DW&WR 42 to 44, built in 1883, were a set of three 2-4-0T tank locomotives built by Beyer, Peacock & Company for the Dublin, Wicklow & Wexford Railway in 1883, and the first for the railway with side tanks.[2] For their size they were considered to be very capable. In particular No. 44 was overhauled at Dundalk works in 1923 and was regularly allocated then to the 5.15pm Greystones express which usually consisted of size bogie coaches. Upon amalgamation to the Great Southern Railways (GSR) in 1925 it was determined these locomotives would be withdrawn and they were not allocated GSR locomotive numbers or class codes however despite this No. 44 was permitted to run up to 1927.[Note 1][1]
Power typeSteam
Power typeSteam
DesignerWilliam Wakefield
Quick facts DW&WR 42, Type and origin ...
| DW&WR 42 |
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| Specifications |
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Configuration:
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| • Whyte | 2-4-0T |
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| Gauge | 5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm) |
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| Leading dia. | 3 ft 10 in (1,170 mm) |
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| Driver dia. | 5 ft 1+1⁄2 in (1,562 mm) |
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| Axle load | 14.95 long tons (15.19 t) |
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| Loco weight | 29.9 long tons (30.4 t) |
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| Water cap. | 900 imp gal (4,100 L; 1,100 US gal) |
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| Boiler pressure | 145 lbf/in2 (1.00 MPa) |
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| Cylinders | 2 |
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| Cylinder size | 16 in × 22 in (406 mm × 559 mm) |
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| Operators | |
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| Class | G1 (Inchicore) |
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| Power class | O/N T |
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| Number in class | 11 |
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| Numbers | 42–44 |
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| Locale | Ireland |
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| Withdrawn | 1925-1927 |
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| Disposition | All scrapped |
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Close
No further 2-4-0Ts were built for DW&WR by Beyer-Peacock but locomotive superintendent William Wakefield chose to construct 11 more of the 2-4-0T configuration at Grand Canal Street from 1885.