CSAR Class E 4-10-2T


The Central South African Railways Class E of 1901 was a South African steam locomotive from the pre-Union era in Transvaal.
In 1901 and 1902, during the Second Boer War, the Imperial Military Railways placed 35 tank locomotives with a wheel arrangement in service, built to the design of the Reid Tenwheeler of the Natal Government Railways. In 1902, they came onto the roster of the Central South African Railways and were designated Class E.

Origin

When the Natal Government Railways identified a requirement for a tank locomotive which could haul at least one-and-a-half times as much as a Dübs A locomotive, a tank locomotive was designed by George W. Reid, Locomotive Superintendent of the NGR at the end of the nineteenth century. On the NGR, these locomotives became known as the Reid Tenwheelers, later designated the NGR Class C.

Manufacturers

In 1901, during the Second Boer War, the Imperial Military Railways of the invading British forces experienced a shortage of locomotives as a result of damage caused during hostilities and the transportation demands of the British Military. Lieutenant-Colonel E.P.C. Girouard KCMG DSO RE, the Commissioner of Railways for the Transvaal and Orange River Colony, therefore placed urgent orders for 35 locomotives of the NGR's Reid Tenwheeler type.
To ensure rapid delivery, the order was split between Dübs and Company, who built engine numbers 220 to 234, and Neilson, Reid and Company, who built numbers 235 to 254.

Characteristics

To be able to negotiate sharp curves, both the first and fifth pairs of coupled wheels of the Reid Tenwheeler locomotive were flangeless. The locomotive used saturated steam and was equipped with Allan straight link valve gear. The trailing Bissel truck was of the Cartazzi type, which allowed the axle some lateral movement.
The main shortcoming of the Reid Tenwheeler was a tendency to derail while reversing, particularly over points, since the trailing drivers were flangeless. On the NGR, this was overcome by increasing the tyre width of these wheels from to.
While the IMR locomotive was identical in construction to those built for the NGR, it had a weatherboard affixed to the coal bunker to offer the crew better protection against the elements when travelling bunker forward. The locomotives were more ornate than those in Natal and, in true military style, their brass domes, chimney caps and boiler bands were polished. The practice of polished brasswork was a trade mark of the IMR and was done with all their new locomotives. It was continued on the Central South African Railways after the IMR was disbanded.

Service

Imperial Military Railways

The Royal Engineer officers of the IMR considered the Reid Tenwheeler as an excellent and handy type of locomotive for the heavy gradients of 1 in 100 to 1 in 50. Most of the IMR's Reid Tenwheelers had been in service for less than a year when peace was declared on 1 June 1902. On 1 July 1902, the control of the railways was handed back to civilian authority.

Central South African Railways

The IMR was transformed into the CSAR, who took control of all railways in the Transvaal and the Orange Free State. One of the first steps taken by the CSAR was to classify and renumber all the locomotive stock, with tank locomotives classified alphabetically and tender locomotives numerically. The Reid Tenwheeler engines were designated, but retained their IMR engine numbers.
;Rebuilding to 4-8-2T Mountain
From c. 1903, six locomotives, numbers 222, 233 to 235, 245 and 252, were converted to Mountain type engines by removing the fifth pair of coupled wheels and blanking off the resulting opening in the frame, similar to the modification which was being done by the NGR on its own Reid Tenwheelers to make them better suited for the tight curves encountered on points during yard working.
;Rebuilding to 4-8-0TT Mastodon
Since the small coal and water capacity of the Reid Tenwheelers limited their radius of action, one of them was converted to a tank-and-tender configuration in 1904. The coal bunker, trailing bissel truck and the fifth pair of coupled wheels were removed, the frame was shortened and the locomotive was equipped with a tender from an obsolete Cape 4th class locomotive. As a tank-and-tender type, the modified locomotive was able to haul the same load as before, used less oil, was less troublesome and was considered by crews to be much more comfortable. As a result, the remaining 28 unmodified Reid Tenwheelers were similarly modified to the 4-8-0| Mastodon type configuration, using three-axle tenders from CSAR locomotives. This increased the coal capacity from and the water capacity from, which resulted in a considerable increase in the operating range of the locomotive.
Both modified versions of the locomotive were not reclassified on the CSAR, but were referred to as the Class E Converted. By 1912, when the classification and renumbering of all the rolling stock of the Cape Government Railways, NGR and CSAR onto the South African Railways roster took place, none of these locomotives survived in their original Reid Tenwheeler configuration.

Works numbers

The CSAR Class E builders, works numbers, rebuilding and disposition are listed in the table.
IMR &
CSAR no.
Builder
Works
no.
Rebuilt
to
SAR
no.
220Dübs40864-8-0TT1310
221Dübs40874-8-0TT1311
222Dübs40884-8-2T222
223Dübs40894-8-0TT1312
224Dübs40904-8-0TT1313
225Dübs40914-8-0TT1314
226Dübs40924-8-0TT1315
227Dübs40934-8-0TT1316
228Dübs40944-8-0TT1317
229Dübs40954-8-0TT1318
230Dübs40964-8-0TT1319
231Dübs40974-8-0TT1320
232Dübs40984-8-0TT1321
233Dübs40994-8-2T223
234Dübs41004-8-2TScrapped
235Neilson, Reid61964-8-2T224
236Neilson, Reid61974-8-0TT1322
237Neilson, Reid61984-8-0TT1323
238Neilson, Reid61994-8-0TT1324
239Neilson, Reid62004-8-0TT1325
240Neilson, Reid62014-8-0TT1326
241Neilson, Reid62024-8-0TT1327
242Neilson, Reid62034-8-0TT1328
243Neilson, Reid62044-8-0TT1329
244Neilson, Reid62054-8-0TT1330
245Neilson, Reid62064-8-2T225
246Neilson, Reid62074-8-0TT1331
247Neilson, Reid62084-8-0TT1332
248Neilson, Reid62094-8-0TT1333
249Neilson, Reid62104-8-0TT1334
250Neilson, Reid62114-8-0TT1335
251Neilson, Reid62124-8-0TT1336
252Neilson, Reid62134-8-2T226
253Neilson, Reid62144-8-0TT1337
254Neilson, Reid62154-8-0TT1338