Palatine T 3

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Power typeSteam
Power typeSteam
BuilderMaffei
Build date1889–1902
T 3 (Pfalz)
DRG Class 89.1
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
BuilderMaffei
Build date1889–1902
Total produced27
Specifications
Configuration:
  Whyte0-6-0T
  UICC n2t
  GermanGt 33.14
Gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
Driver dia.1,245 mm (4 ft 1 in)
Wheelbase3,475 mm (11 ft 4+34 in)
Length:
  Over buffers8,900 or 9,085 mm (29 ft 2+12 in or 29 ft 9+34 in)
Axle load14.0 tonnes (13.8 long tons; 15.4 short tons)
Adhesive weight42.0 tonnes (41.3 long tons; 46.3 short tons)
Service weight42.0 tonnes (41.3 long tons; 46.3 short tons)
Fuel typeCoal
Fuel capacity1.0 tonne (0.98 long tons; 1.1 short tons)
Water cap.4.0 m3 (880 imp gal; 1,060 US gal)
Firebox:
  Grate area1.53 m2 (16.5 sq ft)
Boiler:
  Tube plates3,350 mm (11 ft 0 in)
  Small tubes47.5 mm (1+78 in), 186 off
Boiler pressure12 bar (12.2 kgf/cm2; 174 psi)
Heating surface:
  Firebox6.3 m2 (68 sq ft)
  Tubes and flues83.3 m2 (897 sq ft)
  Total surface89.60 m2 (964.4 sq ft)
Cylinders2
Cylinder size420 mm × 610 mm (16+916 in × 24 in)
Performance figures
Maximum speed45 km/h (28 mph)
Indicated power400 PS (294 kW; 395 hp)
Career
Numbers
  • Pfalz: 13...285
  • DRG 89 101 – 89 121
Retired1953

The Palatine T 3 was a class of goods train tank locomotives with a C n2t wheel arrangement in service with the Palatinate Railway. They had no running axles. They were incorporated into the Deutsche Reichsbahn as DRG Class 891 with operating numbers 89 101–121. Their design was based on that of the Bavarian D V.

Compared to other railway companies, the Palatinate Railway only procured C couplers for service on branch lines and shunting from 1889 to 1905. In Bavaria locomotives of Class C V had been in operation for 10 years.

Procurement

Over a total of 16 years, the firm of Maffei acquired a total of 27 engines in four batches.[1] The first four machines - procured in 1889/1990 - were bought as replacements for engines that had been decommissioned and they were given their numbers. The next procurement series from 1898 for seven engines and the batch ordered from 1900 for eleven engines received new, sequential numbers. In the 1902 batch of a further four locomotives, there was another re-used of previous operating numbers. In 1905 another engine with a new, consecutive number was delivered.

All the engine were given names as well as operating numbers as was usual with the Palatinate Railways at that time.

Fate

Twenty one units were taken over by the Deutsche Reichsbahn, who renamed them the Class 89.1 in their numbering scheme. In 1920, six locomotives - numbers 207, 208, 246, 252, 255 and 285[2] - had to be handed over to the Saarland Railways.

In a list of locomotives in the French occupation zone from 1948, eight engines are allotted to the EAW Kaiserslautern.[3] The last unit was retired in 1953 from the Deutsche Bundesbahn.

Locomotive numbers

References

Literature

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