Sydney C-Class Tram

Last updated

C-class
Sydney C-Class Tram 290 - Sydney Tramway Museum (22.07.2018).jpg
ManufacturerBignall & Morrison
Hudson Brothers
Clyde Engineering
Constructed1896-1900
Number built97
Fleet numbers4-17, 20-97, 289-291
Capacity20-26 (Seated)
Specifications
Train length22 ft 0 in (6.71 m) to 26 ft 0 in (7.92 m)
Width7 ft 3.5 in (2.22 m)
Height12 ft 1.5 in (3.70 m)
Maximum speed60 km/h
Weight8.41 long tons (8.5 t)
Power output4 x 36 hp (later 50)
Electric system(s) 600 V DC catenary
Current collection method Trolley pole
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)

The C-class trams were a class of single bogie end-loading electric trams operated on the Sydney tram network.

Contents

History

Preserved C11 at the Powerhouse Museum 1898 Sydney C-Class Electric Tram No 11 (6940476099).jpg
Preserved C11 at the Powerhouse Museum

Between 1896 and 1900, 97 C-class trams were built by three Sydney firms; Bignall & Morrison, Hudson Brothers and Clyde Engineering with bogies supplied by the Peckham Motor Truck & Wheel Co, Kingston, New York. There were four different body types, with variations in width, length, number of windows, and seating capacity (20-26). Three (289-291) were built as trailer cars, later being fitted with power equipment. [1]

A typical C-class tram featured a single saloon passenger area comprised two longitudinal timber benches facing inwards, accommodating 22 seated passengers, with standing room in the centre aisle. The interior featured varnished timberwork, and there was a clerestory roof with sidelights of coloured glass. Sliding doors at each end led to outside platforms where the driver controlled the tram. The driver was protected by an overhanging canopy, where passengers entered and left the car.

C-class trams towed steam tram and cable tram trailers, and many ran coupled together. There were also examples of C and D classes being coupled. Some of these C/C and C/D combinations became permanent, with the inner end driving controls being removed. They mainly operated from Ridge Street Tram Depot, and to a lesser extent from Rushcutters Bay, Ultimo and Waverley. [1]

In 1905, three (14-16) were sold to Ballarat. In 1907, four (23, 25, 38 and 39) were sold to the Victorian Railways as replacements for trams destroyed by a fire at Elwood depot. Mass withdrawals began in 1917 with all out of service by 1926. From 1924 until 1963, one tram (37) saw service on the jetty at Byron Bay as a locomotive-hauled car. [1]

Numbers

Preservation

Seven have been preserved:

Related Research Articles

Trams in Sydney

The Sydney tramway network served the inner suburbs of Sydney, Australia from 1879 until 1961. In its heyday, it was the largest in Australia, the second largest in the Commonwealth of Nations, and one of the largest in the world. The network was heavily worked, with about 1,600 cars in service at any one time at its peak during the 1930s . Patronage peaked in 1945 at 405 million passenger journeys. Its maximum street trackage totalled 291 km in 1923.

Double-decker tram

A double-decker tram is a tram that has two levels. Some double-decker trams have open tops. Double-deck trams were once popular in some European cities, like Berlin and London, throughout the British Empire countries in the early half of the 20th century including Auckland, Christchurch and Wellington in New Zealand; Hobart, Tasmania in Australia and in parts of Asia. They are still in service or even newly introduced in Hong Kong, Alexandria, Dubai, Oranjestad, Blackpool, Birkenhead, Franschhoek, Auckland and Douglas, mostly as heritage or tourist trams.

Trams in Australia

The earliest trams in Australia operated in the latter decades of the 19th century, hauled by horses or "steam tram motors". At the turn of the 20th century, propulsion almost universally turned to electrification, although cable trams lingered in Melbourne. In cities and towns that had trams, they were a major part of public transport assets.

The Swansea Improvements and Tramway Company operated street trams in and around Swansea in Wales from 1878 to 1937.

Sydney O-Class Tram

The O-class trams were a class of trams operated on the Sydney tram network.

Sydney P-Class Tram Class of trams

The P-class trams were a class of trams operated on the Sydney tram network.

Sydney R1-Class Tram

The R1-class trams were a class of trams operated on the Sydney tram network. Their design was a development of the R class.

Sydney R-Class Tram

The R-class trams were a class of drop-centre saloon car type trams operated on the Sydney tram network.

Sydney D-Class Tram

The D-class trams were a class of single bogie Californian Combination type trams operated on the Sydney tram network with open cross benches at the ends and a saloon in the centre.

Sydney Steam Motor Tram

The Steam tram motors were built for and operated by the New South Wales Government Tramways of Australia.

Sydney E-Class Tram

The E-class trams were a class of single bogie (four-wheel) single-ended cross-bench design trams operated on the Sydney tram network. They always operated in permanently-coupled pairs because they were fitted-out electrically as if the pair was a single bogie car.

Sydney F-Class Tram

The F-class trams were a class of two-bogie California combination car trams operated on the Sydney tram network with longitudinal seating in the open part of the car. They were later rebuilt as the L-class trams and some again as the L/P-class trams.

Sydney G-Class Tram

The G-class trams were a class of single ended cars were designed to operate either permanently coupled back to back in pairs or singly hauling a trailer on lines with reversing arrangements at the terminii.

Sydney H-Class Tram

The H-class trams were purpose built single truck, open cross bench cars built at Randwick Tramway Workshops as tourist cars for the City - Bondi Beach/Coogee and City - La Perouse/Botany services.

Sydney J-Class Tram

The J-class trams were built as replacements for the King Street to Ocean Street, Edgecliff cable line designed to provide a frequent schedule, but with a lower seating capacity. Some briefly operated on the Manly lines in 1911. With the entry into service of the R class, withdrawals commenced in 1934 with all out of service by 1936.

Sydney K-Class Tram

The K-class trams were a single truck all crossbench design, with closed compartments at one end and open seating at the other operated on the Sydney tram network. Withdrawals commenced in 1939. By 1949 only 1295 and 1296 remained in service on the Neutral Bay line, being withdrawn in the mid-1950s. Two were sold as track scrubbers in 1959 to Melbourne.

Sydney M-Class Tram

The M-class trams were built by the Randwick Tramway Workshops for use on tourist services on the Sydney tram network to replace two modified G class trams. Originally allocated to Fort Macquarie Tram Depot, they later moved to Newtown and again to Ultimo before being scrapped in 1941.

Sydney N-Class Tram

The N-class trams were a crossbench design of tram with a two-bogie design, each pair of benches had doors at each side.

P-class Melbourne tram

The P-class was a class of eight trams built by Duncan & Fraser, Adelaide for the Hawthorn Tramway Trust (HTT) as numbers 25 to 32. All passed to the Melbourne & Metropolitan Tramways Board on 2 February 1920 when it took over the HTT becoming the P-class and being renumbered 131 to 138.

Valley Heights Steam Tram Rolling Stock

Valley Heights Steam Tram Rolling Stock is a heritage-listed collection of tramway machinery at 17b Tusculum Road, Valley Heights, City of Blue Mountains, New South Wales, Australia. It was built from 1889 to 1891. The property is owned by Steam Tram and Railway Preservation (Co-op) Societ. It was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 21 October 2016.

References

  1. 1 2 3 MacCowan, Ian (1990). The Tramways of New South Wales. Oakleigh: Ian MacCowan. p. 115. ISBN   0 949600 25 3.
  2. "No. 11 electric C-class tram, 1898". Powerhouse Museum.
  3. 1 2 "Sydney Tramway Museum Fleet Register" (PDF). Sydney Tramway Museum. Retrieved 4 September 2013.
  4. "Car 95 Year Built: 1899". Illawarra Light Railway Museum Society.

Further reading

Commons-logo.svg Media related to Sydney C-Class Tram at Wikimedia Commons