In December 1962, locomotive No. 50 received a boiler from one of the ex-NCC 2-6-0 tender locomotives, the boiler and firebox being overhauled and repaired at Derby.
In early 1966 and towards the end of their careers, the Class WT locomotives were involved in working notable traffic. This was on spoil trains that transported fill for motorway construction from the Blue Circle cement works at Magheramorne to Greencastle near Belfast. Three trains of twenty hopper wagons each were made up, with a Class WT locomotive at each end. Each train when filled carried 600 long tons (610 t; 670 short tons) of rock and in all, some 7,600 trains had carried 4,250,000 long tons (4,320,000 t; 4,760,000 short tons) of material by the time the contract ended in May 1970.
One of these locomotives, No. 4, has been preserved by the Railway Preservation Society of Ireland (RPSI) following its withdrawal.[4] The RPSI operates it on special mainline trains. It is currently operational after an overhaul was completed in June 2015.
No. 4 was one of seven that were converted to have an extended coal bunker in the mid-1960s to extend the range before needing refilling with coal.[1]
No. 58 Project
The RPSI was considering the possibility of building a new member of the class (No.58) to give them a second mainline tank locomotive considering the low availability of turntables on modern day lines. However, a NCC Class W Mogul is being built instead, due to the longer range between coaling and watering allowed by a tender engine.[5]
Technical details
The locomotives were built with many LMS standard features such as a self-cleaning smokebox, rocking firegrate, self-emptying ashpan, side window cab and a simplified footplate together with others which followed NCC practice, such as a water top-feed on a parallel boiler (as opposed to the taper boilers being used by the LMS at the time), Dreadnought type vacuum brake gear, Detroit sight feed cylinder lubricator and a cast number plate.
The locomotives were capable of over 70 miles per hour (110 km/h) and could be expected to use one ton of coal for every 40 miles (64 km).[4]
Notes
^Mitchell describes the Class WT's true ancestry as the Class W mogul, and notes its less common oxymoron nickname of Mogul tanks points to this, though they were more commonly referred as Jeeps from once their operational flexibility became apparent.[2]
Arnold, R.M. (1973). NCC Saga. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN0-7153-5644-5.
Boocock, Colin (1 October 2009). Locomotive Compendium Ireland (1st ed.). Hersham: Ian Allan. ISBN9780711033603. OCLC423592044.
Champion (20 July 1990). "Steam train makes tracks for Sligo". The Sligo Champion. Sligo. p. 15 – via British Newspaper Archive. 1947 No. 4 engine of the London Midland Scottish Northern Counties Committee. Built in Derby, the engine was withdrawn by Northern Ireland railways in 1979 and was purchased by the Railway Preservation Society of Ireland. The engine weights 87 tons, consumes a ton of coal every forty miles and is capable of travelling at over seventy miles per hour
Currie, J.R.L. (1974). The Northern Counties Railway, Volume 2: 1903-1972. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN0-7153-6530-4.
London Midland and Scottish Railway (Northern Counties Committee). Class WT general arrangement drawing. Belfast: LMS (NCC).
Mitchell, Walter F. (February 2021). "Moguls and Jeeps — The W and WT class locomotives of the NCC — a design appreciation". Irish Record Railway Society. 29 (204): 224–234.
Scott, William T. (2008). Locomotives of the LMS NCC and its predecessors. Newtownards, County Down: Colorprint. ISBN9781904242840. OCLC506214865.
External links
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