South Australian Railways '720B' class 2-8-4
Designed by SAR Chief Mechanical Engineer Fred Shea.
Built at Islington Railway Workshops 1930-1943.
CYLINDERS (2) 22 ins x 28 ins (559mm x 711mm)
COUPLED WHEEL DIAMETER 57 ins (1,447.8mm)
TOTAL HEATING SURFACE 3,726 square feet (346m2)
(including superheater)
GRATE AREA 59.5 square feet (5.5m2)
BOILER PRESSURE 215 PSI (1,482.4 kpa)
TRACTIVE EFFORT (INCLUDING BOOSTER) 52,000 lbs (23,587kg)
TOTAL WEIGHT 232.3 tons (236 tonnes)
LENGTH OVERALL 83 feet 6 ins (25,450.8mm)
It was apparent, even after the removal of boosters, that the 710 'Mikados',
unlike the 700 class, could only work over the secondary light line network with
a reduced fuel/water load in their larger tenders. The SAR therefore decided to
build an even bigger, more powerful locomotive based on the earlier design but
with the same route availability as the original Webb 2-8-2's.
In theory this was to be achieved by increasing the boiler size and working
pressure, once again fitting a booster but supporting it in a four wheel
trailing truck and incorporating a large capacity tender carried on two six
wheel trucks. A mechanical stoker was also included.
Seventeen 720B class locomotives were built in two batches between 1930-1943,
these 'big Mikados' as they were called by just about everybody were in actual
fact the only 'Berkshire' types to ever operate in Australia. Unfortunately they
did not completely live up to their expectations damaging some of the lighter
track work and experiencing problems at locations where only 75 foot turntables
were provided.
The '720B's' therefore lived out their working lives hauling mainline freight
and passenger trains with the occasional excursion into parts of the secondary
network at a much reduced speed. Modifications included coal/oil firing and the
fitting of skirting below the running plates and smooth all over boiler casings
on the newer engines.
During the war years the 'Berkshires' ably assisted the 500, 600 and 700/710
classes in moving the vast increases in traffic but as diesels started being
introduced in the early 1950's they were among the first of the 'Big Engines' to
be condemned. Not one of them remains today, the last five being towed away for
scrap in April 1960.