The ZDM-2 class was designed and manufactured by Maschinenbau Kiel (MaK). The type was specially developed for the Indian 762 mm railway lines.[1] Locomotive No 600488 was tested on the Kreisbahn Osterode-Kreiensen750 mm gauge railway line before delivery.[2][3] The class was initially used on the Kalka–Shimla Railway and the Kangra Valley Railway, then later in Nagpur.[4] On the Kalka-Shimla line, ten ZDM-2 locomotives partly replaced the ageing steam locomotives and partly the inefficient and failure-prone ZDM-1 diesel locomotives for passenger transport. On the Kalka–Shimla line, ZDM-1 locomotives pulled only three passenger coaches, while ZDM-2 locomotives often pulled seven.[1] The ZDM-2 and ZDM-1 locomotives that remained on the line were completely replaced by ten ZDM-3 locomotives delivered between 1970 and 1972, the former being transferred to the South Eastern Railway in 1971–1972 and the latter to the Matheran Hill Railway in 1976.[1][5] The ZDM-2s were fitted with a hydraulic transmission of the Indian "Suri" type, which proved to be highly failure-prone.[4] The series was equipped with the Maybach "MD 435" diesel engine.[4][2] On the first ten units these operated at the speed of 1400 min⁻¹ for a power output of 650 metric horsepower (478 kW), while on the latter fifteen at 1700 min⁻¹ for a power output of 700 metric horsepower (515 kW).[2]
Several members of the type were modified in the 1980s and 1990s; they were fitted with KPC hydraulic transmissions and MaK diesel engines.[4][6]
It was tested on the Kreisbahn Osterode-Kreiensen before being delivered. In the 1980s or 1990s, it received a new transmission and engine. Scrapped[18]
^Wallace, Richard (2021-02-22). "The Kalka–Shimla Railway". Hill Railways of the Indian Subcontinent. Ramsbury: The Crowood Press Ltd. pp. 232–233. ISBN978-1785008085.
Locomotive types in italics are in production. G-type locomotives have diesel-hydraulic transmissions, DE-type locomotives have diesel-electric transmissions.