DB Class 82
DB Class 82 | |
---|---|
Number(s) | DB 82 001–041 |
Quantity | 41 |
Manufacturer | Krupp, Henschel, Esslingen |
Year(s) of manufacture | 1950–1955 |
Retired | 1972 |
Wheel arrangement | 0-10-0T |
Axle arrangement | E |
Gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in) |
Length over buffers | 14,080 mm |
Empty weight | 69.7 t |
Service weight | 91.8 t |
Adhesive weight | 91.8 t |
Axle load | 18.4 t |
Top speed | 70 km/h |
Indicated Power | 949 kW |
Coupled wheel diameter | 1,400 mm |
Driving wheel diameter | 1,400 mm |
Valve gear | Heusinger |
No. of cylinders | 2 |
Cylinder bore | 600 mm |
Piston stroke | 660 mm |
Boiler Overpressure | 14 bar |
No. of heating tubes | 115 |
No. of smoke tubes | 38 |
Heating tube length | 4,000 mm |
Grate area | 2.39 m² |
Radiative heating area | 12.60 m² |
Superheater area | 51.90 m² |
Evaporative heating area | 122.21 m² |
Water capacity | 11 m³ |
Fuel | 4 t coal |
Auxiliary brake | 82 038- 82 041 fitted with counterpressure brake |
The DB Class 82 was a goods train tank locomotive with the Deutsche Bundesbahn in Germany, that was built in the period after the Second World War and was intended for shunting and normal rail services. They were to replace the ten-coupled state railway (Länderbahn) engines and also the accident-prone Class 87 DRG Einheitslok (standard locomotive).
It was the first of the DB's so-called Neubaudampflokomotiven or newly designed steam locomotives, and was built by the firms of Krupp and Henschel in 1950 and 1951 and also by the Maschinenfabrik Esslingen in 1955. Although they were ten-couplers, the 41 engines were also suitable for lines with tight curves such as the Hamburg Harbour railway. To improve curve running the first and last axles were fitted with Beugniot levers. The last two examples were also equipped with Riggenbach counterpressure brakes, which enabled their operation on steep lines. The locomotives were able to haul 800 tonne trains at up to 70 km/h.
Deployment
The engines were predominantly employed in the marshalling yards at Bremen and Hamm as well as on the harbour lines of Emden and Hamburg. The 82s could also be seen on normal railway duties on the steep inclines of the Westerwald and in the Black Forest on the Murg Valley Railway.
Retirement began as early as 1966, the final locomotive depot being Bw Koblenz-Mosel, where the last one was mustered out in 1972 .
Preserved
Locomotive 82 008, the last existing example of its class, has been looked after in Bw Neumünster since early 2003 by the Rendsburger Eisenbahnfreunden.
See also
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to DB Class 82. |