Data from "Great Eastern Railway," Locomotive Magazine, Volume 18 (15 January 1912), p. 3; and "Six Coupled Bogie Express Engine, Great Eastern Ry"(15 February 1912), p. 30. See also E L Ahrons, The British Steam Locomotive from 1825 to 1925 (London: Richard Tilling, 1927), pp. 334. [], [
] and from Richard Marsden's [
] (15 February 2004). For a full description of Paxman's promotion and production of Lentz gear for British and overseas customers, see "Lentz Valves for Locomotives" on Richard Carr's Paxman History Pages at [
], last accessed 9 August 2021.
Inside-cylinder design by SD Holden with modest dimensions, Belpaire firebox, 10" (254 mm) piston valves, and typically undersized superheater. that was a repeat of his earlier 4-6-0. Note that the tube length is quite short because the firebox with its 143.5 sq ft of heating surface was placed between the second and third axles. An additional benefit was a commodious cab. The 15 1912 report for LM noted that the second locomotive of the first batch (1501)was the 1,500th locomotive built at Stratford Works since it opened in 1851.
Glover (1967) reports that this class "performed with marked success over the somewhat light road for which they were planned." OS Nock (RWC IV, pl 159) weighs in with "The new engines were an immediate and resounding success, and their increased haulage capacity over the 4-4-0s was of immense value during the war years when loads were greatly increased over previous standards."
After the war, the GER contracted with aspiring Clydebank builder William Beardmore & Company to produce 20 of the class. (Works numbers were 134-153 in 1920.)
The last 10 were completed with Lentz poppet valves by Beyer, Peacock for the East Anglia lines of the Great Eastern. Classed as B12/2 by the LNER, this class's valve gear proved problematical and the engines were reworked with Stephenson link motion in 1933. See Locobase 3766 for the B12/3 large-boiler rebuild.
In the meantime, B12s went all over England. Thirty-one went to Scotland where they pulled the heaviest of passenger trains. Marsden observes that the LNER exploited the class's light axle loading and relatively compact dimensions (including a short wheelbase) on a variety of services such as the American ambulance trains bringing wounded back from France.
Principal Dimensions by Steve Llanso of Middle Run Media | |
---|---|
Class | S69/B12 |
Locobase ID | 2374 |
Railroad | Great Eastern (GER) |
Country | Great Britain |
Whyte | 4-6-0 |
Number in Class | 70 |
Road Numbers | 1500-1570 |
Gauge | Std |
Number Built | 70 |
Builder | Stratford Works |
Year | 1911 |
Valve Gear | Stephenson |
Locomotive Length and Weight | |
Driver Wheelbase (ft / m) | 14 / 4.27 |
Engine Wheelbase (ft / m) | 28.50 / 8.69 |
Ratio of driving wheelbase to overall engine wheelbase | 0.49 |
Overall Wheelbase (engine & tender) (ft / m) | 57.58 / 17.55 |
Axle Loading (Maximum Weight per Axle) (lbs / kg) | 35,840 / 16,257 |
Weight on Drivers (lbs / kg) | 98,560 / 44,706 |
Engine Weight (lbs / kg) | 148,360 / 67,295 |
Tender Loaded Weight (lbs / kg) | 88,032 / 39,931 |
Total Engine and Tender Weight (lbs / kg) | 236,392 / 107,226 |
Tender Water Capacity (gals / ML) | 4404 / 16.68 |
Tender Fuel Capacity (oil/coal) (gals/tons / Liters/MT) | 4.50 / 4 |
Minimum weight of rail (calculated) (lb/yd / kg/m) | 55 / 27.50 |
Geometry Relating to Tractive Effort | |
Driver Diameter (in / mm) | 78 / 1981 |
Boiler Pressure (psi / kPa) | 180 / 1240 |
High Pressure Cylinders (dia x stroke) (in / mm) | 20" x 28" / 508x711 |
Tractive Effort (lbs / kg) | 21,969 / 9964.98 |
Factor of Adhesion (Weight on Drivers/Tractive Effort) | 4.49 |
Heating Ability | |
Tubes (number - dia) (in / mm) | 191 - 1.75" / 44 |
Flues (number - dia) (in / mm) | 21 - 5.25" / 133 |
Flue/Tube length (ft / m) | 12.83 / 3.91 |
Firebox Area (sq ft / m2) | 143.50 / 13.33 |
Grate Area (sq ft / m2) | 26.50 / 2.46 |
Evaporative Heating Surface (sq ft / m2) | 1633 / 151.71 |
Superheating Surface (sq ft / m2) | 286 / 26.57 |
Combined Heating Surface (sq ft / m2) | 1919 / 178.28 |
Evaporative Heating Surface/Cylinder Volume | 160.40 |
Computations Relating to Power Output (More Information) | |
Robert LeMassena's Power Computation | 4770 |
Same as above plus superheater percentage | 5486 |
Same as above but substitute firebox area for grate area | 29,705 |
Power L1 | 11,318 |
Power MT | 759.49 |