LNER Class U1

LNER Class U1

Infobox Locomotive
powertype=Steam
name = LNER Class U1



caption = An official photograph of No. 2395 from 1925 in photographic grey livery.
designer = Nigel Gresley
builder = Beyer, Peacock & Co. Ltd.
serialnumber=6209
builddate = 1925
totalproduction = 1
whytetype = 2-8-0+0-8-2
uicclass=1'D(D1')h
gauge = RailGauge|ussg
leadingsize = 2ft 8ins
driversize = 4ft 8ins
length = 87ft 3ins
weight = 178 tons
fueltype = Coal
fuelc

waterc

cylindercount = 6
cylindersize = 18½in x 26in
firearea = 56.5 ft²
boilerpressure = 180lb/sq in
tractiveeffort = 72940lb
railroad=London and North Eastern Railway
British Railways
railroadclass=LNER: U1
dispositon=Scrapped
retiredate=1955
The London and North Eastern Railway Class U1 was a solitary 2-8-0+0-8-2 Beyer-Garratt locomotive designed for banking coal trains over the Worsborough Bank, a steeply graded line in South Yorkshire and part of the Woodhead Route. It was both the longest and the most powerful steam locomotive ever to run in Britain. It was built in 1925 with the motion at each end being based on an existing 2-8-0 design. The original number was 2395, and it was renumbered 9999 in March 1946, and then 69999 after nationalisation in 1948, although it retained its cab-side plate bearing its original number throughout its life. The locomotive ran for some time as an oil burner, and was tried out on the Lickey Incline in 19491950 and again, after the electrification of its home line, in 1955. These trials were unsuccessful, and so the locomotive was withdrawn in 1955 and scrapped.

Origins

The Worsborough bank, sometimes referred to as the Worsborough Incline, was a steep bank on the Great Central Railway (GCR) freight line from Wath to Penistone, climbing for 3 miles at a gradient of 1 in 40. The main traffic on the line was loaded trains carrying coal from the South Yorkshire coalfields to Lancashire. The GCR had considered several options for banking these heavy trains, including one based on a design by Kitson & Co for a locomotive carrying out similar duties in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka)cite journal | last = Nixon | first = Les | title = The Beast of Worsborough | journal = Steam Railway | issue = 343 | pages = pp82-85 | publisher = EMAP | location = Peterborough | date = 30Nov-28Dec 2007. This idea had been discarded due to the restricted loading gauge, and thought had turned to an articulated Garratt locomotive based on 2 GCR K8 2-8-0s (LNER Class O4) with a specially designed large boiler, but no move had been made to build such a locomotive when, in 1923 grouping, the GCR was absorbed into the LNER, and responsibility for locomotive design passed to the Chief Mechanical Engineer of the newly formed railway, Nigel Gresley.

The design proposed by Nigel Gresley for a locomotive to bank heavy coal trains up the Worsborough bank was for a 2-8-0+0-8-2 Garratt locomotive based on 2 GNR O2 2-8-0s, but with 3 cylinders and utilising Gresley's unique derived motion for the inside cylinder. Beyer, Peacock of Manchester tendered £21,000 for the construction of two such locomotives, although the order was subsequently amended to just a single lococite web | title = LNER Beyer-Garratt | work = www.thewoodheadsite.org.uk | url = http://www.thewoodheadsite.org.uk/MotivePower/BeyerGarratt.htm | accessdate = 03-10-2008 which was delivered in summer 1925 at a cost of £14,895. The loco, works number 6209, took just three weeks from laying the frames to completion and was hurredly sent, still in workshop grey, to appear in the centenary celebration of the Stockton & Darlington Railway where she was exhibit number 42. It was then finished in LNER black livery and was officially accepted into LNER stock in August 1925cite web | last = Marsden | first = Richard | title = The U1 Garratt ('The Wath Banker') | work = The LNER Encyclopaedia | url = http://www.lner.info/locos/U/u1.shtml | accessdate = 03-10-2008.

Operation

The U1, numbered 2395, was initially allocated to Barnsley shed but due to the restricted layout there was transferred to Mexborough on 17 October 1925. The locomotive was used to bank heavy trains up the Worsborough Bank, making up to 18 return trips each day; a typical train consisted of an LNER Class O4 locomotive with 60+ loaded coal wagons then an assisting engine at the rear, usually another O4 or an Ex-GCR Class 1B, and finally the U1. The U1 was attached at Wentworth Junction at the bottom of the bank, and pushed for the 3½ miles to West Silkstone Junction at the top where it would be detatched, while the assisting engine would normally continue as far as Dunford Bridge. Prior to the introduction of the U1 a further two O4 locos would have been used for this work although the additional effort required to operate such a large locomotive as the U1 was not appreciated by the crew; "Twice the work but the same sodding pay" summing up their opinion.

With it's huge size and 79ft 1in wheelbase the U1 rode well and a commodious cab was provided. Unfortunately this did not help when negotiating the two Silkstone tunnels just before the top of the Worsborough Bank. Being the last of three steam locos to enter the tunnel the atmosphere on the footplate with heat, steam and smoke was "close to hell". To try to overcome this, gas masks were provided for the crew connected via a pipe to a vent at rail level, but the crews objected to sharing these for reasons of hygiene and continued to use the time-honoured method of covering the nose and mouth with a wet handkerchief.

The locomotive itself was adequate but not succesful enough for further development, and drawings for a revolving coal bunker made by Beyer, Peacock in 1930 were not pursued. Indeed the design did have some expensive flaws; soft water resulted in the boiler being retubed in 1926, firebox damage was diagnosed in 1927 and 1928, and the loco was out of service for 9 months during 1930 during which time some modifications were carried out and a new firebox fitted. After this the loco itself settled down to working its regular beat up and down Worsborough Bank, despite continued steaming problems and a definite susceptibility to poor quality coal. It was renumbered 6999 in the LNER renumbering scheme of 1946, and became 69999 on the creation of British Railways in 1948.

Later life

With the electrification of the Woodhead route and the Worsborough Bank using 1500V dc overhead catenary, and the boiler considered to be nearing the end of its useful life, the continued operation of the U1 was in some doubt in the late 1940s, but in 1949 it was decided to try the U1 on the Lickey Incline on the Ex-LMS Bristol-Birmingham route to supplement to exising 0-10-0 banker nicknamed "Big Bertha". Initially she worked chimney-first, but after difficulty in buffering up to passenger trains, she was turned to run cab-first up the bank and an electric headlight was fitted. Despite this the crew had great problems with visibility from the cab, particularly after dark, and the U1 returned to Mexborough in November 1950 and was officially placed in storage there. In February 1951 the U1 was again banking on the Worsborough Bank and continued doing so into 1952 then was briefly placed in store before being sent to Gorton Works for work in preparation for a return to the Lickey Incline. She stayed at Gorton for 3 years while several different attempts were made to convert her to oil burning and an improved electric headlight was also fitted. In June 1955 she resumed work on the Lickey Incline, but was stored at Bromsgrove on 13 September and returned to Gorton the following month. She was officially withdrawn on 23 December 1955, and was subsequently taken to Doncaster Works and cut up during early 1956 having travelled around 425,000 miles during her 30 years.

References

External links

* [http://www.railuk.co.uk/steam/getsteam.php?number=69999 Railuk database]


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