NZR Rollingstock

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A Brief Introduction

The term rollingstock is in many ways self explanatory in that it refers to all the railway 'stock' that rolls on the track. That then includes locomotives, (passenger) carriages, (goods) wagons, (guards) vans, and all special rail equipment like breakdown cranes, service wagons, and modern track maintenance machines etc. In its heyday, NZR had nearly 35,000 items of rollingstock and that all needed to be kept track of. Even in a railway's infancy, the number of rollingstock items increased quickly, Canterbury Provincial Railways started in 1863 with two 1st class and two 2nd class carriages and 18 trucks, ten years later the total had risen to nearly 300 and increasing rapidly. As each new railway was built, it received a standard allocation of locomotives, carriages and wagons, with additional stock acquired once demand had been confirmed. Other than the early railways that started independent from the national Government's public works policy, the types of rollingstock followed a set plan. 1871 say orders placed in England for complete carriages and wagons, usually in kit-set form to minimise shipping volumes, but quite quickly this was changed to importing only the iron-work for wagons with all the timber components sourced locally. Once metal processing machinery was well established in New Zealand, rollingstock could be completely manufactured here using just imported bulk iron and steel, however, more specialised items like wheels and axles continued to be manufactured 'at home'.

While total numbers remained comparatively low, items of rollingstock were quite easy to keep track of even though they were not numbered, as Canterbury Railways operated throughout the broad gauge period. It is likely that most sections of New Zealand's railways will have operated like this in their very early days, as the small number of different wagon types could easily be differentiated by using a simple descriptive term like 'high-sider' or 'horse-box' etc. At some point though, a better means of keeping track of individual items became necessary, and this may have happened at the same time that locomotives got formal classification letters

Classification of Rollingstock

From the very first days of railways there was a need to apply some form of classification to the various pieces of rollingstock a railway had in order to keep track of it all. This was as much for allocating the correct items to be on a train as it was for organising repairs or authorising loading. In New Zealand things were no different, even though railway started as small operations in various parts of the country, each section had to know what it had in order to be able to manage it properly. where all rollingstock was initially grouped by a descriptive names.

At the highest level, there were four groups, namely Locomotives, Carriages, Brake Vans and Wagons

Locomotives

Locomotives were initially classified on a system based on the size of the cylinders and the number of wheels. This was primarily a descriptive system that got too complex to extend beyond a handful of locomotive types. Eventually a letter system was adopted allowing for 26 different locomotive types. In practice, two of the letters were not used (I and Z) and some were used twice (A, D, E, J and K), and in our post steam era, locomotives are now confined to either a "D" or "E" primary classification letter for Diesel or Electric

Further details can be found on the page dedicated to NZR Locomotives

Carriages

Carriages are designed specifically for carrying people and were originally horse carriages adapted to run on rails. It wasn't long before the vision was realised of carrying many people in a single carriage. Modern carriages have seating for around 50 on long distance trains and somewhat more on commuter trains.

Carriages all carry a single primary classification letter (A - D) and later with sub letters denoting specific types. Originally carriages were classified with a descriptive term made up of two sections; the travel class followed by the wheel arrangement, i.e. 1st class, 4 wheel. While there was 1st and 2nd class cars, there were also Composite cars with one half 1st class and the other 2nd class. Originally there were only two wheel arrangements 4 and 6, resulting in six possible classifications. By 1878 however, things started to get more complex with now three wheel arrangements (4, 6 and 8), and a further descriptions of Side Door, or End Door. The 8 wheel type were additionally described as American Bogie, and there was also a patented 6 wheel configuration called Cleminson's Radial Axles (designed to minimise wheel wear). This now resulted in 18 different possibilities.

Over the next few years, certain categories started to drop off the lists and a few others come on. Cleminson's radial axles seem to have been replaced by Grover's under-frames, side-door cars were progressively phased out, and cross-seated cars got a category of their own, and Salon was now a 1st class option.

While 1899 was the first year that passenger carriages were recorded with classification letters in the Annual Returns to Parliament, the letters A - D had been in used for some time already, probably since letters were also allocated to locomotives in 1877. The introduction of letters in the annual returns did not do away with the descriptive classification terms.


Today, B, C and D cars have been eliminated completely leaving only some A cars in use by KiwiRail, the National rail operator. Examples of many of the older carriages have been saved by heritage groups, either restored or preserved for possible later restoration.

Further details can be found on the page dedicated to NZR Carriages

Brake Vans

Wagons

Classification

The classification of locomotives was formalised in 1877 with the introduction of letters to denote a specific type of locomotive. Variations of the type eventually got a second letter, and in one case even a third. The whole alphabet was reserved for locomotives.

In a similar way, other rollingstock also got allocated letters, A - D were for passenger carriages, E was for service wagons, F was for brake vans, and G - Z was for goods wagons.

The annual Parliamentary Returns did not start listing any wagon classification letters till 1886, unlike Locomotives, where classification letters were already recorded in 1881. Carriages and Vans were even later in 1889. It is assumed that carriages, Vans and wagons were allocated classification letters at the same time as locomotives might have been at the same time as locomotives. A careful study of photographic evidence will be required to shed more light on that.

The earliest classification list for Carriages, Vans and Wagons is shown in the following table.

Classification of Rollingstock excluding Locomotives
Class Description
A Bogie carriages over 30 feet long
B 30 foot bogie carriages
C all 6 wheel carriages
D all 4 wheel carriages
F all Brake vans
G Horse Boxes
H Cattle Truck
J Double Floor Sheep Truck
K Covered Goods Wagon
K2 Refrigerating Covered Goods Wagon
L High-Side Wagon
M Low-side Wagon
N Timber Wagon
O Iron Hopper Wagon
P Platform Coal Truck
R High-sire Bogie wagon
S Bogie Sheep Wagon

Even today, many of these classification letters still apply although the majority refer to 4-wheel wagons which have now been eliminated from ordinary train services. Un-used letters can also be recognised