- Long Boiler locomotive
The Long Boiler locomotive was the object of a patent by
Robert Stephenson and the name became synonymous with the pattern.It is generally perceived that it arose out of attempts to match the power of
broad gauge locomotives within the limitations of the loading gauge of Stephenson railways.However the patent originally arose from a problem which became apparent as trains travelled longer distances, specifically on the
North Midland Railway around1841 , where fire tubes and smokeboxes were becoming destroyed by the heat.Experiments at the North Midland's
Derby Works showed temperatures as high as 773 degrees Fahrenheit, determined by placing a small cup ofzinc within the smokebox beneath the chimney. Stephenson extended the boiler, and hence the firetubes, from the usual nine feet to thirteen or fourteen feet. Placingtin in the firebox, he found that it just began to melt, indicating a temperature of 442 degrees.Having tested the design on the North Midland line between
Derby andLeeds , Stephenson took out a patent in1842 for what he referred to as a "Long Boiler" engine, since, to protect his patent, he realised that he should not specify an exact length.Meanwhile, the prevailing view was that the centre of gravity should be as low as possible, which limited the size of the driving wheels, and incidentally precluded the use of inside cylinders.
The initial locomotives were of
2-2-2 wheel arrangement to accommodate the extra length. However, with the outside cylinders, the engines were extremely unsteady, swaying from side to side. This led him to bring the rear wheels forward in the4-2-0 formation, with the cylinders between the leading wheels. Such an engine was the "Great A" which took part in theGauge Trials . This however, left the firebox behind the wheels and was therefore limited in size and weight. The classical long-boiler locomotive, then, was powerful but slow. It was ideal for goods trains, one example surviving as the North Eastern Railways Class 1001.The opposite point of view was taken by
John Gray , who designed a number of engines for theLondon and Brighton Railway . His engines were the inspiration forDavid Joy in his design for theJenny Lind locomotive , which compensated for the size of its boiler by greater efficiency and a pressure of some 120 psi.The long boiler design, on the other hand, was taken to its extreme by the
Crampton locomotive which utilised a larger driving wheel by placing it behind the firebox.References
* Lowe, J.W., (1989) "British Steam Locomotive Builders," London: Guild Publishing
* Ransome, P.J.G., (1990) "The Victorian Railway and How it Evolved," London: Heinemann
* Stretton, C.E., (1896) "The development of the Locomotive: A Popular History, 1803-1896," London: Crosby, Lockwood. Reprinted 1989 by London: Bracken Books.
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