État 141-001 to 141-250

État 141-001 to 141-250, was a series of 2-8-2 steam locomotives of the Chemins de Fer de l'État.

État 141-001 to 141-250
SNCF 3-141.B → C
141.C.100 on the Train à Vapeur de Touraine heritage railway, 28 August 1983.
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
BuilderSchneider et Cie. (190)
SACM (60)
Build date1921–1923
Total produced250
Specifications
Configuration:
  Whyte2-8-2
  UIC1′D1′ h2
Gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Leading dia.850 mm (33.46 in)
Driver dia.1,650 mm (64.96 in)
Trailing dia.1,250 mm (49.21 in)
Length13 m (42 ft 8 in)
Adhesive weight67.8 t
Loco weight87.0 tonnes (85.6 long tons; 95.9 short tons)
Tender weight54.6 tonnes (53.7 long tons; 60.2 short tons)
Fuel typeCoal
Fuel capacity9 or 12 tonnes
Water cap22,000 litres (4,800 imp gal; 5,800 US gal)
Tender cap.7.0 tonnes (6.9 long tons; 7.7 short tons)
Firebox:
  Firegrate area
3.87 m2 (41.7 sq ft)
Boiler pressure12 kg/cm2 (1.18 MPa; 171 psi), later 14 kg/cm2 (1.37 MPa; 199 psi)
Heating surface207.37 m2 (2,232.1 sq ft)
Superheater:
  Heating area46.35 m2 (498.9 sq ft)
CylindersTwo, outside
Cylinder size630 mm × 700 mm (24.80 in × 27.56 in)
Performance figures
Maximum speed100 km/h (62 mph)
Power output1,700 hp (1,268 kW)
Career
OperatorsChemins de Fer de l'État → SNCF
ClassSNCF: 3-141.C
NumbersÉtat: 141-001 to 141-250
SNCF: 140.B.1 to 140.B.250
later 140.C.1 to 140.C.250
PreservedOne: 141.C.100

Overview

The series of 250 engines, numbered 141-001 to 141-250 were built in 1921. They were renumbered 141.B.001 to 141.B.250 by the SNCF in 1938 and ended their career in the West of France at the end of the 1960s.

Table of orders
YearManufacturerSerial nos.État nos.SNCF nos.Notes
1920Schneider et Cie.3630–3739141-001 – 141-1103-141.B.1 – 110
1921–1922Schneider et Cie.3740–3819141-111 – 141-1903-141.B.111 – 110
1923SACM (Graffenstaden)7232–7291141-191 – 141-2503-141.B.191 – 250

Design

The engines were capable of a speed of up 100 km/h. Their light weight per axle made them capable of hauling both passenger and goods trains on most of the Chemins de Fer de l'État’s network and of the former Chemins de Fer de l'Ouest. Due to the need of a simple to operate and solid locomotive, the Chemins de Fer de l'État even went to choose the pressure of the boiler (or timbre in French). The pressure was 12 kp/cm² or 12 hectopièzes (old units of measurement, 1.2 MPa in modern units), this enabled to machine to develop an output of 1,540 hp (1,150 kW) at 60 km/h and 830 hp (620 kW) at 100 km/h. From 1932 the timbre was increased to 14 kp/m² to obtain a power of 1,700 hp (1,300 kW) at 60 km/h and 1,160 hp (870 kW) at 100 km/h; locomotives were recoded from "B" to "C" as this work was done.

141.C.50 was rebuilt at Sotteville-lès-Rouen in 1928. This depot was built by the British and was the largest of the Chemins de Fer de l'Ouest (part of the État from 1908). There it received new Renaud type valves, saving 9.8% coal. It also received a Kylchap exhaust.

Preservation

One locomotive has been preserved: 141.C.100 (and tender 22.B.609) are in working order and are listed as a Monument historique.

in France 1956
gollark: Let us all configure our IDEs to blur text annoyingly.
gollark: Because they write less code?
gollark: As I like to say, being able to instantly see "ah, a for loop" and know what a for loop does instead of seeing `map` and `filter` and whatnot isn't the same as actually understanding the code, and `filter`/`map` allow you to focus on the actual problem instead of copy-pasting for loops.
gollark: "I like being able to look at code and see for loops but have no idea what's going on at a high level"
gollark: Why would you *like* C for **scripting**?!

References

  • Davies, John (August 2001). Chemins de fer de l'État Locomotive List 1878–1938. Woodbridge, Queensland: Dr. John Davies. pp. 101–105. ISBN 0-7316-8442-7.
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