The British Railways ‘Pilot Scheme’ orders of 1955 included ten
English Electric Type 2 diesel-electric locomotives deploying Napier
‘Deltic’ engines. These locomotives, more colloquially known as
the ‘Baby Deltics’, were introduced into traffic during 1959 for
use on the Eastern Region of British Railways. This book looks at the
history of the Class 23s, making extensive use of available but
previously unpublished archive material, covering their introduction,
technical idiosyncrasies, appearance design and performance. Issues
with the original ‘Deltic’ engines were ultimately dealt with via
a major rehabilitation exercise during the 1963-65 period; whilst
various re-engining options were considered , including a new ‘U’
series English Electric high-speed engine design, the original Napier
engines were ultimately retained. The work involved in the whole
rehabilitation process is discussed in detail using internal English
Electric archive material and forms a central focus of research. The
fleet survived intact until 1968, when withdrawal commenced as a
direct result of declining traffic levels across the UK, with
successive National Traction Plans progressively selecting the less
successful, non-standard and ‘numerically-challenged’ classes for
removal from traffic. All ten locomotives were withdrawn by March
1971. Individual locomotive histories, allocations, fire and accident
incidents, liveries and detail differences, storage and disposals are
provided for each locomotive.
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B R Class 23, Design to Destruction
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781399058483
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
Vendor
Pen and Sword Transport
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter