Beyer-Garratts

My time with the first, last and largest. And, their miniatures in the 21st Century.

 

The first, Tasmanian Railways K class K1 of 1909

Arriving at Dinas on the Welsh Highland Railway with a ballast train on Beyer-Garratt K1 

September 2007

 

Driving the 3" scale Beyer-Garratt K1, Herefordshire, England

April 2007

Gavin Hamilton image


 

The Last, South African NG/G16 143 

Beyer-Garratt NG/G16 143 built in 1958 with K1 in tow. 

Both now working on the Welsh Highland Railway

 This image by Owen Chapman circa 2005

 

Also from the last batch built in 1958, Beyer-Garratt NG/G16 138

April 2007

 

Cab of NG/G16 138

April 2007

 

K1, 143 and 138 at the Dinas loco shed on the Welsh Highland Railway

K1 is in it's first weekend with coal fuel since the 1920's

The following week the coal rails installed to allow enough coal to be carried were raised to 6 high and the boards disposed of.

Bryn Morgan is attending to the lubrication feed to the axel boxes while Alf and Mick check the ash pan dampers.

September 2007

Steve Sedgwick image

 

3" scale NG/G16 Beyer-Garratt in New Zealand 

January 2004

 

Driving the 3" scale NG/G16 in New Zealand

January 2004

 

Cab of 3" scale NG/G16

January 2004


 

The Largest*, East African Railways 59 class

5918 "Mount Gelai"

East African 59 class 5918 at the head of a special working to promote tourism in Kenya

December 2004

Click here to see 5918 being removed from the museum in 2001

Click here to see 5918 working in December 2004

 

East African 59 class 5918 "Mount Gelai at Athi River, Kenya, waiting for the road with a test train.

 December 2004

 

Cab of East African 59 class 5918 "Mount Gelai"

December 2004

The missing instrument on the right is actually the location of a clock. The clock was the personal property of the driver Kirpal Singh of Mombasa. When he retired in 1980, after the driving the locomotive for 15 years, he took the clock home.

Click here to see 5918 emerging from the works on to the traverser in December 2004

 

A smiling Trevor Heath the day of my drive of 5918

December 2004 

Graham Roberts image

More images and narrative from Kenya in 2004 can be found here

 

Builders plate from East African 59 class 5923 "Mount Longonot"

Owned by Graham Kelsey

 

Driving the 2" scale East African 59 class 5928 "Mount Kilimanjaro"

September 2001

Click here to see a video of 5928 operating.


The East African 59 class has two "siblings" although neither is as powerful.

The New South Wales Railway 

AD60 Class

New South Wales Railway AD60 class Beyer-Garratt 6020 

1955

 

Builders plate from AD60 6020 owned by Richard Whitford

Not the 21st century but we can hope that a current operating image of 6029 will be possible within this decade. 

See here for the latest news on the restoration.

 

New South Wales Railway AD60 6029

June 1981

Dennis Rittson image

 

New South Wales Railway. AD60 6039 at Dorrigo

 

Sitting on the dome cover of AD60 6039 at Dorrigo chatting to custodian Keith Jones

January 2004

 

Drivers controls on AD60 6039

January 2004

   

Replica builders plate for AD60 6039 presented by the custodian of 6039, Keith Jones upon my visit to Dorrigo, NSW

January 2004

 

 

 

Two views of my personal locomotive, the 1.5" scale AD60 6039

July 2003

Click here to see a video clip of this loco on test

 

Photographing details (with special permission) on the sectioned AD60 at the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney, Australia

January 2004

 


 

The National Railway of Zimbabwe 20th class

 

 

National Railways of Zimbabwe 20th class 730 (originally numbered 705) on Bulawayo shed in July 2001 prior to hauling  a revenue freight to Plumtree on the Botswana border.

This locomotive is in serviceable condition today although it has not been used since 2001

Click here to see 730 working to Plumtree in July 2001

 

An original smokebox insignia from a Rhodesian locomotive

 

The original front pilot beam number plate from the 20th named "Jumbo"

 

This 3.5" gauge 20th built by Jan Kouwen is based in the Netherlands

Note the throttle extension rod running back across the rear bunker.

The miniature version of the insignia can be seen on the side of the smokebox

Click here to see a video clip of this loco


* There are many ways to classify the "largest" of anything. Steam locomotives are generally classified by tractive effort. The East African 59 class has a tractive effort of 83,000 lbs  making them the most powerful of all the Beyer-Garratts, the most powerful locomotives operating in the world from 1960 to 1980 and making "Mount Gelai" the second most powerful locomotive in operating condition in the world today next to the Union Pacific "Challenger" 3985