FS Class 640 II

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FS Class 640
Walschaerts, Caprotti
Performance figures
Maximum speed100 km/h (62 mph)
Power output800 CV (588 kW; 789 hp)
Tractive effort10,000 kgf (98.1 kN; 22,000 lbf)
Career
Preserved15 rebuilt (from FS Class 630)

The Ferrovie dello Stato (FS; Italian State Railways) Class 640 (Italian: Gruppo 640) is a class of 2-6-0 'Mogul' steam locomotives in Italy. Commonly nicknamed "Signorine" (Italian: 'young ladies'), a nickname shared with the similar Class 625, these locomotives were the first superheated steam locomotives in Italy.[1]

Design and construction

When the FS were created in 1905, Chief Mechanical Engineer Giuseppe Zara undertook a process to design a standard range of locomotives; one of these was the Class 630, a light express engine which, together with the other designs, shared the features of being compound locomotives. However, with the diffusion in Germany (then in close ties with Italy because of the Triple Alliance) of the Schmidt superheater, a decision to build there a batch of 24 non-compound and superheated versions of the Class 630 (keeping all the other features, including the Italian bogie and the peculiar inside-cylinders/outside valve chests and valve gear) was taken.[2] Results were highly successful, and subsequently almost all steam locomotives in Italy would be built with simple expansion and superheating.

The first locomotives were built by the German firm Schwartzkopff (as the Italian industry lacked experience with the superheating technology), with other Italian firms building the rest, for a total of 169; four more Class 640 were added in 1951 when the railway company for which they had been built for (Strade Ferrate di Biella) was incorporated in the FS.

All the Class 640 were fitted with a unique three-axle tender with a water capacity of 15,000 L (4,000 US gal)

Operations

Originally pulling the principal express trains on the Italian mainlines, after a few years the Class 640 locomotives were replaced in these services by the more powerful Class 680 and Class 685 2-6-2 locomotives; they were then assigned to pulling passenger trains on secondary lines with level ground. They enjoyed a very long career, surviving up to the end of regular Italian steam services in the 1970s.[1]

Modifications

Between 1929 and 1931, fifteen Class 630 locomotives were rebuilt with superheaters, simple expansion and Caprotti valve gears. Their running numbers had 300 added to them, making them form the 640.3XX subclass.[1]

Preservation

Sixteen Class 640 locomotives survive into preservation; of these, two (the 143 and 091) are currently operational and available for heritage trains, while others are being restored.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c Kalla-Bishop 1986, p. 49.
  2. ^ Cook & Hollingsworth 2003, p. 80.
  3. ^ "Vapore - 640". Photorail forum. Retrieved 5 December 2015.