The South African Railways Class 15F 4-8-2 of 1938 is a steam locomotive.
The Class 15F was the most numerous steam locomotive class in South African Railways service. Between 1938 and 1948, 255 of these locomotives with a 4-8-2 Mountain type wheel arrangement entered service.[1][2][3][4]
Manufacturers
The Class 15F 4-8-2 Mountain type steam locomotive was designed by W.A.J. Day, Chief Mechanical Engineer (CME) of the South African Railways (SAR) from 1936 to 1939, based on the design of the Class 15E by his predecessor, Allan Griffiths Watson, and later modified again by his successor, M.M. Loubser. It was built in five batches by four locomotive manufacturers in Germany and the United Kingdom over a period of ten years spanning World War II.[2][4]
The first 21 were built in Germany in 1938. Seven were delivered by Berliner Maschinenbau, numbered in the range from 2902 to 2908, and fourteen by Henschel & Son, numbered in the range from 2909 to 2922.[2][5]
Locomotive building was interrupted by World War II, but because of a critical motive power shortage that developed in South Africa during the war, manufacturing of the Class 15F was resumed even before hostilities had ceased. In 1944, production started on thirty locomotives by Beyer, Peacock & Company (BP), delivered later that same year and numbered in the range from 2967 to 2996.[2][7]
In 1945, sixty were built and delivered by NBL, numbered in the range from 2997 to 3056.[6]
The final batch of 100 Class 15Fs were built by NBL in 1946 and 1947 and delivered between 1946 and 1948, numbered in the range from 3057 to 3156.[6]
Lineage
The Class 15F represented the ultimate stage in a long history of development spanning thirty years. The first Class 15 4-8-2 tender locomotive entered SAR service in 1914. It sported a 40 square feet (3.7 square metres) grate, a boiler pressure of 185 pounds per square inch (1,276 kilopascals), a maximum axle load of 16 long tons 10 hundredweight (16,760 kilograms) and 57 inches (1,448 millimetres) diameter coupled wheels. Later models incorporated major improvements in succession, until the Class 15CA was commissioned in 1926 with a 48 square feet (4.5 square metres) grate, a boiler pressure of 210 pounds per square inch (1,448 kilopascals), a maximum axle load of 17 long tons 15 hundredweight (18,030 kilograms) and 60 inches (1,524 millimetres) diameter coupled wheels.[8]
Characteristics
The Class 15F locomotive was similar to its predecessor Class 15E, but it was built with Walschaerts valve gear as specified by Day, who was not a protagonist of rotary cam poppet valve gear. This and some other differences led to these engines being designated Class 15F. The locomotives used Stone's electric lighting, with a 150 watt Tonum E type headlight, cab lighting which included a light over the reversing controls, a bunker light and rear headlights on the tender. The locomotive was capable of traversing curves of 275 feet (84 metres) radius with 3⁄4 inch (19 millimetres) gauge widening.[2][4]
The Class 15F was delivered with a Watson Standard no. 3B boiler and a Watson cab. During the 1930s, Day's predecessor as CME, A.G. Watson, designed a standard boiler type as part of his standardisation policy. Many serving locomotives were reboilered with these Watson Standard boilers and in the process most of them were also equipped with Watson cabs with their distinctive slanted fronts, compared to the conventional vertical fronts of their original cabs. New locomotives that were acquired in the Watson era and later, such as the Class 15F, were built with such boilers and cabs.[2][4][9][10]
To fit within the loading gauge, the Watson Standard no. 3B boiler was domeless. The maximum height of the locomotive was 12 feet 11+1⁄2 inches (3,950 millimetres), the maximum width 10 feet (3,048 millimetres) and the length over coupler faces 73 ft 5+15⁄16 in (22,401 mm).[1][9][10][8]
The pre-war locomotives were equipped with two large inclined Ross-pop safety valves, mounted on the upper sides of the boiler just ahead of the firebox and aimed about 80 degrees apart. When these inclined valves blew off under a station canopy, bystanders often received a shower of slimy wet soot. After the war, they were replaced by four smaller Ross-pop valves at the highest point of the boiler that blew off straight up.[11][12][13]
The cylinder barrels had cast iron liners. The valve gear, brake gear and the hubs on the coupled wheels were fitted with soft grease lubricating nipples while the bronze axle boxes and connecting and coupling rods had hard grease lubrication. The leading and trailing wheels were fitted with roller bearings. The axle boxes and motion were similar to those of the Classes 15CA and 23 and were interchangeable in most cases. The weight of the reciprocating parts on each side of the engine was 1,273 pounds (577 kilograms), of which 20% was balanced to ensure that the hammer blow per wheel would not exceed 1 long ton 12 hundredweight (1.6 tonnes) at 55 miles per hour (89 kilometres per hour) and with the overbalance equally divided on all the coupled wheels.[2]
Pre-war models
The pre-war Class 15Fs were manually stoked and were delivered without smoke deflectors. The original 21 Berliner- and Henschel-built engines remained hand-fired for the full duration of their working lives. On the pre-war NBL-built engines, on the other hand, provision was made in the design to later convert them to mechanical stoking. A mechanical stoker was tested on no. 2923 before the remaining locomotives of that group were all equipped with such stokers by the late 1940s. Their brake systems consisted of steam brakes on the engines and vacuum brakes on the tenders.[1][2][8]
One of the Henschel-built locomotives, no. 2916, is documented as having had a lighter all-up weight and different axle loads than the rest of the engines from the same batch, although its adhesive weight was more than a ton heavier. While sources are silent on the reason for the differences, it is known that this engine was oil-fired, although it is not clear whether it was delivered as an oil-burner or modified post-delivery.[1][9][10]
Post-war models
The post-war locomotives were built to the design and specifications of Dr. M.M. Loubser, who succeeded Day as CME in 1939. His specifications included mechanical stokers, vacuum brakes on the coupled wheels as well as the tenders, with two 24 inches (610 millimetres) diameter brake cylinders on the engine and two 21 inches (533 millimetres) diameter cylinders on the tender, and elephant-ear smoke deflectors instead of smokebox handrails.[1][2][8][14]
The engine's vacuum brake cylinders were fitted outside the main frames under the running boards on each side, between the second and third pairs of coupled wheels. The vacuum brake operated automatically whenever the train brakes were applied. The use of vacuum braking instead of steam braking became standard practice on locomotives built from 1944 onwards and was welcomed by SAR drivers, who were always reluctant to make use of steam brakes for fear of skidding the coupled wheels. In practice, the trigger on the steam brake attachment to isolate the proportional device which admitted steam to the brake cylinder automatically upon the application of the vacuum brake, was invariably wedged down with a wooden peg by drivers to eliminate the steam brake entirely.[1][2]
Loubser also modified the leading bogie to have swing links with three-point suspension which eliminated the side control springs that were used on earlier versions. As a unit, the modified bogie was interchangeable with those of earlier versions and with those of the Classes 15E and 23. The leading bogie had a side-play of 8 inches (203 millimetres) while the trailing Bissel truck had a side-play of 9+3⁄8 inches (238 millimetres).[2][8]
The engines from Beyer, Peacock were war-time austerity models on which planished steel boiler lagging was replaced by ordinary steel lagging, while cosmetic dressing items like stainless steel lagging bands, chrome-plated handrails and rounded corners on the front of the firebox lagging were absent or replaced by unplated items. While the boiler barrels of the pre-war engines were of nickel steel, the austerity locomotives had boiler barrels made of carbon steel with steel plates of 1⁄16 inch (2 millimetres) greater thickness. When it was subsequently found that the increased thickness was unnecessary, 13⁄16 inch (21 millimetres) thick carbon steel plates were used on later orders, the same thickness as earlier used with nickel steel plates, which resulted in a desirable reduction in axle loads.[2]
Like the pre-war NBL-built engines, the early post-war locomotives built by BP and NBL in 1944 and 1945 were delivered with Type JT tenders which had a 14 long tons (14.2 tonnes) coal capacity and a 6,000 imperial gallons (27,300 litres) water capacity. As delivered, they were arranged for manual stoking, but with provision made in their design for their subsequent conversion to mechanical stoking. All these locomotives were equipped with mechanical stokers post-delivery.[2]
The locomotives in the final batch of 100 that were received from NBL in 1947 and 1948, numbers 3057 to 3156, were delivered new complete with mechanical stokers. These engines were delivered with Type ET tenders, which also had a 14 long tons (14.2 tonnes) coal capacity, but a smaller 5,620 imperial gallons (25,500 litres) water capacity to accommodate the mechanical stoker mechanism, while its empty weight was 1,232 pounds (559 kilograms) more due to the additional stoking equipment. These appear to have been the only differences between the Types JT and ET tenders. Apart from these differences, the post-war locomotives were identical to the earlier ones. Elephant ear smoke deflectors were later installed on the pre-war locomotives as well.[4]
Locomotive naming
Although the naming of locomotives in South Africa dates back to the Cape Town Railway & Dock 0-4-2 locomotives of 20 March 1860 and the Natal Railway's 0-4-0WT Natal of 13 May 1860, it was rarely done. In 1945, the Minister of Transport at the time, the Honourable F. C. Sturrock MP, instructed that a number of Classes 15F and 23 engines should be named after various South African cities and towns and fitted with suitable nameplates in both official languages. The decorative plates were fitted to the sides of the smokebox or to the elephant ear smoke deflectors of engines which were so equipped. Twelve Class 15F locomotives were named.[2]
In later years, some of these names migrated to other engines and classes, with several eventually ending up on Classes 23 and 25NC locomotives.
A 1/1.44th scale of the Class 15F was built by W R Collyer in the 1970s named Kloof. This is one of the largest working scaled models of the Class 15F. It is now in preservation in the United Kingdom.[15]
Service
While the Class 15F was used predominantly in the Orange Free State and Western Transvaal, it also saw service in every system country-wide, including Garratt territory in Natal where it was used on the line from Newcastle to Utrecht.[4]
During 1947 King George VI, accompanied by Queen Elizabeth and the Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret, visited the British territories in Southern Africa. The Royal Visit began in Cape Town on 17 February. Transport during the Royal Visit was aboard the Royal Train of the SAR, hauled by selected British-built locomotives. Class 15F no. 3030 took the Royal Train on its first leg, departing from Table Bay Harbour's Duncan Dock in Cape Town on 21 February. The same locomotive was also in charge of the train's last leg two months and 10,000 miles (16,093 kilometres) later, when it brought the Royal Train back to Duncan Dock.[16]
On the Western Transvaal System, the Class 15F was for many years the mainstay of mainline steam at Germiston, working to Witbank, Volksrust and Kroonstad. In 1956 it was decided to temporarily allocate thirty Class GMA Garratts to the Witbank-Germiston section during the transition period from steam to electric working. This released thirty Class 15Fs for the Orange Free State, of which thirteen were required for increases in traffic and seventeen to replace seventeen Class 23s, required for increases in traffic on the Cape Northern System.[17]
In February 1957, the Cape Midland System received its first two Class 15F locomotives, transferred from the Cape Western System's Paarden Eiland shed to Sydenham in Port Elizabeth. By July 1957 there were nine at Sydenham, three at Cradock and one at Noupoort. There was a brief period when both Systems were using Class 15Fs on the mainline. On the Midland, several of the locomotives were equipped with chimney cowls from 1960 onwards to ease the smoke nuisance for footplatemen in the many tunnels, but these were of dubious effectiveness.[18]
By late 1959, the fast Natal-bound passenger trains were worked from Germiston to Volksrust by Class 31-000 or Class 32-000 diesel-electrics, but the lesser passenger trains were still being worked by Volksrust-based Class 15Fs. By mid-1965, the Volksrust locomotives were transferred back to the Germiston shed upon completion of the electrification of the Natal mainline.[14][19][20]
The Class 15F also briefly served on the Cape Eastern system when some worked out of East London in the early 1960s.
Some briefly served outside South Africa's borders. In 1978, six Class 15Fs 3000, 3031, 3066, 3072, 3094, 3126 were hired to Rhodesia Railways, but they were returned nine months later and replaced by Class GMAM Garratts.[3][4]
When the Class 23 was withdrawn, many of the Class 15F locomotives that were equipped with mechanical stokers inherited their huge twelve-wheel Type EW tenders which, apart from increasing their range with its larger fuel and water capacity, also greatly enhanced their appearance. In later years when the Class 15F was relegated to heavy shunting and local work, many of the locomotives had their mechanical stokers removed.[3]
Given its usefulness and the large quantity placed in service with the SAR, there were many efforts[by whom?] to save a significant number at the end of the steam era. About 60 survived into the 21st century, most still owned by the Transnet Heritage Fund (THF)[as of?]. Since the year 2000, many have now been scrapped with more scrapping expected[when?], especially those stored at Millsite (Krugersdorp) which have been stripped by thieves. This is a list of what remains as of January 2019.
No. 3052 Avril formerly owned by the artist David Shepherd[until when?], now owned by Sandstone[as of?] and in the custody of Reefsteamers was loaned out to Friends of the Rail (FOTR). It was derailed near Cullinan on 21 March 2017 while working an FOTR train following the theft of some 250 metres of rail.[citation needed] Damage was minimal, mainly being confined to the destruction of the cowcatcher. However, the loan was terminated and the locomotive returned to the custody of Reefsteamers at Germiston before moving by road to the Sandstone farm.[when?]
In 2006, NBL-built no. 3007 was returned to its builder's home city, Glasgow in Scotland, where it was initially put on static display in George Square for fundraising purposes by the North British Locomotive Preservation Group. The move of no. 3007 from staging in the Bloemfontein locomotive depot to Glasgow was recorded in Season 3 of the television documentary series Monster Moves in 2008. The locomotive was originally to have been trucked to Durban by Moveright International, but the transporter was not capable of carrying the locomotive. Instead, it was towed by rail on a two-day journey across the country, with ten flat wagons used to augment the braking capacity of the locomotives which hauled the Class 15F. The locomotive now resides in the Glasgow Museum of Transport's collection at the new Riverside Museum.[21][22][23]
Commemoration
A 40c postage stamp depicting a Class 15F locomotive was one of a set of four commemorative postage stamps that were issued by the South African Post Office on 27 April 1983 to commemorate the steam locomotives of South Africa, which were rapidly being withdrawn from service at the time. The artwork and stamp design was by the noted stamp designer and artist Hein Botha. The particular locomotive depicted was NBL-built Class 15F no. 2954. The outline of a traditional SAR locomotive number plate was used as a commemorative cancellation for De Aar on the date of release.[24]
Works numbers
The table shows the Class 15F engine numbers, builders, years built and works numbers.[3][5][6][7]
Class 15F 4-8-2 Builders & Works Numbers
SAR No.
Builder
Year
Works No.
2902
Berliner
1938
10820
2903
Berliner
1938
10821
2904
Berliner
1938
10822
2905
Berliner
1938
10823
2906
Berliner
1938
10824
2907
Berliner
1938
10825
2908
Berliner
1938
10826
2909
Henschel
1938
23932
2910
Henschel
1938
23933
2911
Henschel
1938
23934
2912
Henschel
1938
23935
2913
Henschel
1938
23936
2914
Henschel
1938
23937
2915
Henschel
1938
23938
2916
Henschel
1938
23939
2917
Henschel
1938
23940
2918
Henschel
1938
23941
2919
Henschel
1938
23942
2920
Henschel
1938
23943
2921
Henschel
1938
23944
2922
Henschel
1938
23945
2923
NBL
1938
24463
2924
NBL
1938
24464
2925
NBL
1938
24465
2926
NBL
1938
24466
2927
NBL
1938
24467
2928
NBL
1938
24468
2929
NBL
1938
24469
2930
NBL
1938
24470
2931
NBL
1938
24471
2932
NBL
1938
24472
2933
NBL
1938
24473
2934
NBL
1938
24474
2935
NBL
1938
24475
2936
NBL
1938
24476
2937
NBL
1938
24477
2938
NBL
1938
24478
2939
NBL
1938
24479
2940
NBL
1938
24480
2941
NBL
1938
24481
2942
NBL
1938
24482
2943
NBL
1938
24483
2944
NBL
1938
24484
2945
NBL
1938
24485
2946
NBL
1938
24486
2947
NBL
1938
24487
2948
NBL
1938
24488
2949
NBL
1938
24489
2950
NBL
1938
24490
2951
NBL
1938
24491
2952
NBL
1938
24492
2953
NBL
1938
24493
2954
NBL
1938
24494
2955
NBL
1938
24495
2956
NBL
1938
24496
2957
NBL
1938
24497
2958
NBL
1938
24498
2959
NBL
1938
24499
2960
NBL
1938
24500
2961
NBL
1938
24501
2962
NBL
1938
24502
2963
NBL
1938
24503
2964
NBL
1938
24504
2965
NBL
1938
24505
2966
NBL
1938
24506
2967
BP
1944
7082
2968
BP
1944
7083
2969
BP
1944
7084
2970
BP
1944
7085
2971
BP
1944
7086
2972
BP
1944
7087
2973
BP
1944
7088
2974
BP
1944
7089
2975
BP
1944
7090
2976
BP
1944
7091
2977
BP
1944
7092
2978
BP
1944
7093
2979
BP
1944
7094
2980
BP
1944
7095
2981
BP
1944
7096
2982
BP
1944
7097
2983
BP
1944
7098
2984
BP
1944
7099
2985
BP
1944
7100
2986
BP
1944
7101
2987
BP
1944
7102
2988
BP
1944
7103
2989
BP
1944
7104
2990
BP
1944
7105
2991
BP
1944
7106
2992
BP
1944
7107
2993
BP
1944
7108
2994
BP
1944
7109
2995
BP
1944
7110
2996
BP
1944
7111
2997
NBL
1945
25536
2998
NBL
1945
25537
2999
NBL
1945
25538
3000
NBL
1945
25539
3001
NBL
1945
25540
3002
NBL
1945
25541
3003
NBL
1945
25542
3004
NBL
1945
25543
3005
NBL
1945
25544
3006
NBL
1945
25545
3007
NBL
1945
25546
3008
NBL
1945
25547
3009
NBL
1945
25548
3010
NBL
1945
25549
3011
NBL
1945
25550
3012
NBL
1945
25551
3013
NBL
1945
25552
3014
NBL
1945
25553
3015
NBL
1945
25554
3016
NBL
1945
25555
3017
NBL
1945
25556
3018
NBL
1945
25557
3019
NBL
1945
25558
3020
NBL
1945
25559
3021
NBL
1945
25560
3022
NBL
1945
25561
3023
NBL
1945
25562
3024
NBL
1945
25563
3025
NBL
1945
25564
3026
NBL
1945
25565
3027
NBL
1945
25566
3028
NBL
1945
25567
3029
NBL
1945
25568
3030
NBL
1945
25569
3031
NBL
1945
25570
3032
NBL
1945
25571
3033
NBL
1945
25572
3034
NBL
1945
25573
3035
NBL
1945
25574
3036
NBL
1945
25575
3037
NBL
1945
25576
3038
NBL
1945
25577
3039
NBL
1945
25578
3040
NBL
1945
25579
3041
NBL
1945
25580
3042
NBL
1945
25581
3043
NBL
1945
25582
3044
NBL
1945
25583
3045
NBL
1945
25584
3046
NBL
1945
25585
3047
NBL
1945
25586
3048
NBL
1945
25587
3049
NBL
1945
25588
3050
NBL
1945
25589
3051
NBL
1945
25590
3052
NBL
1945
25591
3053
NBL
1945
25592
3054
NBL
1945
25593
3055
NBL
1945
25594
3056
NBL
1945
25595
3057
NBL
1946
25941
3058
NBL
1946
25942
3059
NBL
1946
25943
3060
NBL
1946
25944
3061
NBL
1946
25945
3062
NBL
1946
25946
3063
NBL
1946
25947
3064
NBL
1946
25948
3065
NBL
1946
25949
3066
NBL
1946
25950
3067
NBL
1946
25951
3068
NBL
1946
25952
3069
NBL
1946
25953
3070
NBL
1946
25954
3071
NBL
1946
25955
3072
NBL
1946
25956
3073
NBL
1946
25957
3074
NBL
1946
25958
3075
NBL
1946
25959
3076
NBL
1946
25960
3077
NBL
1946
25961
3078
NBL
1946
25962
3079
NBL
1946
25963
3080
NBL
1946
25964
3081
NBL
1946
25965
3082
NBL
1946
25966
3083
NBL
1946
25967
3084
NBL
1946
25968
3085
NBL
1946
25969
3086
NBL
1946
25970
3087
NBL
1946
25971
3088
NBL
1946
25972
3089
NBL
1946
25973
3090
NBL
1946
25974
3091
NBL
1946
25975
3092
NBL
1946
25976
3093
NBL
1946
25977
3094
NBL
1946
25978
3095
NBL
1946
25979
3096
NBL
1946
25980
3097
NBL
1946
25981
3098
NBL
1946
25982
3099
NBL
1946
25983
3100
NBL
1946
25984
3101
NBL
1946
25985
3102
NBL
1946
25986
3103
NBL
1946
25987
3104
NBL
1946
25988
3105
NBL
1946
25989
3106
NBL
1946
25990
3107
NBL
1946
25991
3108
NBL
1946
25992
3109
NBL
1946
25993
3110
NBL
1946
25994
3111
NBL
1946
25995
3112
NBL
1946
25996
3113
NBL
1946
25997
3114
NBL
1946
25998
3115
NBL
1946
25999
3116
NBL
1946
26000
3117
NBL
1946
26001
3118
NBL
1946
26002
3119
NBL
1946
26003
3120
NBL
1946
26004
3121
NBL
1946
26005
3122
NBL
1946
26006
3123
NBL
1946
26007
3124
NBL
1946
26008
3125
NBL
1946
26009
3126
NBL
1946
26010
3127
NBL
1946
26011
3128
NBL
1946
26012
3129
NBL
1946
26013
3130
NBL
1946
26014
3131
NBL
1946
26015
3132
NBL
1946
26016
3133
NBL
1946
26017
3134
NBL
1946
26018
3135
NBL
1946
26019
3136
NBL
1946
26020
3137
NBL
1946
26021
3138
NBL
1946
26022
3139
NBL
1946
26023
3140
NBL
1946
26024
3141
NBL
1946
26025
3142
NBL
1946
26026
3143
NBL
1946
26027
3144
NBL
1946
26028
3145
NBL
1946
26029
3146
NBL
1946
26030
3147
NBL
1946
26031
3148
NBL
1946
26032
3149
NBL
1946
26033
3150
NBL
1946
26034
3151
NBL
1946
26035
3152
NBL
1946
26036
3153
NBL
1946
26037
3154
NBL
1946
26038
3155
NBL
1946
26039
3156
NBL
1946
26040
References
^ abcdefHolland, D. F. (1972). Steam Locomotives of the South African Railways. Vol. 2: 1910-1955 (1st ed.). Newton Abbott, England: David & Charles. pp. 97–98. ISBN978-0-7153-5427-8.
^ abcdefghijklmnoEspitalier, 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, February 1947. pp. 129-131.