The British Rail Class 01 diesel locomotive is a short wheelbase 0-4-0 diesel-mechanical design intended for use in areas with tight curves and limited clearance.

British Rail Class 01
A Class 01 at Holyhead Breakwater
Type and origin
Power typeDiesel-mechanical
BuilderAndrew Barclay Sons & Co
Serial number395–398, 424
Build date1956 (4), 1958 (1)
Total produced5
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte0-4-0DM
 • UICB-dm
Gauge4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Wheel diameter3 ft 2 in (0.965 m)
Minimum curve
Wheelbase6 ft 0 in (1.829 m)
Length23 ft 8 in (7.214 m)
Width8 ft 5 12 in (2.578 m)
Height11 ft 10 12 in (3.620 m)
Loco weight25.05 long tons (25.5 t; 28.1 short tons)
Fuel capacity325 imp gal (1,480 L; 390 US gal)
Prime moverGardner 6L3
RPM:
 • Maximum RPM1,200
Engine type6-cylinder in-line Four-stroke diesel engine
TransmissionMechanical: Wilson SE4, 4-speed epicyclic gear box, Vulcan-Sinclair type 23 rigid hydraulic coupling, to a Wiseman 15LGB reverse and final drive unit.
Loco brakeStraight Air
Train brakes
Performance figures
Maximum speed14.25 mph (22.9 km/h)
Power output
  • Engine: 153 hp (114 kW)
  • At rail: 102 hp (76 kW)
Tractive effort:
 • Continuous12,750 lbf (56.7 kN) at 2.63 mph (4.23 km/h)
Brakeforce15 long tons-force (150 kN)
Career
OperatorsBritish Railways
Numbers
  • 11503–11506, 81 (departmental)
  • later D2953–D2956
  • later 01001–01002
Axle load classRA 1
Withdrawn1966–1968 (except D2954–5), 1981
PreservedD2953, D2956 (1st)
Scrapped1969, 1982
Disposition2 preserved, 3 scrapped

History

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Four examples were built by Andrew Barclay Sons & Co. of Kilmarnock (Scotland) in 1956. They were numbered 11503–11506, then D2953–2956, and two survived long enough to become 01001 (D2954) and 01002 (D2955) on the TOPS system.[1] Their original depot allocation was to Stratford (30A). A fifth locomotive with detail differences was built in 1958 for departmental use at Peterborough Permanent Way Depot. It was originally No. 81 but was renumbered D2956 in July 1967 after the original D2956 had been withdrawn.[2]

The locomotives were very versatile, despite having only 153 horsepower (114 kW) available, and were small enough to operate on any railway on the BR standard gauge network, limited only by their low top speed of 14 14 miles per hour (22.9 km/h). They were also very reliable for such a small class, although Stratford Docks, where they originally worked, was not noted for having much use for them. Two examples, D2953 and D2956, were sold in 1966 and a third locomotive (the second D2956) followed in 1968.[3]

D2954 and D2955 survived in BR service because they were required to service the Holyhead Breakwater, being the only locomotives light enough for that track, the pair were used by William Wild & Sons Ltd.[4] They were renumbered 01001 and 01002 under TOPS. 01001 was not used after 1973 but was cannibalised for spare parts to keep its sister loco in service. 01001 was withdrawn in 1979, and 01002 followed in 1981. 01002 had last run when the Breakwater Railway closed in July 1980. Both locomotives were cut up on site still carrying their original livery of British Railways black with black-and-yellow "wasp stripe" warning ends and the original British Railways "unicycling lion" emblem; they were the last locomotives in BR service to do so.

Table of withdrawals
Year Quantity in
service at
start of year
Quantity
withdrawn
Locomotive numbers Notes
1966 5 2 D2953/56 (i) Both went into industrial use
1967 3 1 D2956 (ii) Formerly Departmental No. 81
1968–78 2 0
1979 2 1 01001
1980 1 0
1981 1 1 01002

Fleet list

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Locomotive Number Withdrawn Disposition
D2953 1966 Sold to Thames Matex Ltd., West Thurrock,[5] later preserved
D2956 (i) 1966 Sold into industrial use, later preserved
D2956 (ii) 1967 Scrapped
01001 1979 Scrapped
01002 1981 Scrapped

Technical details

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Class 01 locomotives had a Gardner 6-cylinder in-line, 4-stroke 6L3 engine of 153 hp (114 kW) at 1,200 rpm connected to a Wilson SE4, 4-speed epicyclic gear box with a Vulcan-Sinclair type 23 rigid hydraulic coupling, and a Wiseman 15LGB reverse and final drive unit. The wheels were connected by coupling rods and driven by a jackshaft.

Preservation

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Two pre-TOPS members survive in preservation:

Re-use of the '01' TOPS code

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More recently, the sub-classification 01/5 has come into use to refer to small, privately owned shunters certified to run on the national network. As such, 01/5 is a collective grouping of a number of very different locomotives, having in common only that they are small, hitherto unclassified shunters of designs never given a BR classification.

References

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  1. ^ Strickland, D.C. (1982). Locomotive directory: every single one there has ever been. Camberley: Diesel and Electric Group. p. 46. ISBN 0-906375-10-X.
  2. ^ Marsden, Colin (1981). A pictorial history of the diesel shunter. Oxford: Oxford Publishing. pp. unpaged. ISBN 0-86093-108-0.
  3. ^ Strickland, (1982), p.46.
  4. ^ Industrial Locomotives of Great Britain 1976. Smethwick, West Midlands: Industrial Railway Society. 1976. p. 231. ISBN 0-901096-27-X.
  5. ^ Industrial Locomotives 1982 including preserved and minor railway locomotives. Industrial Railway Society. 1982. ISBN 0-901096-43-1.
  6. ^ "Heritage Shunters Trust | www.HeritageShuntersTrust.com | Rowsley|". www.heritageshunterstrust.com. Retrieved 2 October 2021.
  7. ^ "ELR Diesel Group - Class 01 D2956". www.elrdiesel.info. Retrieved 2 October 2021.

General references

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Further reading

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