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Locomotives of New Zealand is a complete list of all locomotive classes that operate or have operated in New Zealand's railway network. It does not include locomotives used on bush tramways.
All New Zealand's main-line locomotives run on a narrow gauge of 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm).
The first locomotive in New Zealand was built by Slaughter & Co in Bristol, [1] arrived at Ferrymead [2] in May 1863 [3] to work on Canterbury Provincial Railways' 5 ft 3 in gauge. It was withdrawn in 1876. [4] The Ferrymead to Christchurch railway line was not completed until 1 December 1863, [5] so the steam locomotive Lady Barkly, in use on Invercargill's jetty in August 1863 during construction of the Bluff branch, may have been the first locomotive in steam. [6]
The first steam engines built in New Zealand were produced in 1872. Fraser and Tinne built an 0-4-0 in Auckland in 1872, but it was based on a Hornsby traction engine. [9] Similarly, a steam crane was converted during construction of the Port Chalmers railway, [10] though it could only haul about 10 tons. [11] The first locomotive entirely built in the country was a 10 hp (7.5 kW) engine for the Foxton Tramway contractor, Ashworth Crawshaw, [12] by R. S. Sparrow & Co in Dunedin, [13] also in 1872. [14] It was named Palmerston. [15] Horses had replaced Palmerston by 1874, [16] but, in 1875, after iron had replaced wooden rails, the same branch had an A class steam locomotive built in Wellington by E.W. Mills' Lion Foundry. [17]
Steam locomotives were originally categorised with just a single letter, such as the "F class". When a new class was built as an enhancement of an old class, the old class's letter was re-used, followed by a superscript upper-case letter. For example, the 1906 A class was followed by the AA and AB classes.
Diesel-electric and electric locomotive classifications originally consisted of an upper-case D or E respectively followed by a second and sometimes a third (sub-class) letter. The second and third letters are sometimes represented as smaller-sized upper case (for example, as seen on many locomotive cab-side number plates). [18]
New classes were not always given the classification that alphabetically followed that of the previous class that had most recently been acquired. For example, the DJ class was followed by the DX class followed by the DF class. If an entire class had been withdrawn from service and the classification no longer in use, it was sometimes re-used; for example, two A classes exist, one from 1873 and one from 1906.
Following the introduction of the computer-based Traffic Monitoring System (TMS) and consequent renumbering, classes were identified by the two upper-case letters with the first letter remaining D or E respectively and sub-classes being indicated by a third upper-case letter, such as DAA (DA modified for hump shunting), DAR (DA with rebuilt superstructure), DFT (DF with turbo-conversion), DXR (rebuilt DX) and so on. [19] Most diesel shunting locomotives have a three-letter classification with DS as the first two letters, following on from the original diesel-hydraulic shunting class that was known simply as the DS class.
For electric locomotives the second letter generally referred to where the locomotive was based, such as EC in Christchurch, EO in Otira and EW in Wellington. The EM class in Wellington stands for Electric Motor and the ET stands for Electric Trailer. The DM class units were an exception to this.
Most railcars were classified RM (Rail Motor), and individual classes were known by alternate names such as the Vulcan railcars of the South Island and the Wairarapa railcars that ran over the Rimutaka Incline.
Image | Class | Numbers | Number in class | Year(s) introduced | Year(s) withdrawn | Power output | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
TMS (1979) | pre-1979 | TMS (1979) | pre-1979 | ||||||
![]() | DA | DA | 86–996 | 1400 – 1545 | 146 | 1955–1967 | 1974 – 1989 | 1,060 kW (1,420 hp) | The largest locomotive number class in New Zealand, 85 were rebuilt as the DC class, five as DAA class [20] and one as DAR class. |
DB | DB | 1001–1180 | 1000 – 1016 | 17 | 1965–1966 | 1980 – 1989 | 705 kW (945 hp) | Ten were rebuilt as the DBR class. | |
![]() | DBR | 1199–1295 | 10 | 1980–1982 | 2002 – 2017 | 705 kW (945 hp) | Rebuilt DB with a new cab, lower hood and new engine. | ||
![]() | DC | DC | 4006–4951 | 1551 – 1599 | 85 | 1978–1983 | 1992 – present | 1,100 kW (1,500 hp)1,230 kW (1,650 hp) | Rebuilt DA with a new cab and low hood and appears in two engine types, one with 12-645C engines and the other with 12-645E engines. |
| DCP | 4277–4945 | 17 | 2002–2009 | 2015–present | 1,230 kW (1,650 hp) | DC subclass originally built for passenger services, but now used for other uses. | ||
![]() | DF (1954) | 1500 – 1510 (1954) 1300 – 1309 (1960) | 10 | 1954 | 1972–1975 | 1,120 kW (1,500 hp) | NZs first mainline diesel locomotive. | ||
DF | DF (1979) | 6006–6317 | 1651 – 1670 | 30 | 1979–1981 | All rebuilt to DFTs | 1,230 kW (1,650 hp) | ||
![]() | DFB | 7010–7348 | 21 | 2006–present | Still in use | 1,800 kW (2,400 hp) | Upgraded DFT class locomotive ('B' for Brightstar) | ||
DFM | 7036–7226 | 3 | All reclassified as DFT internally | 1,800 kW (2,400 hp) | Upgraded DFT class locomotive ('M' for Maxitrax). | ||||
![]() | DFT | 7008–7348 | 30 | 1992–1997 | 2011–present | 1,800 kW (2,400 hp) | Rebuilt DF, with 21 later converted to DFBs ('T' for turbocharged). | ||
![]() | DG | DG | 2007–2468 | 750 – 791 | 42 | 1955–1956 | 1983 | 560 kW (750 hp) | 11 were rebuilt from the 1956 DH class. |
DH (1956) | 766, 772, 777 – 783 | 11 | 1956 | 1968 | 560 kW (750 hp) | All were later reclassified as DGs | |||
![]() | DI | DI | 1808–1843 | 1100 – 1104 | 5 | 1966 | 1988–1989 | 755 kW (1,012 hp) | |
![]() | DJ | DJ | 3009–3689 | 1200 – 1263 | 64 | 1968–1969 | 1986 – 1991 | 672 kW (901 hp) | Five in service with Dunedin Railways |
![]() | DL | 9008–9688 | 63 | 2010–2018 | Still in use | 2,700 kW (3,600 hp) | |||
![]() | DM | 8012- | 66 [21] | 2025 | 3,000 kW (4,000 hp) | Under order from Stadler Rail | |||
DQ | 6007 -6036, 6324 – 6416 | 15 | 1996–1998 | 1998 – 2013 | 1,120 kW (1,500 hp) | Rebuilt QR class; originally from Queensland Railways. | |||
![]() | DX | DX | 5016–5520 | 2600 – 2648 | 48 | 1972–1975 | All Rebuilt as DXC & DXB | 2,050 kW (2,750 hp) | Two rebuilt as DXR. |
![]() | DXB | 5016 – 5166, 5448 | 14 | still in use | 2,050 kW (2,750 hp) | Upgraded DX class ('B' for Brightstar). | |||
![]() | DXC | 5172 – 5520 5039 | 32 | still in use | 2,050 kW (2,750 hp) | DX class upgraded for the Midland Line coal trains ('C' for chute). | |||
DXH | 0 | All rebuilt as DXB and DXC | 2,050 and 2,400 kW (2,750 and 3,220 hp) | Upgraded from DX | |||||
![]() | DXR | 8007, 8022 | 2 | 1993, 2006 | still in use | 2,420 kW (3,250 hp) | Rebuilt From DX | ||
QR | 2027 – 2102, 3032 | 25 | 1997 | 1999 | 1,120 kW (1,500 hp) | Originally from Queensland Railways; 15 rebuilt as the DQ class. | |||
Image | Class | Numbers | Number in class | Year(s) introduced | Year(s) withdrawn | Power output | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
TMS (1980) | pre-1980 | TMS (1980) | pre-1980 | ||||||
![]() | DAA | DAA | 11–63 | 1400 – 1404, 1406 | 5 | 1971 | 1989 | 1,060 kW (1,420 hp) | DA class refitted for low speed running for heavy shunting at Te Rapa. |
![]() | DAR | 517 | 1 | 1989 | 2008 | 1,060 kW (1,420 hp) | DA class modified for shunting at Tasman Pulp and Paper. | ||
| DE | DE | 1308–1458 | 501 – 515 | 15 | 1952 | 1984–1989 | 490 kW (660 hp) | |
![]() | DH | DH | 2816–2868 | 900 – 905 | 6 | 1978 | Still in use | 672 kW (901 hp) | |
DS | DS | 200–215 | 16 | 1949–1955 | 1978–1984 | ||||
![]() | DSA | DSA | 1953–1967 | ||||||
DSB | DSB | 1003–1290 | 300–327 | 28 | 1954–1967 | 1978–1988 | |||
![]() | DSC | DSC | 2000–2759 | 400 – 469 | 70 | 1959–1967 | 1989–present | 315 kW (422 hp) | |
| DSG | 3005–3304 | 24 | 1981–1983 | still in use | 700 kW (940 hp) | Shunting locomotive. | ||
![]() | DSJ | 4004–4060 | 5 | 1984–1985 | still in use | 350 kW (470 hp) | |||
![]() | TR | TR | 90 | 1924–1978 | Six distinct build models of various power, wheel set and body. | ||||
![]() | EB | 1809, 1815, 1821 | 3 | 1976–1980 | 23 kW (31 hp) | Used for internal workshop movements. Rebuilt in 1953 from the EB Battery-electric loco. | |||
Image | Class | Numbers | Number in class | Year(s) introduced | Year(s) withdrawn | Voltage | Power output | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
TMS (1980) | pre-1980 | TMS (1980) | pre-1980 | |||||||
![]() | EO | EA | 39–74 | 1 – 5 | 5 | 1968, 2008 | 1997, 2011 | 1500 V DC overhead | 960 kW (1,290 hp) | Originally classified EA, 1980 reclassified as EO. Used Otira-Arthurs Pass section, three returned to Wellington suburban service in 2008. Final withdrawal 2011. |
| EC | 7–12 | 6 | 1928–1929 | 1970 | 1500 V DC overhead | 885 kW (1,187 hp) | Used on Christchurch-Lyttelton line. | ||
![]() | ED | ED | 15, 21 | 101–110 | 10 | 1938 | 1969–1981 | 1500 V DC overhead | 670 kW (900 hp) | Used on Wellington suburban network. |
![]() | EF | 30007–30249 | 22 | 1986–1988 | 1991–present | 25 kV 50 Hz AC overhead | 3,000 kW (4,000 hp) | Originally Class 30, reclassified as EF class. Used on the NIMT between Palmerston North and Hamilton. | ||
![]() | EO | 2–6 | 5 | 1923 | 1968 | 1500 V DC overhead | 510 kW (680 hp) | Used on Otira-Arthurs Pass section. Replaced by EA class (later reclassified as EO). | ||
![]() | EW | EW | 107–171 | 1800 – 1806 | 7 | 1952 | 1988 | 1500 V DC overhead | 1,340 kW (1,800 hp) | Used on Wellington suburban network. |
Image | Class | Numbers | Number in class | Year(s) introduced | Year(s) withdrawn | Power output | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
TMS (1980) | pre-1980 | TMS (1980) | pre-1980 | ||||||
![]() | E | 1 | 1923 | 1930 | 131 kW (176 hp) | Used for maintenance in the Otira Tunnel. | |||
![]() | EB | 25–29 | 5 | 1925–1929 | 1976–1980 | 23 kW (31 hp) | Used for internal workshop movements. Rebuilt in 1953 to diesel electric power. | ||
Wellington electric multiple units operate on 1500 V DC overhead. Auckland's electric multiple units run on 25 kV AC overhead.
Image | Class | Number in class | Location | In service | Formation | Passenger capacity | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DM/D | 49 | Wellington | 1938–2012 | D – DM (two-car) D – DM – D (three-car) | 132 (two-car) 204 (three-car) | 6 sets preserved in museum or private use. |
![]() | EM/ET | 44 | Wellington | 1982–2016 | EM – ET | 148 | One refurbished set preserved at Canterbury Railway Society; one Tranz Metro Blue set preserved by Wellington Heritage Multiple Unit Trust |
| FP/FT | 83 | Wellington | 2010–present | FP – FT | 147 | Named Matangi, after the Māori word for "wind". |
![]() | AM | 72 | Auckland | 2014–present | AMP – AMT – AMA | 230 |
Livery: The first railcars were painted "carnation red" with a white or yellow stripe. The Silver Fern railcars appeared in stainless steel.
All railcars, unless otherwise stated, are designated RM class. Here, they are classified under their common names.
Image | Class | Number in class | In service | Power type | Passenger capacity | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 88-seater | 35 | 1955–1978 | Diesel-mechanical | 88 | Alternatively known as Fiats, Eighty-Eights, or Twinset railcars. After withdrawal, 14 were converted to locomotive-hauled AC class articulated carriages known as "Grassgrubs" due to their green colour. |
![]() | Silver Fern | 3 | 1972–2019 | Diesel-electric | 96 | Auckland – Wellington service, 1972–1991. Geyserland Express, Kaimai Express and Waikato Connection 1991–2001; used for excursions until 2019. Now withdrawn. [22] |
| Standard | 6 | 1938–1972 | Diesel-mechanical | 48–52 | Preserved examples exist at Silver Stream Railway (Wellington), Glenbrook Vintage Railway (Auckland) and Pahiatua Railcar Society (near Palmerston North). |
![]() | Vulcan | 9 | 1940–1978 | Diesel-mechanical | 48–50 | Examples are preserved at Ferrymead Railway, Christchurch (3 of) and Plains Railway, Ashburton (1 of). |
![]() | Wairarapa | 7 | 1936–1956 | Diesel-mechanical | 25–49 | The remaining example is currently being restored by Pahiatua Railcar Society (near Palmerston North). |
Experimental railcars included the following:
Image | Class | Number in class | In service | Power type | Passenger capacity | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | MccEwan-Pratt petrol railcar | 1 | 1912–1913 | Petrol | 12 | Never in revenue service. Not preserved. |
![]() | Clayton steam railcar | 1 | 1926–1937 | Coal | Originally worked the Kurow branch, and later in Otago and Southland. Not preserved. | |
![]() | Edison battery-electric railcar | 1 | 1926–1934 | Electric (battery) | 60 seated, 70 total. | Used on Little River branch. Destroyed by fire. |
![]() | Sentinel-Cammell steam railcar | 1 | 1925–1931 | Coal | 48 | Used on Melling and then Thames branches. Not preserved. |
![]() | Leyland experimental petrol railcar | 1 | 1925 | Petrol | Never entered revenue service. | |
![]() | Model T Ford railcar | 2 | 1925–1931 | Petrol | 11 plus driver | Operated on Greytown branch and in Southland. A replica operates on the Pleasant Point Railway, near Timaru. |
![]() | Leyland diesel railbus | 2 | 1936–1942 | Diesel | 19 or 8 plus 1 ton of newspapers. | Served on Midland Line and the west coast. None preserved. |
Image | Class | Number in class | In service | Formation | Passenger capacity | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | ADK/ADB | 9 | 1993–2014 | ADK – ADB | 134 | Ex Transperth, used on Auckland suburban network. None preserved. |
![]() | ADL/ADC | 10 | 1993–2022 | ADL – ADC | 128 | Ex Transperth, used on Auckland suburban network. |
Livery: New Zealand steam locomotives after the late 1920s were mainly completely black with red buffer beams at each end. Earlier steam locomotives were more varied in colour with polished brasswork and a contrasting lining on the cab sides and side tanks, for example the green of the F class Peveril.
Image | Class | Numbers | Number in class | Year(s) introduced | Year(s) withdrawn | Whyte notation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | A of 1873 | 14 | 1873 | 1905 | 0-4-0 T | ||
![]() | A of 1906 | 58 | 1906 | 1969 | 4-6-2 | Includes 30 locomotives reclassified from AD | |
![]() | AA | 10 | 1914 | 1957 | 4-6-2 | Improved Q Class design | |
![]() | AB | 141 | 1915 | 1969 | 4-6-2 | New Zealand's most prolific steam locomotive; ten were rebuilt from WAB class. Preserved examples at Pleasant Point Railway (near Timaru), Steam Incorporated Paekakariki, Mainline Steam Heritage trust, Kingston Flyer (near Queenstown), Glenbrook/Motat (Auckland). | |
![]() | AD | 30 | 1910 | 1916 | 4-6-2 | Reclassified A in 1916. | |
![]() | B of 1874 | 2 | 1874 | 1890 | 0-4-4-0 T Double Fairlie | ||
![]() | B of 1899 | 10 | 1899 | 1967 | 4-8-0 | Three rebuilt as WE class | |
![]() | BA | 10 | 1911 | 1969 | 4-8-0 | ||
![]() | BB | 30 | 1915 | 1968 | 4-8-0 | ||
![]() | BC | 1 | 1902 | 1927 | 2-8-2 | Originally from the Wellington and Manawatu Railway, which was nationalised in 1908. | |
![]() | C of 1873 | 16 | 1873 | 1920 | 0-4-0 ST original 0-4-2 ST rebuild | ||
![]() | C of 1930 | 24 | 1930 | 1968 | 2-6-2 | Built for heavy shunting at major yards, one preserved at Silverstream Railway (Wellington) and one at Ferrymead Railway (Christchurch). | |
![]() | D of 1874 | 35 | 1874 | 1927 | 2-4-0 T | A low powered locomotive, with many finding a second life as industrial locomotives or with the Public Works dept. Seven have survived, with operational examples at the Pleasant Point Railway (near Timaru) and Ferrymead (Christchurch). Static examples are at Silverstream Railway (Wellington) and Ocean Beach Railway (Dunedin). | |
![]() | E of 1872 | 8 | 1872 | 1906 | 0-4-4-0 T Double Fairlie | A double fairlie, originally used only in the South Island, but one was used by the Public Works Dept. in the North Island. An static example of the E Class is preserved at the Otago Settlers Museum, Dunedin. | |
| E of 1906 | 1 | 1906 | 1917 | 2-6-6-0 T Mallet | ||
![]() | F | 88 | 1872 | 1964 | 0-6-0 T | Ubiquitous and long-serving, nine examples of this class are preserved. Used in all roles, including mainline use and shunting. | |
![]() | FA | 13 | 1892 | 1943 | 0-6-2 T | ||
FB | 13 | 1897 | 1943 | 0-6-2 T | |||
![]() | G of 1874 | 4 | 1874 | 1918 | 4-4-0 ST | ||
![]() | G of 1928 | 3 | 1928 | 1937 | 4-6-2+2-6-4 Garratt | The only Garrett-type locomotive in NZ, they were not a success. All rebuilt as Pacifics, and became the G class of 1937. None preserved. | |
G of 1937 | 6 | 1937 | 1956 | 4-6-2 | Rebuilt from the unsuccessful Garrett G class of 1928. None preserved. | ||
![]() | H | 199–204 | 6 | 1878 | 1955 | 0-4-2 T Fell | Built to work the Rimutaka Incline, H 199 is the only remaining Fell locomotive in the world and is preserved in the Fell Locomotive Museum at Featherston, just north of Wellington. |
![]() | J of 1874 | 32 | 1874 | 1935 | 2-6-0 | First locomotive class in NZ with a tender. | |
![]() | J of 1939 | 1200–1239 | 40 | 1939 | 1971 | 4-8-2 | A powerful, yet lighter locomotive than the K class. Coal burning and initially streamlined, 12 members of the class were rebuilt as JB class, being oil burners. Two operating examples remain, one at Mainline Steam and the other at Steam Incorporated. |
![]() | JA | 1240–1290 | 51 | 1946–1956 | 1964 – 1971 | 4-8-2 | 1240 to 1274 were used exclusively in the South Island, and were coal burners. The second batch of 16 were oil burners, built by North British Locomotive Works. These were numbered 1275 to 1290 and were used in the North Island. The class includes JA 1274 – the last NZR steam locomotive built. Seven preserved, including at Mainline Steam, Plains railway (Ashburton), Steam Incorporated, Glenbrook Vintage Railway (Auckland) and a static exhibit in Dunedin. |
![]() | JB | 12 | 4-8-2 | 12 locomotives were rebuilt from the 1939 J class as oil burners. | |||
![]() | K of 1877 | 8 | 1877 | 1927 | 2-4-2 | Originally used solely in the South Island, including on the famous Kingston Flyer, they later received minor use in the North Island. | |
![]() | K of 1932 | 900–929 | 30 | 1932 | 1967 | 4-8-4 | |
![]() | KA | 930–964 | 35 | 1939–1950 | 1964 – 1967 | 4-8-4 | A modified version of the K class, with roller bearings and ACFI feedwater heaters. |
![]() | KB | 965–970 | 6 | 1939 | 1968 | 4-8-4 | A coal burning locomotive that was a KA class fitted with trailing-wheel boosters. Used solely in the South Island, almost exclusively on the midland line between Springfield and Arthur's Pass. A non-operating example is preserved at Mainline Steam, Christchurch. |
![]() | L | 10 | 1877 | 1901–1939 | 2-4-0 T 4-4-0 T 4-4-2 T | ||
![]() | LA | 5 | 1887–1892 | 1920 – 1928 | 4-4-0 T | Originally from the New Zealand Midland Railway, which was nationalised in 1900. | |
![]() | M | 4 | 1875 | 1919–1928 | 0-6-0 T 2-4-4 T | ||
![]() | N | 12 | 1885 | 1934 | 2-6-2 | Two originally from the Wellington and Manawatu Railway (nationalised 1908). | |
NA | 2 | 1894 | 1929 | 2-6-2 | Originally from Wellington and Manawatu Railway (nationalised 1908). | ||
![]() | NC | 2 | 1902 | 1931 | 2-6-2 | Originally from Wellington and Manawatu Railway (nationalised 1908). | |
![]() | O | 6 | 1885 | 1922 | 2-8-0 | ||
![]() | OA | 1 | 1894 | 1929 | 2-8-0 | Originally from Wellington & Manawatu Railway (nationalised 1908). | |
![]() | OB | 2 | 1888 | 1931 | 2-8-0 | Originally from Wellington and Manawatu Railway (nationalised 1908). | |
![]() | OC | 1 | 1896 | 1930 | 2-8-0 | Originally from Wellington and Manawatu Railway (nationalised 1908). | |
![]() | P of 1876 | 2 | 1876 | 1885 | 0-6-0 ST | ||
![]() | P of 1885 | 10 | 1885 | 1930 | 2-8-0 | ||
![]() | Q of 1878 | 2 | 1878 | 1898 | 2-4-4 T | ||
![]() | Q of 1901 | 13 | 1901 | 1957 | 4-6-2 | The world's first class of 4-6-2 Pacific locomotive. | |
![]() | R | 18 | 1878 | 1936 | 0-6-4 T Single Fairlie | A Single Fairlie locomotive, designed for the tight curves and steep grades characteristic of rail in NZ at that time. Used in all roles from mainline passenger down to shunting and Public Works, private industrial and tramway use. A static example has been preserved at Reefton, on the west coast of the South Island. | |
![]() | S | 7 | 1880 | 1927 | 0-6-4 T Single Fairlie | ||
![]() | T | 6 | 1879 | 1928 | 2-8-0 | ||
![]() | U | 9 | 1894 | 1959 | 4-6-0 | ||
![]() | UA | 6 | 1899 | 1937 | 4-6-0 | ||
![]() | UB | 22 | 1901 | 1957 | 4-6-0 | ||
![]() | UC | 10 | 1901 | 1959 | 4-6-0 | ||
![]() | UD | 2 | 1904 | 1931 | 4-6-0 | Originally from the Wellington & Manawatu Railway, which was nationalised in 1908. | |
![]() | V | 13 | 1885 | 1937 | 2-6-2 | Three originally from the Wellington and Manawatu Railway (nationalised 1908) | |
![]() | W | 192, 238 | 2 | 1889 | 1959 | 2-6-2 T | Tank locomotive, W 192, which was the first NZR locomotive built in New Zealand, is preserved and operational at Ferrymead Railway, Christchurch. |
![]() | WA | 11 | 1892 | 1962 | 2-6-2 T | Tank locomotive, 11 built new; four rebuilt from J class 1874. WA165 is believed to be the only locomotive of this class still existing. It is owned and operated by the Gisborne City Vintage Railway. | |
![]() | WAB | 30 | 1918–1927 | 1947 – 1969 | 4-6-4 T | 14 rebuilt from WS class; 10 rebuilt as AB class | |
![]() | WB | 12 | 1898 | 1957 | 2-6-2 T | ||
![]() | WD | 18 | 1901 | 1936 | 2-6-4 T | ||
![]() | WE | 3 | 1902 | 1969 | 4-6-4 T | Rebuilt from B of 1899; equipped with Fell centre rail braking for use on the Rimutaka Incline and Rewanui Incline. | |
![]() | WF | 41 | 1904 | 1969 | 2-6-4 T | ||
![]() | WG | 20 | 1910 | 1964 | 4-6-4 T | 14 later rebuilt as WW class. | |
![]() | WH | 3 | 1884 | 1927 | 2-4-2 T | Originally from Wellington and Manawatu Railway (nationalised 1908) | |
![]() | WJ | 1 | 1904 | 1928 | 2-8-4 T | Originally from Wellington and Manawatu Railway (nationalised 1908) | |
![]() | WS | 14 | 1917 | 1936 | 4-6-4 T | All rebuilt as WAB class | |
![]() | WW | 51 | 1913 | 1969 | 4-6-4 T | 14 rebuilt from WG class | |
![]() | X | 18 | 1909 | 1957 | 4-8-2 | The world's first 4-8-2 Mountain locomotive | |
Y | 3 | 1923 | 1958 | 0-6-0 T |
Steam locomotive notes:
A number of industrial locomotives were used by various operators connecting to the national rail network:
Similar to the NZR DS class:
In 1999, Tranz Rail purchased the line between Awakeri and the mill and took over shunting operations with DBR and DSC class diesel locomotives. The two Drewrys were then onsold to Forest Loaders, a subcontractor working for Tranz Rail in the Portland area, loading log wagons at Portland. Both locomotives were renumbered by Forest Loaders as FL 106 and FL 107 respectively. Both are now preserved by the Bay of Islands Vintage Railway.
Similar to the NZR DSA class:
Similar to the NZR DSB class:
Two 0-6-0 locomotives were built by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries for industrial service for the Ohai Railway Board in 1967.
A further three 0-6-0DM locomotives were built by W. G. Bagnall for industrial service in New Zealand. The first, Bagnall 3079 of 1954, was delivered to Tasman Pulp & Paper for use at their Kinleith paper plant in the Bay of Plenty. The other two, maker's nos. 3132 and 3144 of 1958, were delivered to Wilsons Portland Cement for use on their private quarry railway at Portland, just south of Whangarei. All three were exactly the same as the ten NZR locomotives which were built to the same pattern as Bagnall 3079. They were initially equipped with National M4AA6 diesel engines producing 240 hp (180 kW).
All three were later re-powered by A & G Price at their Thames workshops; Bagnall 3079 with a 315 hp (235 kW) Caterpillar D343T diesel engine and Twin Disc torque converter, while the two Portland locomotives, numbered WPC 10 (3132) and WPC 11 (3144) received 204 hp (152 kW) Gardner 8L3 diesel engines which were used in the DS and Drewry DSA class locomotives. Bagnall 3079 was also later fitted with extra ballast weight to increase its power output
The North Island Main Trunk (NIMT) is the main railway line in the North Island of New Zealand, connecting the capital city Wellington with the country's largest city, Auckland. The line is 682 kilometres (424 mi) long, built to the New Zealand rail gauge of 1,067 mm and serves the large cities of Palmerston North and Hamilton.
The NZR P class was a class of two 0-6-0ST locomotives built to work on the government-owned national rail network of New Zealand in 1876. They were initially ordered by the Otago Provincial Council, but they were soon incorporated into the national locomotive fleet when the provinces were abolished. Other examples of the P class were built for industrial service and never came under the ownership of the New Zealand Railways Department, though one worked on the Kaitangata Line.
The NZR WAB class locomotives were steam locomotives designed, built and used by New Zealand Railways Department (NZR). Their wheel arrangement is described by the Whyte notation 4-6-4T. The locomotives were designed by NZR chief draughtsman S.H. Jenkinson as tank versions of the AB class 4-6-2 Pacific locomotive. Initially, the locomotives were separated into two classes, designated WAB for mainline work and WS for suburban work.
The New Zealand Railways Department, NZR or NZGR and often known as the "Railways", was a government department charged with owning and maintaining New Zealand's railway infrastructure and operating the railway system. The Department was created in 1880 and was corporatised on 1 April 1982 into the New Zealand Railways Corporation. Originally, railway construction and operation took place under the auspices of the former provincial governments and some private railways, before all of the provincial operations came under the central Public Works Department. The role of operating the rail network was subsequently separated from that of the network's construction. From 1895 to 1993 there was a responsible Minister, the Minister of Railways. He was often also the Minister of Public Works.
The NZR RM class 88-Seaters were a class of railcar used in New Zealand. New Zealand Government Railways (NZR) classified them as RM (Rail Motor), the notation used for all railcars, numbering the 35 sets from RM100 to RM134. They were the most numerous railcars in NZR service. Their purchase and introduction saw the demise of steam-hauled provincial passenger trains and mixed trains, and was part of a deliberate effort to modernise NZR passenger services at a time of increasing competition from private motor vehicles. Being diesel powered and lighter the railcars were less expensive to operate and able to maintain quicker timetables, although they became plagued with mechanical and electrical problems, with a number of the classes eventually being turned into depowered locomotive-hauled carriages and reclassified as the AC class "Grassgrubs".
The Night Limited was an express passenger train that operated in New Zealand between Wellington and Auckland, utilising the entire length of the North Island Main Trunk. It commenced service on 15 December 1924 and was replaced by the Silver Star in 1971 and supplemented by the Northerner express in 1975.
The NZR RM class Sentinel-Cammell was a steam-powered railcar operated by the New Zealand Railways Department (NZR). It was the only one of its type to operate in New Zealand, and one of only two steam railcars trialled in the country; the other was the Clayton steam railcar.
The Palmerston North–Gisborne Line (PNGL) is a secondary main line railway in the North Island of New Zealand. It branches from the North Island Main Trunk at Palmerston North and runs east through the Manawatū Gorge to Woodville, where it meets the Wairarapa Line, and then proceeds to Hastings and Napier in Hawke's Bay before following the coast north to Gisborne. Construction began in 1872, but the entire line was not completed until 1942. The line crosses the runway of Gisborne Airport, one of the world's few railways to do so since Pakistan's Khyber Pass Railway closed.
The Castlecliff Branch is a branch line railway 5.88 km long in the Manawatu-Whanganui region of New Zealand's North Island. It is an extension of the Wanganui Branch from Taupo Quay in central Whanganui and follows the Whanganui River to Castlecliff on the South Taranaki Bight of the Tasman Sea. From its opening on 31 October 1885 until 1 February 1956 when the NZR took over, it was owned by the Wanganui Heads Railway Company, later renamed the Castlecliff Railway Company. From 5 September 2006 services on the branch were suspended but the infrastructure remained in place. In 2011 KiwiRail resumed services on part of the line.
The Rotorua Branch is a railway line from Putāruru to Rotorua, in the Waikato and Bay of Plenty regions of the North Island of New Zealand. Construction of the line was commenced by the Thames Valley and Rotorua Railway Company and finished by the Public Works Department (PWD). The complete line, 50.5 kilometres (31.4 mi) in length, opened in two sections; on 24 November 1893 to Tārukenga and the final 8 mi 43 ch (13.7 km) to Rotorua on 8 December 1894.
The NZR DS class locomotive is a type of 16 diesel shunting locomotives built by the Vulcan Foundry and supplied by the Drewry Car Co from 1949–1955, for New Zealand Railways (NZR).
The NZR DSA class locomotive was a type of 0-6-0DM diesel-mechanical locomotives built by three different manufacturers: W. G. Bagnall, Hunslet, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, and Vulcan Foundry for the Drewry Car Co. They were built between 1953 and 1967.
Taonui railway station was a station on the North Island Main Trunk and in the Manawatū-Whanganui region of New Zealand. From 1879 to 1886 it was the junction for the Taonui Branch. A passing loop remains at the station site.
The Glen Afton Branch was a branch railway line of 7.9 km in the Waikato in New Zealand, built to serve coal mines in the Awaroa district west of Huntly at Rotowaro, Pukemiro and Glen Afton. Rotowaro is Māori for "coal lake".
The NZR Y class was a class of three 0-6-0T tank steam locomotives. Built by the Hunslet Engine Company for the Public Works Department in 1923, all three were sold to NZR between 1938 and 1945.
Ohakune railway station is a station on the North Island Main Trunk (NIMT), which serves the town of Ohakune in the Manawatū-Whanganui region of New Zealand. It is served by KiwiRail's Northern Explorer long distance train between Wellington and Auckland. It was called Ohakune Junction from 10 August 1926 until Raetihi Branch closed in 1968, to avoid confusion with Ohakune Town station on that branch. It was the second highest operating railway station in New Zealand, after National Park.
Oio was a station on the North Island Main Trunk line, in the Ruapehu District of New Zealand. It served the hamlet of Oio, which lay to the north of the station. It was 8.29 km (5.15 mi) north of Raurimu and 5.64 km (3.50 mi) south of Ōwhango. It was one of the many temporary railheads along the route, with work going on from 1904 to 1908.
Tangiwai was a station on the North Island Main Trunk line, in the Ruapehu District of New Zealand. The station served the settlement of Tangiwai. The nearby pulp and saw mills are now one of the main sources of freight on NIMT. In 1953 the Tangiwai disaster occurred when the nearby bridge over the Whangaehu River was swept away.
Karioi was a station on the North Island Main Trunk line, in the Ruapehu District of New Zealand. A passing loop remains.