Prussian T 11
The Prussian Class T 11 were passenger tank locomotives produced between 1903 and 1910 in the service of the Prussian state railways for duties on the Berlin Stadtbahn. HistoryBetween 1903 and 1910, 470 engines of this type were procured for the Prussian Railways from four manufacturers. Like the superheated locomotive, the Prussian T 12, the T 11 evolved from the T 9.3 in order to replace the older, four-coupled tank engines on the Berlin Stadtbahn and suburban route in other cities. Construction of the T 11 was ceased in 1910 in favour of the more economical T 12. The locomotives were employed together with the T 12s especially on the Berlin Stadtbahn until its electrification in 1926–1933; as a result they had direction plates (Richtungsschilder) on their smokebox and coal tanks. But they were also used in suburban services for other cities such as Frankfurt, Hamburg and Altona. At the end of World War I, 56 locomotives were transferred to the new Polish state where that became PKP class OKi1,[1] and were numbered OKi1-1 to OKi1-52 and OKi1-1Dz to OKi-4Dz (the locomotives with the 'Dz' suffix were nominally owned by the Free City of Danzig).[2] In addition 25 locomotives were surrendered as reparations to France; two went to the Administration des chemins de fer d'Alsace et de Lorraine (AL) as 7300 and 7301,[3] while the other 23 went to the Chemins de fer de Paris, Lyon et Mediterrannee (PLM) as 5752 to 5774 (5774 was renumbered 5751 about 1920); in the PLM's 1924 renumbering scheme they became 130.BT.1 to 130.BT.23.[4] Another 23 locomotives were transferred to Belgian State Railways, where they were classified as the type 95 .[5] In 1923, 16 engines were fitted with a superheater, but they retained their existing running numbers. In 1925, the Deutsche Reichsbahn took over the 358 remaining locomotives as DRG Class 74.0–3, allocating them the numbers 74 001 to 74 358.[1] During World War II, the 54 surviving Polish OKi1 locomotives were divided up between the DRB (48 locomotives) and the Soviet Railways (6); the DRB renumbered their locomotives 74 011 to 74 269, re-using the numbers of withdrawn locomotives. An additional four were acquired from the Soviets in 1944; they became 74 273 to 74 332.[2] The Germans also borrowed the seven remaining ex-PLM locomotives from the SNCF.[6] At the end of World War II, there were still 120 examples of these engines in service in Germany, 65 with the Deutsche Bundesbahn and 55 with the Deutsche Reichsbahn (GDR) in East Germany. The majority of T 11s were retired by 1950 in the west and the 1960s in the east;[1] but two engines (74 231 and 74 240) continued to work the Erfurt Industrial Railway until 1974 and 1973 respectively.[7] Two locomotives have been preserved:
DesignAll four axles of the locomotives – even the carrying axles – were more or less equally loaded with a hefty 16 tonnes. The carrying axle was linked to the first coupled axle via a Krauss-Helmholtz bogie. The axles were located in a plate frame, inside which a well tank was rivetted. The first units had piston valves, the later ones slide valves. The riveted boiler barrel comprised two boiler shells and the smokebox was also rivetted. At the back of the boiler was the copper firebox. Two vacuum Dampfstrahlpumpen served as feed pumps. For the brakes, there was, next to the smokebox a single-stage air pump, and in front of the carrying axle were one or two air reservoirs. T 11 of the Lübeck-Büchen RailwayThe Lübeck-Büchen Railway also placed nine T 11s in service between 1906 and 1908; they had been built by Linke-Hofmann[10] The four engines taken over by Deutsche Reichsbahn in 1938, with numbers 74 361 to 74 364, were however not the Prussian T 11 — they were withdrawn from service between 1923 and 1929[10] — but the LBE's own special designs (LBE T10) based that were more like the Prussian T 9.3 and which had been built in 1911/1912 by Linke-Hofmann in a batch of five.[10] The drive resembled that of the T 11, apart from the smaller coupled wheels with a 1,400 mm diameter, whilst the boiler was smaller too. The last of these engines was not retired until 1951. See alsoNotes
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Further reading
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