria East.[3]

Service

Imperial Military Railways

All railway operations in the two Boer Republics, the ZAR and the Orange Free State, were taken over by the Imperial Military Railways (IMR) during the Second Boer War. The IMR renumbering register made provision for all six 18 Tonners, in the number range from 606 to 611. Three of them were later converted to stationary boilers no. 1592, 1593 and 1704.[5]

Central South African Railways

At the end of the war, when the IMR was transformed into the Central South African Railways (CSAR), either one or two of the 18 Tonners survived and were renumbered, either as CSAR no. E or as numbers D and E. The uncertainty arises from the fact that the renumbering register lists CSAR no. D both as 14 Tonner no. 5 and as one of the 18 Tonner locomotives.[8]

Industrial service

Two of the 18 Tonners were sold to industry, but neither was identified by engine number. One went to the Rand Collieries Schapenrust Coal Mines and was later sold again to Apex Colliery, where it was their no. 1. Another one went to Brakpan Mines, where it was their no. 2.[5]

By the time the South African Railways classification and renumbering program was implemented in 1912, none of them were in railway service any longer.

Works numbers

The NZASM 18 Tonner works numbers, factory shipping dates and Delagoa Bay Railway, NZASM and IMR engine numbers are listed in the table.[1][4]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Holland, D.F. (1971). Steam Locomotives of the South African Railways. Vol. 1: 1859–1910 (1st ed.). Newton Abbott, England: David & Charles. pp. 110–112. ISBN 978-0-7153-5382-0.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Espitalier, T.J.; Day, W.A.J. (1944). The Locomotive in South Africa - A Brief History of Railway Development. Chapter IV - The N.Z.A.S.M.. South African Railways and Harbours Magazine, October 1944. pp. 761-764.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 The South African Railways - Historical Survey (Editor George Hart, Publisher Bill Hart, Sponsored by Dorbyl Ltd, c. 1978, pp. 18-20.)
  4. 1 2 3 4 Harman, Fred W. (1999). The Locomotives Built by Manning Wardle & Company – Volume 1 Narrow Gauge, (1st ed.). Toddington, Beds: Century Locoprints. p. 51. ISBN 978-0953531301.
  5. 1 2 3 4 18 Tonner Information supplied by John Nicholas Middleton
  6. De Pater, A.D. (1970). The locomotives built by Machinefabriek "Breda" voorheen Backer & Rueb. Brill Archive. p. 54.
  7. Google books extract from The locomotives built by Machinefabriek "Breda" voorheen Backer & Rueb
  8. 1 2 10, 14 and 18 Tonner Information supplied by John Nicholas Middleton
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