South African Class 16DA 4-6-2 1928


The South African Railways Class 16DA 4-6-2 of 1928 was a steam locomotive.
In 1928, the South African Railways placed six Class 16DA steam locomotives with a 4-6-2 Pacific type wheel arrangement in passenger train service. Eight more entered service in 1929.

Manufacturers

Further orders for locomotives similar to the Class 16D Pacific type locomotive were placed for the South African Railways in 1928. The design of the earlier engines was modified by the Chief Mechanical Engineer, Colonel F.R. Collins DSO, along the same lines as his design of the Class 15CA Mountain type.
This consisted of a locomotive bar frame which was shorter to end at the front of the firebox, with a bridle casting to create a widened frame extension below the firebox and the cab to the rear dragbox to gain more ashpan room under the firebox.
These redesigned locomotives were designated Class 16DA and were built by two manufacturers in 1928 and 1929. The first six, numbered in the range from 868 to 873, were built in Germany by Hohenzollern Locomotive Works and entered service in 1928. Another eight locomotives, numbered in the range from 843 to 850, were built in the United States of America by Baldwin Locomotive Works and entered service in 1929.

Characteristics

The Hohenzollern and Baldwin-built Class 16DA locomotives basically differed from the predecessor Class 16D only by virtue of its shortened frame and bridle casting, the Class 16D having had a frame extending all the way from the front buffer beam to the rear dragbox. They used the same Type KT tenders with a coal capacity of and a water capacity of. As delivered, they had diameter coupled wheels and their cylinders were of bore and stroke. Their boiler operating pressure was set at.

Modification

During the 1940s six of these locomotives, three from each manufacturer group, were retyred with diameter tyres on their coupled wheels. To not have their tractive effort reduced by the larger coupled wheels, their cylinders were reamed from a bore of and their operating boiler pressure was raised to. All the modified locomotives remained classified as Class 16DA.
When the larger tyres were fitted, the old tyres were left in position and turned down on the wheel centres to serve as liners and the new tyres were then shrunk on over the liners. The practice of increasing the diameter of coupled wheels, wheel spacing and other considerations permitting, was begun by A.G. Watson during his term in office as CME and was continued by his successors. The reduction of tractive effort caused by the larger wheels was made up by increasing boiler pressures or by fitting larger cylinders or both, as required. This policy resulted in more mileage between heavy repairs, less cost-per-mile on repairs and locomotives capable of higher speeds.

Service

The Class 16DA Pacifics were initially placed in passenger service between Johannesburg and Kimberley where they regularly worked trains like the Union Express and Union Limited, which became the Blue Train after the Second World War. From 1930 the new Henschel-built wide-firebox Class 16DA took over this duty.
In 1939-1940, when new air-conditioned rolling stock was placed in service on the Union Limited and Union Express services between Cape Town and Johannesburg, all the Class 16DA and Class 16E locomotives were transferred to Bloemfontein in the Orange Free State. From here, they continued to work passenger trains north and south, including the Orange Express, until the Class 15F replaced them and they were relegated to suburban and local passenger train work. By the early 1950s, the suburban trains to Lynchfield and Melorane were handled by narrow-firebox Class 16DA locomotives which only occasionally worked mainline passenger trains by then. They were withdrawn from service in 1973.
Four of the Baldwin-built locomotives were sold into industrial service. No. 844 went to Hlobane Colliery in Natal and later to Umgala Colliery. Numbers 845, 847 and 848 went to Wankie Colliery in Rhodesia, where they became numbers 5 to 7 in reverse order. After they were finally withdrawn in 1982, one of these three was plinthed alongside the main North road at Hwange. Another of the Baldwin-built locomotives, no. 850, is plinthed at Theunissen in the Free State.

Works numbers

The table lists the Hohenzollern and Baldwin Class 16DA engine numbers, builders, years built, works numbers and variations in coupled wheel sizes.

SAR No.
Builder
Year
Works
No.
Coupled
wheel dia.
843Baldwin19296082063"/1600mm
844Baldwin19296082160"/1524mm
845Baldwin19296082260"/1524mm
846Baldwin19296082363"/1600mm
847Baldwin19296082460"/1524mm
848Baldwin19296082563"/1600mm
849Baldwin19296082660"/1524mm
850Baldwin19296082760"/1524mm
868Hohenzollern1928465363"/1600mm
869Hohenzollern1928465463"/1600mm
870Hohenzollern1928465560"/1524mm
871Hohenzollern1928465660"/1524mm
872Hohenzollern1928465760"/1524mm
873Hohenzollern1928465863"/1600mm

Preservation

NumberWorks nmrTHF / PrivateLeaselend / OwnerCurrent LocationOutside SOUTH AFRICA?
848PrivateWanki ColleryMain StreetZimbabwenext to Wanki Highway
850PrivateTheunissen MunicipalityMain Street
870THFKrugersdorp Locomotive Depot
876THFTransnet Heritage Foundation Bloemfontein Locomotive Depot
878THFTransnet EngineeringBloemfontein Locomotive Depot
879THFCeres Railway CompanyCape Town Station

Illustration