NZR NA class

NZR NA class
Type and origin
Power type Steam
Builder Baldwin Locomotive Works
Serial number 13913, 15054
Build date 1894, 1896
Total produced 2
Specifications
Configuration 2-6-2
UIC class 1′C1′ n
Gauge 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm)
Driver dia. 49 in (1.245 m)
Length 50 ft 10 in (15.49 m)
Adhesive weight 25 long tons 4 cwt (56,400 lb or 25.6 t)
25 long tons 4 hundredweight (25.6 t; 28.2 short tons)
Loco weight 35 long tons 4 cwt (78,800 lb or 35.8 t)
35 long tons 4 hundredweight (35.8 t; 39.4 short tons)
Tender weight 19 long tons 2 cwt (42,800 lb or 19.4 t)
19 long tons 2 hundredweight (19.4 t; 21.4 short tons)
Total weight 54 long tons 10 cwt (122,100 lb or 55.4 t)
54 long tons 10 hundredweight (55.4 t; 61.0 short tons)
Fuel type Coal
Fuel capacity 3 long tons 0 cwt (6,700 lb or 3 t)
6 long tons 0 hundredweight (6.1 t; 6.7 short tons)
Water cap 1,500 imp gal (6,800 l; 1,800 US gal)
Firebox:
  Firegrate area
16.7 sq ft (1.55 m2)
Boiler pressure 180 lbf/in2 (1,241 kPa)
Heating surface 957 sq ft (88.9 m2)
Superheater None
Cylinders Four (Vauclain compound)
High-pressure cylinder 10 in × 20 in (254 mm × 508 mm)
Low-pressure cylinder 17 in × 20 in (432 mm × 508 mm)
Performance figures
Tractive effort 9,700 lbf (43.15 kN)
Career
Operators Wellington and Manawatu Railway, New Zealand Government Railways
Numbers WMR 14, 15
NZR 459, 460
Locale Frankton, Wairarapa, Wellington - Longburn section
Withdrawn 1929
Disposition Withdrawn

The NA class was a class of two steam locomotives that operated on the privately owned Wellington and Manawatu Railway (WMR) and then the publicly owned national rail network in New Zealand. Ordered by the WMR to operate on its line up the west coast of the North Island north of Wellington, the first was built in 1894 by the Baldwin Locomotive Works and entered service that year as WMR No. 14. In 1896, a second locomotive that was slightly more powerful was ordered from Baldwin, and it entered service in October 1897. The engines were similar to the two members of the N class ordered in 1891, except they were heavier and more powerful. They were Vauclain compound locomotives.

In 1908, the WMR was incorporated into the national network and the government's Railways Department reclassified the engines as the sole members of the NA class: No. 14 became NA 459 and No. 15 became NA 460. They operated for roughly another two decades; NA 459 spent its final days working in Frankton near Hamilton and was withdrawn from service in March 1929, while NA 460's last depot was Cross Creek at the Wairarapa end of the Rimutaka Incline and it was withdrawn in July 1929.

See also

External links

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