JNR Class D51

JNR Class D51
Class D51
JR East's D51 498 on the Joetsu Line, December 2008
Power type Steam
Designer Hideo Shima
Builder Kawasaki Heavy Industries Rolling Stock Company etc
Build date 1936-1951
Configuration 2-8-2 Mikado
Gauge 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
Length 19,730 mm
Locomotive weight 76.8 t[1]
Locomotive & tender
combined weight
123.0 t
Top speed 85 km/h (55 mph)
Tractive effort 184.3 kN
Retired 24 December 1975

The Class D51 (D51形?) is a type of 2-8-2 steam locomotive built by the Japanese Government Railways, the Japanese National Railways and various manufacturers from 1936 to 1951. The name consists of a "D" for the four sets of driving wheels and the class number 51 for tender locomotives that the numbers 50 through 99 were assigned to under the 1928 locomotive classification rule.

The design of Class D51 was based on the earlier Class D50, which was introduced in 1923. A total of 1,115 D51 locomotives were built, the largest number of locomotives in a single class in Japan. Early D51s built were known as "Namekuji type" (or "slug"). The Class D51 is popularly called "Degoichi" in Japanese.

The specially built D51s that were left on Sakhalin (formerly Karafuto) by the retreating Japanese at the end of World War II were used until 1979 by Russian Railways. One was left outside Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk railway station, and one is in running condition and is kept at the Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk railway station. Additionally two wrecks were left to the north of the city.[2]

Contents

Preserved examples

Over 170 Class D51 locomotives have been preserved in Japan. D51 498 has been restored by JR East and hauls special event trains on JR East lines.[3]

The following is a partial list of preserved locomotives.

  • D51 1 – Preserved at Umekoji Steam Locomotive Museum in Kyoto
  • D51 2 – Preserved at the Modern Transportation Museum in Osaka
  • D51 51 – Preserved at Torokko Saga Station in Kyoto. (Previously at Kuzuha Mall in Kuzuha, Hirakata, Osaka from 1972 to 2004)
  • D51 187 – Preserved in front of JR East's Omiya Workshops, Saitama, Saitama
  • D51 200 – Preserved in operational condition by West Japan Railway Company at Umekoji Steam Locomotive Museum in Kyoto
  • D51 222 – Preserved in Yogi Park, Naha, Okinawa
  • D51 254 – Preserved in Suginami Jidō Kōtsū Park, Suginami, Tokyo
  • D51 272 – Preserved in Setagaya Park, Setagaya, Tokyo
  • D51 296 – Preserved in Fuchū Transport Park, Fuchū, Tokyo
  • D51 408
  • D51 426 – (Front end only) Preserved at JR East Railway Museum, Saitama, Saitama (Cab section is used as a driving simulator)
  • D51 451 – Preserved in Akishima Park, Akishima, Tokyo
  • D51 452 – Preserved at Ōme Railway Park, Ōme, Tokyo
  • D51 498 – Operated by JR East, based at Takasaki Rolling Stock Center[3][4]
  • D51 502 – Preserved in Kamichiba Sunahara Park, Katsushika, Tokyo
  • D51 853 – Preserved in Asukayama Park, Kita, Tokyo
  • D51 1001 – Preserved in front of the Koshoku Gymnasium, Chikuma, Nagano

Russian Class D51

Plinthed Russian D51-22 outside Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk Railway Station Sakhalin Island, Russia
  • D51-1: Niigata Prefecture
  • D51-2: Hokkaido
  • D51-4: Sakhalin (Working order, but faces uncertain future due to re-gauging of the Sakhalin Railways to the Russian gauge)
  • D51-22: Sakhalin (Plinthed outside Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk railway station)
  • D51-23: Hokkaido
  • D51-25: Hokkaido
  • D51-26: Hokkaido
  • D51-27: Hokkaido
  • D51-28: Sakhalin (Dumped at Tomari)
  • D51 ? : Sakhalin (2 D51s Dumped north of Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk at Dalny)

In fiction

A JNR D51 appears in Thomas & Friends as Hiro who carries the number "51" on his tender.

See also

Media related to D51 at Wikimedia Commons

References

  1. ^ Inoue, Kōichi (1999). 国鉄機関車辞典 [JNR Locomotive Encyclopedia]. Japan: Sankaido. p. 59. ISBN 4-381-10338-6. 
  2. ^ Steam and the Railways of Sakhalin Island - at International Steam Locomotives
  3. ^ a b JR全車輌ハンドブック2009 [JR Rolling Stock Handbook 2009]. Japan: Neko Publishing. 2009. ISBN 978-4-7770-0836-0. 
  4. ^ JR East Takasaki Branch D51 498 home page (Japanese) (Translate: Google, Babelfish)

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