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EMD G12

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(Redirected from SJ T42)

EMD G12 series
Class M2 570 – Alberta in Sri Lanka
Type and origin
Power typeDiesel–electric
BuilderGeneral Motors Electro-Motive Division (USA),
General Motors Diesel (Canada)
Clyde Engineering (Australia)
ModelG12
Build date1953–1968
Total producedB-B version: 670
A1A-A1A version: 300
C-C version: 126
Specifications
Configuration:
 • AARB-B, A1A-A1A and C-C
Gauge1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)
3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm)
4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)
5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm)
5 ft 6 in (1,676 mm)
Loco weight107 long tons (109 t; 120 short tons)
Fuel capacity2,840 litres (750 US gal; 620 imp gal)
Prime moverEMD 12-567C
Engine typetwo-stroke V12 diesel
Cylinders12
Cylinder size8.5 in × 10 in (216 mm × 254 mm)
TransmissionElectric
Performance figures
Power output1,310 or 1,425 bhp (977 or 1,063 kW)
Tractive effort19,100 kgf (187.3 kN; 42,108.3 lbf)
Career
DispositionMost scrapped, many preserved, some still in service

The EMD G12 is a class of export locomotive built by GM-EMD, and its Canadian affiliate General Motors Diesel. In addition, Australian licensee Clyde Engineering built ten locomotives for New Zealand in 1957, five for Hong Kong, 23 for Queensland, fourteen for Western Australia and seven for BHP. Australian licensee Commonwealth Engineering also built 42 for Queensland Rail in 1964–1966. Many examples were built in the 1950-1960s for railroads around the world.

They are powered by EMD 12-567C prime movers rated at 1,250 hp (930 kW); some have been rebuilt with EMD 645 engines. The A1A-A1A and C-C versions had a lower axle loading than the B-B version.

Original Owners

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B-B version

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Australia

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Brazil

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A total of 241 locomotives:

Canada

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Chile

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Egypt

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  • 97 Egyptian Railways 3701–3797.[3] During the 1967 Six-Day War, Israel captured 3712, 3715, 3766 and 3795, which were appropriated to Israel Railways stock.

Israel

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  • 23 Israel Railways 104–126,[4] some since rebuilt with 12-645E engines. After the 1967 Six-Day War, four captured Egyptian G12s were renumbered 127–130.[5]

Iran

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Hong Kong

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  • 5 Kowloon-Canton Railway Corporation No. 51–55[6][7]
    • Built by Clyde Engineering in Sydney, Australia in 1955 (51 and 52) and 1957 (53-55).
    • 51 Sir Alexander, named after by-then governor of Hong Kong in 1955, Alexander Grantham, was retired in 1997 and donated and preserved in Hong Kong Railway Museum in 2004.[8]
    • 52–55 were retired in June 2004 (however 55 did see limited shunting use for a short while) and re-sold to Chicago Freight Car Leasing Australia in October 2005, arriving that December and reentering service in late 2006-early 2007 as TL152–TL155. Before being loaded on the ship to Australia, the locomotives had their nameplates removed and KCR logos painted over.
      • TL152 (originally 52 Lady Maurine) sold to K&AB Rail c. 2014, to SCT 2020, now used as shunter at the Wimmera Intermodal Freight Terminal at Dooen.
      • TL153 (originally 53 H.P. Winslow) sold to the Dalby Machinery Centre in Dalby, west of Toowoomba in Queensland, as a static exhibit. On display at the entrance to the centre.
      • TL154 (originally 54 R. Baker) owned by ALARC, stored at Tailem Bend. No longer operable due to copper thieves, used as source of spare parts for TL155.
      • TL155 (originally 55 R.D. Walker) owned by ALARC. Restored in 2020, hired out to SCT.
    • The names of the locomotives were originally painted on the valance underneath the long hood catwalks, however they were replaced with cast nameplates in the late 1980s. All locomotives apart from 51 lost their names when sold to CFCLA.
    • 51 and 52 were built with Clyde's stock buffers-and-chain couplers, as well as the numberboard/headlight fixture flush with the top of the hoods. These were replaced with automatic couplers sometime after arrival in Hong Kong. 53 to 55 were built with slightly-lowered numberboard fixtures.
    • In 1996, the locomotives were heavily modified, with large air conditioning units mounted to the cab, diesel generators installed in the No. 2 end to power them (which involved slightly lengthening the long end hood under the numberboards) and full-length handrails. These modifications were retained on 51 at preservation (minus the air conditioner), to illustrate the changes the locomotives had went through during service in Hong Kong. Further modifications made to the locomotives in CFCLA service included installation of reinforced side windows, slightly widening the steps on the front left and rear right sides of the units and adding an extra rung to the modified steps. The original Hong Kong air conditioners had been removed when retired from KCR service, but new, smaller ones were fitted by CFCLA. The locomotives had the stock EMD exhaust pipes replaced with larger twin exhausts in the 1950s after arrival in Hong Kong, which were replaced with box-like exhaust silencers in the 1980s.
  • As delivered, the locomotives wore a green livery, with a silver upper section and the numbers painted on the cabsides and ends. In the 1980s, this was changed to a grey livery, with the cabside numbers relocated to the hood sides and replaced with a KCR logo, but retaining the silver upper section. In 1996, 54 was painted in a blue livery with green valances. 52, 53 and 55 would soon after be repainted in a red livery with blue valances, which all other operating KCR diesels were soon repainted into. 51 did not receive this livery, and in 2003 was repainted into a rough approximation of its original livery based on the 1980s livery.

Mexico

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Netherlands

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  • 5 Dutch State Mines SM 151-155 (Built in 1956-1959 under license as Henschel G12 in Germany). In 1970 sold to the Nederlandse Spoorwegen as series NS 2901–2905. In 1975 sold to Ferrocarriles de Vía Estrecha in Spain.

South Korea

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  • 25 Korean National Railways 4001–4015(From 4011 to 4015, the gear ratio was changed to change the speed to reach 153 km/h (95 mph), and the numbers were revised to 4301 to 4305), 4101–4110

Nigeria

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Norway

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Sri Lanka

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Sweden

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  • 1 locomotive bought by SJ in 1956, named at first T5, later T42. It was built by GM for sales demo in Europe, and SJ bought it afterwards. Now placed at the Swedish Railway Museum.

Venezuela

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  • 3 Government Coal Mines 01–03

A1A-A1A version

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Argentina

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Australia

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Brazil

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A total of 26 locomotives:

Indonesia

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Mexico

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New Zealand

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Sri Lanka

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Sri Lanka Railways Class M2D 628
  • 12 Sri Lanka Railways.[9] All except M2 571 still in daily operation (1). Classified as Class M2
    • Class M2 569–573; One locomotive (M2 571) destroyed by terrorism.
    • Class M2A 591–593; 591 damaged by 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami and later rebuilt
    • Class M2B 594–595
    • Class M2D 628–629

Taiwan

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United States

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C-C version

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Argentina

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A Ferroexpreso Pampeano EMD GR12 on the Sarmiento Railway.
  • 60 Sarmiento Railway as model GR12, initially 6576-6635 but later some were renumbered.

Australia

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A total of 66 locomotives:

Preservation

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KORAIL 4102 is the only preserved G12 in Korea, plinthed in front of Daejeon MPD [ko], alongside a single SD9 5025. Both engines worked for the construction of KTX's Gyeongbu section as departmental vehicles upon the retirement of KORAIL.

A former Australian-built KCRC G12 is preserved in the Hong Kong Railway Museum.

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ http://www.trafikverket.se/jarnvagsmuseum/publik-trafik/museitag/vara-tag/Diesel/T42-205/ [dead link]
  2. ^ "T42 205".
  3. ^ Hughes, Hugh (1981). Middle East Railways. Harrow: Continental Railway Circle. p. 26. ISBN 0-9503469-7-7.
  4. ^ Cotterell, Paul (1984). The Railways of Palestine and Israel. Abingdon: Tourret Publishing. p. 136. ISBN 0-905878-04-3.
  5. ^ Cotterell, 1984, page 103
  6. ^ https://www.checkerboardhill.com/2017/07/kcr-emd-g12-diesel-locomotives-australia/
  7. ^ "Forgotten locomotives: The CFCLA TL class". Bernie Baker, Motive Power, January-February 2022.
  8. ^ "Diesel Electric Engine No. 51 – "Sir Alexander"" (PDF). Hong Kong Heritage Museum. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
  9. ^ "Mainline Diesel–Electrics". infolanka.com.
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