LB&SCR D2 class

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London Brighton and South Coast Railway Class D2
Stroudley D2 Class.jpg
D2 No.312 Albion c. 1880
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
Designer William Stroudley
Builder Brighton Works
Build date1876–1883
Total produced14
Specifications
Configuration:
   Whyte 0-4-2
Gauge 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Driver dia.5 ft 6 in (1.676 m)
Loco weight34 long tons 6 cwt (34.9 t; 38.4 short tons)
(76,800 lb or 34,800 kg)
Boiler pressure140 psi (0.97 MPa)
Cylinders Two
Cylinder size 17 in × 24 in (432 mm × 610 mm)
Performance figures
Tractive effort 12,506 lbf (55.6 kN)
Career
Operators London Brighton and South Coast Railway
Class D2
Numbers300–313
Locale Great Britain
First run1876
Withdrawn1902–1907
DispositionAll scrapped

The LB&SCR D2 class, 0-4-2 suburban passenger locomotives, were designed by William Stroudley of the London Brighton and South Coast Railway in 1876. They were developed from his successful "D-tank" class of 1873.

Contents

Pre-Grouping

The 14 locomotives in this class were built at Brighton railway works and appeared in traffic between September 1876 and October 1883, intended for those duties where the limited water supply of a "D-tank" might prove to be a handicap. They were frequently employed on lightly loaded fast continental boat trains between London and Newhaven, and so were named after European cities. Thus they were frequently known as the "Lyons Class", after the first locomotive No.300 Lyons.

The class performed well for a quarter of a century, and achieved good mileages but when they began to require major repairs, it was decided to withdraw the class and use the newer B2 and C2 class locomotives in their place. The first two locomotives were withdrawn in November 1902 and the final two in March 1907. No examples survived into preservation.

Locomotive summary

D2 class locomotive fleet summary
First
No.
Build dateSecond
No.
Date
renumbered
Prev
No.
LBSCR
Name
Withdrawn
300September 1876 Lyons June 1903
301March 1877 Caen November 1902
302January 1878 Turin July 1904
303January 1878 Milan June 1903
304December 1877 Nice July 1904
305December 1877 Genoa December 1904
306April 1878 Naples December 1904
307April 1878 Venice November 1902
308July 1883 Como December 1904
309July 1883609September 1906 Splugen March 1907
310July 1883 Laval July 1906
311July 1883 Rhone January 1907
312September 1883612March 1905 Albion February 1907
313October 1883613March 1905 Paris March 1907

Sources

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