British Rail Class 10
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The British Rail Class 10 diesel locomotives are a variant of the standard Class 08 diesel-electric shunter with a Lister Blackstone diesel engine and General Electric Company plc (GEC) traction motors. The locomotives were built at the BR Works in Darlington and Doncaster over the period 1955–1962, and were withdrawn between February 1967 and June 1972.
Background
[edit]British Railways built four main variants of its standard large diesel-electric shunter. Those fitted with a Lister Blackstone diesel engine were classified D3/4 if they had GEC traction motors and D3/5 with British Thomson-Houston (BTH) traction motors. The D3/4 locomotives were later reclassified to become Class 10 under TOPS.[1]
Technical details
[edit]The locomotives had the same general outline, 0-6-0 wheel arrangement and outside frames as the earlier Class 11, built originally for the London, Midland and Scottish Railway after 1945, and perpetuated by British Railways as the Class 08. However, they were fitted with Lister Blackstone 6-cylinder, 4-stroke, ER6T engines and two GEC nose suspended motors.[2]
Building and use
[edit]The first batch of thirty locomotives, originally numbered 13137–13151, (later renumbered D3137–D3151) were built at Darlington works during 1955, and allocated to motive power depots in the North Eastern Region of British Railways, notably Thornaby.[3][4] Further batches were built at Darlington as follows: D3439–D3453 (1957); D3473–D3491 (1957/8); D3612–D3651 (1958); D4049–D4094 (1961/2). These were allocated to the Eastern Region of British Railways particularly in the London area. Six examples, D3497–D3502, were built at Doncaster (1957/8). The class eventually numbered 146 locomotives.
Withdrawal
[edit]As they were non-standard, compared to the 08 class they had relatively short lives and were withdrawn between February 1967 and June 1972. Twenty locomotives were sold to industrial customers.
Year | Quantity in service at start of year |
Quantity withdrawn |
Locomotive numbers |
---|---|---|---|
1967 | 146 | 6 | D3151, D3449/96, D3620/28/31. |
1968 | 140 | 77 | D3139–40/42/46–48/51, D3439–48/50–53/73–78/80–82/84–85/87–91/93–95[a]/97–99. D3500–02, D3624–27/30/32–33/35–37/40/43, D4064/71/76/80–94. |
1969 | 63 | 21 | D3143–44, D3479/83/92, D3612–14/16–19/21/23/29/38–39/42/45/47[b]/49. |
1970 | 41 | 9 | D3137/49, D3486, D3638[c]/44/47, D4052/67/77. |
1971 | 34 | 14 | D3141, D3634/41/46/48/50–51, D4050–51/53/55/59–60/65. |
1972 | 20 | 20 | D3138/45, D4049/54/56–58/61–63/66/68–70/72–75/78–79. |
Post BR Use
[edit]Locomotive Number | Location | Disposition |
---|---|---|
D3452 | E.C.C. Ports Ltd., Fowey Jetties[6] | Preserved - Bodmin and Wenford Railway |
D3476 | E.C.C Ports Ltd., Fowey Jetties[6] | Scrapped |
D3497 | E.C.C. Ports Ltd., Fowey Jetties[6] | Scrapped |
Preservation
[edit]Four examples have been preserved:
- D3452 at Bodmin and Wenford Railway
- D3489 at Spa Valley Railway
- D4067 at Great Central Railway
- D4092 at Barrow Hill Engine Shed
- A fifth example, D3476, was stored on the Colne Valley Railway, though has since been scrapped.
References
[edit]- ^ Strickland, D.C. (1982). Locomotive directory: every single one there has ever been. Camberley: Diesel and Electric Group. p. 53. ISBN 0-906375-10-X.
- ^ Oakley, Michael (1979). Diesel shunting locos: a pictorial history. Truro: Bradford Barton. pp. [10–11]. ISBN 0-85153-361-2.
- ^ Strickland 1983, p. 53.
- ^ British Railways Locomotives and Locoshed Book 1959. Shepperton: Ian Allan. 1959. ISBN 0-7110-0726-8.
- ^ Strickland 1983, pp. 56–57.
- ^ a b c Industrial Locomotives 1982 including preserved and minor railway locomotives. Industrial Railway Society. 1982. ISBN 0-901096-43-1.
- Strickland, David C. (September 1983). Locomotive Directory: Every Single One There Has Ever Been. Camberley: Diesel and Electric Group. pp. 53–61. ISBN 978-0-906375-10-5. OCLC 16601890. OL 27959920M. Wikidata Q105978499.