NBR H class
The North British Atlantic, later known as NBR Class H, and then as LNER Class C11 was a class of 4-4-2 steam locomotive of the North British Railway. The class was designed by William P. Reid, Locomotive Superintendent of the NBR, and entered service under his direction. They were the heaviest, longest, and most powerful (by tractive effort) locomotives ever employed on the North British Railway. The locomotives passed to the London and North Eastern Railway in 1923. They had a long service life, but most were withdrawn during 1936 and 1937, with none surviving into the nationalised British Railways system. The NBR Class I, later known as LNER Class C10, was a temporary designation of some engines in this class (see below). Design
In the early twentieth century the North British Railway possessed an ageing locomotive fleet which had not kept pace with modern demands. On the Board of Directors Dr John Inglis argued strongly for investment in the construction of new locomotives. Ultimately it was the persuasive arguments of Inglis, and the design skills of Locomotive Superintendent William Paton Reid, which led to the development of the NBR's new flagship locomotive, the North British Atlantic.[1] The NBR Board met on 2 November 1905 and approved the construction of 14 heavy express passenger locomotives, with design work to commence immediately. The designs were drawn up by NBR Chief Draughtsman Walter Chalmers and were presented to the Board on 5 January 1906, tenders were invited on 13 January 1906, and the order placed before the end of the month. Many railways were, in this era, constructing powerful express passenger locomotives of the 4-6-0 type, which benefit from 6 coupled driving wheels. The North British Railway's principal passenger engines had hitherto been of the 4-4-0 type, meaning that 4-coupled drive was more familiar. Additionally, the NBR had some very tight curves, for which the use of the "Atlantic" type engine with its 4-4-2 wheel arrangement was simply more practical and efficient.[2] Build datesThe 14 locomotives were constructed and supplied during 1906. Having established themselves as the most powerful passenger locomotives on the North British network, but being insufficient in number to operate all of the crack express services, a further 6 engines were ordered and constructed during 1911. The construction of these 6 additional engines received widespread publicity internationally.[3] Finally two more engines were ordered at the very end of 1920; these were constructed during 1921, and entered service that year.[citation needed] ReceptionThe North British Railway was overly ambitious in its advertising of the new locomotives, and despite rapid construction, the engines were not ready in time for the new timetables which they had been designed to serve. It was also discovered that owing to their size, the locomotives would not fit on the turntables owned by the North British Railway. This led to considerable operating difficulty until the turntables at key towns and cities could be enlarged. There was also some opposition to the use of the engines, particularly from James Bell, the NBR Civil Engineer, who felt that the engines were so heavy and powerful that they would cause damage to the permanent way for which he was responsible.[1]: 16 Alleged poor initial performance by the locomotives seems to have had more to do with poor management than poor design. Contemporary records[which?] show poor communication between the locomotive department (supplying engines) and the traffic department (requesting locomotives and matching them to services), as well as possibly unwarranted criticism from James Bell and others. Having become established, the locomotives gave good service for many years, and were the company's flagship engines, or "pride of the fleet".[4] Rebuilding and designationStarting in 1915, all engines in the class were fitted with superheaters. The final two engines, built in 1921, were fitted with superheaters from the outset.[2] The North British Railway did not historically give special designations to different locomotive classes, and in company records of the period 1906 and 1907, the atlantics are simply referenced as "Our new passenger locomotive".[1]: 30 In later documentation, in 1908, 1909, and 1910, the engines are referenced as "locomotives of the atlantic type" or "our atlantic type engines". By the start of World War One the company was using a system of class designations, under which the North British Atlantics became known as Class H. Once the programme to fit superheaters had commenced, the saturated locomotives (those without a superheater) were re-designated as Class I, each one reverting to Class H again once its superheater had been fitted.[citation needed] in 1923 the North British Railway became part of the LNER, during the superheating programme. The LNER designation for Class H engines was Class C11. However, as six engines were not yet superheated, and therefore inherited by the LNER as Class I engines, these were given LNER designation of Class C10. They reverted to the C11 designation, one by one, as their superheaters were installed between 1923 and 1925.[2] Table of locomotives
AccidentsThe North British Atlantics enjoyed a good safety record throughout their career. Early concerns about their weight (as expressed by James Bell) and their centre of gravity (leading William Jackson, NBR General Manager, to order an expensive "swing test" of an engine in January 1907[clarification needed]) proved unfounded. Nonetheless, engines of the class were involved in a number of incidents and accidents, of which the following are the most notable.
Preservation
Locomotives of this class were withdrawn from service in the 1930s. Two in 1933, one in 1934, three in 1935, then eight in 1936, and eight in 1937. The final locomotive withdrawn was Midlothian in December 1937. In a remarkable piece of railway history, an order was issued that Midlothian should be preserved for the nation, as an example of such an important class of locomotive, but the order was not received until after the engine had been scrapped at Cowlairs. So that the national collection was not denied a Class H engine, Midlothian (whose component parts were mostly still in existence, and frame still fully intact) was painstakingly rebuilt, and returned to service for transfer to the LNER Railway Museum at York (which later formed part of the basis of the National Railway Museum). Several parts of the locomotive had been disposed of, including one main connecting rod, and these were built new for the restored engine. Unfortunately, just a few months later the Second World War commenced, and there was a massive demand for metal to produce aircraft for the war effort. The newly rebuilt Midlothian was withdrawn from the museum stock, and scrapped for a second time, to provide aircraft-building materials.[1]: 19 ModelsThe NBR H class is available as a commercially produced O gauge model by specialist NBR model company 62C Models. Several live-steam models of North British Atlantics have been built in 5 in (127 mm) gauge. The 7+1⁄4 in (184 mm) gauge locomotive Trojan (built 1928/29) is a historically important miniature railway locomotive[according to whom?] whose design was based upon that of the North British Atlantic. Trojan was the oldest locomotive of the world's oldest miniature railway, the Saltwood Miniature Railway, until its closure in 1987. The locomotive still operates and is privately owned.[as of?] ReferencesWikimedia Commons has media related to NBR H Class.
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