2-12-0

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
A Württemberg K locomotive, an example of this wheel arrangement.

Under the

leading truck), twelve powered and coupled driving wheels on six axles, and no trailing wheels
.

Equivalent classifications

Other equivalent classifications are:

  • Italian classification
    )
  • French classification
    : 160
  • Turkish classification
    : 67
  • Swiss classification
    : 6/7

Germany

While standard German freight train

steam locomotives were 2-10-0 types, between 1917 and 1924 the Esslingen locomotive works produced 44 units of the so-called Class K for the Royal Württemberg State Railways (later renumbered to class 59 by the Deutsche Reichsbahn). With a top speed of only 60 km/h these locomotives were designed for heavy duty in mountainous areas such as the Geislinger Steige, with special attention on low load per axle (16 t). During World War II, after electrification of that line the units were used on the Semmering railway in Austria, then part of the German Reich.[1]
The last four units were in service until 1957.

France

The Paris-Orleans railway made a compound demonstrator (160-A1) under the orders of André Chapelon which used a six-cylinder, double expansión configuration with 'resuperheat'.

Other

Other 2-12-0s were built for the

Austrian State Railways in 1912.[2]

References


This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article: 2-12-0. Articles is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license; additional terms may apply.Privacy Policy