Talyllyn (locomotive)

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Talyllyn
300px
Talyllyn at Tywyn Wharf railway station in 2009
Type and origin
Power type Steam
Builder Fletcher, Jennings & Co.
Serial number 42
Model Class C
Build date 1864
Total produced 1
Specifications
Configuration 0-4-0 ST, later 0-4-2 ST
Gauge 2 ft 3 in (686 mm)
Driver diameter 2 ft 4 in (711 mm)
Trailing dia 1 ft 9 in (533 mm)
Wheelbase
  • Coupled: 4 ft 0 in (1.22 m)
  • Loco: 8 ft 0 in (2.44 m)
Length 18 ft 0.5 in (5.50 m)
Loco weight 11 long tons 18 cwt (26,700 lb or 12.1 t)
Boiler pressure 160 lbf/in2 (1.10 MPa)
Cylinders Two, outside
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Performance figures
Tractive effort 5,781 lbf (25.72 kN)
Career
Operators Talyllyn Railway
Numbers 1

Talyllyn is a narrow gauge steam locomotive. It was built by Fletcher, Jennings & Co. in 1864 and is one of the oldest locomotives still in active service. It was delivered to the Talyllyn Railway on 24 September 1864 and continues to run on this railway.[1]

History

File:TalyllynBefore1895.jpg
One of the earliest photos of Talyllyn taken before 1895 and showing its original saddle tank

The Talyllyn Railway was the first British narrow gauge line to be built as a steam hauled railway from its conception. The company ordered two locomotives for its opening, Talyllyn and Dolgoch. Both were built by Fletcher, Jennings & Co. of Whitehaven, although to two very different designs. Talyllyn was the first order the company had delivered to north Wales and the first narrow gauge locomotive they had built with plate frames.[2] It was built to the company's C Class design, although it was the first member of its class to be built to a gauge less than 2 ft 8 in (813 mm).[1]

The saddle tank locomotive was originally delivered as a 0-4-0 ST with an open cab. Early tests on the railway showed that this wheel arrangement lead to unacceptable vertical oscillation, and in January 1867, Talyllyn was returned to its manufacturer for the fitting of a pair of trailing wheels, converting it into an 0-4-2ST. A cab was subsequently fitted in the railway's workshops at Pendre.[2]

File:Talyllyn1904.jpg
Talyllyn at Tywyn Wharf station in 1904
File:TalyllynNo1.jpg
Talyllyn at Abergynolwyn Station in 1999, carrying a green livery

One unusual feature of the conversion of Talyllyn to an 0-4-2 wheel arrangement is that the trailing axle was fixed rigidly to the frame, resulting in an overall wheelbase of 8 ft. Most 0-4-2 locomotives have the trailing wheels that are able to swivel independently of the frame, thus avoiding creating a long fixed wheelbase. To accommodate Talyllyn's long wheelbase, the gauge of the Talyllyn Railway was increased marginally to between 2 ft 3½in and 2 ft 4in.[1]

The locomotive was returned to Fletcher Jennings for a second time around 1900, although the reason for this visit is not recorded. Repairs and improvements were also made at Pendre over the years, including alterations to the cab, fitting of a footplate at the front of locomotive and of a sandbox. A new set of frames supplied by W.G. Bagnall's was also fitted at Pendre, again around 1900.[1]

Talyllyn remained in service for most of the life of the original railway. By the time of the Second World War it had fallen into a very poor state of repair, as it was the more popular of the two locomotives and was used more frequently.[1] It was finally retired in 1945 when its boiler and firebox were found to be beyond use or further repair. At this time the locomotive was still carrying its original 1864 boiler.[2]

In fiction

Talyllyn, along with Dolgoch, appeared many times in The Railway Series, in which it formed the basis for the character Skarloey.

Preservation

Following the rescue of the Talyllyn Railway in 1951, Talyllyn was inspected and found to be beyond economic repair. However as the railway's fortunes improved it became possible to consider a major overhaul. In 1957 the locomotive was sent away to the Gibbons Brother's Brierly Hill engineering works at Lenches Bridge in Pensnett[3] for a complete renewal. A new boiler, saddletank and bunker were built and Talyllyn returned to service in 1958.[2]

References

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