NZR's Early Car-vans 2
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NZR's EARLY CAR-VANS
Part 2 The 44ft and 46ft 7in
Class 'A' low Roofed Bogie Cars
Author John Agnew
The full article can be found in New Zealand Railfan, Issue 58, March 2009, pages 23 - 27. John has given permission to make the whole article available so that will eventually be possible at this link
This article-summary aims to list the key facts, reference specific items of rolling stock mentioned, and describe the drawings and photographs that are presented in the full article.
The Developments
- Car_A300(W) was the New Zealand's first Bogie Carriage, a conversion of Car_C140 with American bogies. Te work done at Petone in 1877.
- mid 1878, Addington Workshops working on converting British 6-wheel cars to bogie cars to improve ride.
- mid 1878, Clemenson's patent Radiating Axles were fitted to some cars at Addington and Hillside
- 30 Clemenson's 6-wheeled carriages imported in 1879 - the last British imports
- 13 Gilbert Bush & Co clerestory-roofed carriages and one Baggage Car imported from USA in 1879 (3 cars and the van ordered for Rakaia and Ashburton Forks Railway, 10 cars allocated to Hurunui - Bluff Railway)
- From 1882, Addington Workshops started building 43ft and 44ft versions
- From 1882, C class cars were being converted to bogie cars using (Blueprint) BP_919.
- During the 1884 -1885 period 14 longer (46'-7") cars were constructed to drawing PWD_9133
- The only two C class rebuilds that were 44ft long and converted to car-vans (one in 1895 the other in 1897) were allocated 1 to each island.
- Car_A311 had been allocated to Wellington and was converted to a car-van at Petone Workshops in 1895 to a variation of BP_919
- Car_A241 had been allocated to Dunedin and converted to a car-van in 1897 at Hillside
- Eleven of the twelve S.I. 46'-7" carriages (so not car_A147), were converted to composite car-vans at Addington or Hillside during 1897-99