TDLR 1 to 3, 6, and 8
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The Tralee and Dingle Light Railway (TDLR) locomotives 1, 2, 3, 6, and 8 were locomotives manufactured by the
Hunslet Engine Company The Hunslet Engine Company is a locomotive-building company, founded in 1864 in Hunslet, England. It manufactured steam locomotives for over 100 years and currently manufactures diesel shunting locomotives. The company is part of Ed Murray & So ...
of Leeds, England between 1889 and 1910. The
Tralee and Dingle Light Railway __NOTOC__ The Tralee and Dingle Light Railway and Tramway was a , narrow gauge railway running between Tralee and Dingle, with a branch from Castlegregory Junction to Castlegregory, in County Kerry on the west coast of Ireland. It operated bet ...
was incorporated in 1888. Its construction began soon afterwards and the line opened on 31 March 1891. The first three locomotives arrived from Hunslet Engine Company in 1889 and were used in the construction work. The railway consisted of a long main line from Tralee to Dingle and a long branch from Castlegregory Junction to Castlegregory. The rail head on Dingle pier was claimed to be the most westerly point reached by a railway in Europe. These five Hunslet locomotives operated for the Tralee & Dingle and at the 1925 amalgamation and became Great Southern Railways Class 1T or Class KN2.


History

Much of the line was a roadside tramway and the locomotives adorned accordingly with "skirts", to shield the driving wheels and motion, a bell mounted on the boiler, cowcatchers, headlights etc. Although accepted as a legal requirement for road-side tramway lines the "skirts" were removed after only a short period, this giving crews easier access to the oiling points of the motion. As far as can be seen from early photographs of the line these "skirts" never returned. The maximum permitted speed on the roadside lines was but on fenced sections this was raised to The two batches of Hunslet 's were almost identical, certainly to the eye. The main difference was in the number of boiler tubes, increasing the heating surface in the later batch giving a slightly higher tractive effort (by around 1,000 lbf). All T&D locomotives carried their numbers on cast plates attached to the side tanks. Locomotive No. 1 was involved in the Camp accident in 1893 when the train “ran away” down the 1 in 29 (3.4%)
gradient In vector calculus, the gradient of a scalar-valued differentiable function of several variables is the vector field (or vector-valued function) \nabla f whose value at a point p is the "direction and rate of fastest increase". If the gr ...
towards a sharp curve leading onto a bridge over the river. It was said that it hit the curve doing and went into the river, the locomotive losing a sandbox which was on the top of the boiler behind the chimney. Locomotive No. 6 was a star of the GSR accident reports, not only featuring more times than all the other T&D locomotives put together but its adventures being featured in a story by the Rev. W. Awdry. The locomotive wasted no time in featuring on report as its first GSR accident was on the new company's first day of operation when it hit a car, and there cannot have been many about in January 1925. In later years it was involved in the running down of a travelling circus and then problems with the
Cork and Muskerry Light Railway The Cork and Muskerry Light Railway was a narrow gauge railway in County Cork, Ireland. The first part of the railway opened in 1887 and closed in 1934. A major reason for building the railway was to exploit tourist traffic to Blarney Castle. ...
steam roller A steamroller (or steam roller) is a form of road roller – a type of heavy construction machinery used for leveling surfaces, such as roads or airfields – that is powered by a steam engine. The leveling/flattening action is achieved through ...
, the incident being the one in which '' Sir Handel'' played the part in the Rev. Awdry story "The Gallant Old Engine". The worst of these accidents, however, occurred when the locomotive came off the rails on the approach to Lispole viaduct, finishing halfway down the embankment. Locomotive No.6 was used on the dismantling trains following the closure of the Cavan and Leitrim Railway before itself being scrapped.


Livery

The locomotives were painted dark green lined out with red between two cream lines. The
buffer beam A headstock of a rail vehicle is a transverse structural member located at the extreme end of the vehicle's underframe. The headstock supports the coupling at that end of the vehicle, and may also support buffers, in which case it may also be ...
s were painted red. In the days of the Great Southern Railways the locomotives were painted in a plain grey livery, the buffer beams being red.


References

* {{Ireland Steam Locomotives, state=collapsed 2-6-0T locomotives Steam locomotives of Ireland Hunslet narrow gauge locomotives Railway locomotives introduced in 1889 3 ft gauge locomotives Scrapped locomotives