The 5 Most Powerful (NOT AMERICAN) Steam Locomotives Ever | History in the Dark

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  • Опубликовано: 1 авг 2024
  • People from around the world wanted to know how powerful their steam locomotives were. That's fair.
    0:00 - Intro
    2:57 - DRG Class 45
    5:23 - Victorian Railways H class
    7:45 - New South Wales AD60 class
    10:56 - Soviet locomotive class AA20
    14:19 - Franco-Crosti Boiler locomotive
    🚂 Further reading 🚂
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DRG_Cla...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victori...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Sou...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_...
    locomotive.fandom.com/wiki/Be...
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    #trains #top5 #powerful

Комментарии • 196

  • @Eric_Hunt194
    @Eric_Hunt194 Год назад +88

    The Belgians needed such a BIG CHUNGUS locomotive for all their steeply graded lines over the huge mountains that Belgium is so famous for... 😂😂😂

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 Год назад +6

      Maybe the cross.over the bordets to netherlands at times

    • @federicoghisafi3384
      @federicoghisafi3384 Год назад +5

      In fact it was meant for freight on alps. It was designed by italians

    • @keiranallcott1515
      @keiranallcott1515 Год назад +10

      I thought they would need it for their Belgium chocolate trains

    • @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis
      @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis Год назад +3

      @@federicoghisafi3384that makes sense.

    • @nielsleenknegt5839
      @nielsleenknegt5839 7 месяцев назад

      Oh no, we made that thing cus we could.

  • @QLDrailfan798
    @QLDrailfan798 Год назад +41

    as an Australian it feels great to know that 2 of our locos are in the top 5 Most Powerful steamers (that aren't American) out there, also Belgium, what were you planning with that thing.

    • @megladon6
      @megladon6 Год назад +1

      Makes sense. Strong locomotives need long stretches of straight lines. Australia is the perfect runner-up when it comes to long straight tracks. Russia gets an honorable mention when you get past the Urals.

    • @QLDrailfan798
      @QLDrailfan798 Год назад +1

      @@megladon6 thinking about it... yea we do have flat plains here soo I don't see why we shouldn't have big engines.

    • @Phoenix_emperor76
      @Phoenix_emperor76 Год назад

      We were erunk when designing it alright

    • @obelic71
      @obelic71 Год назад +1

      The most heavy trains in Belgium were the Steel, Iron ore trains from the Liege (steelmills) to Antwerp (seaport)
      The coal was mined also mined in and around Liege.

    • @liammatthews5656
      @liammatthews5656 10 месяцев назад +1

      He missed out the NSWGR D57, though - so it's actually 3 of 5, not 2 of 5

  • @keiranallcott1515
    @keiranallcott1515 Год назад +13

    Dear history in the dark , great video , two things that I would like to add about the ad60 Garratts, 6029 is about to run to the blue mountains with 3801. When they were ordered , we had on the nswgr , the d57 and d58 class which matched the garratts in terms of power output but were too heavy for branch lines. And curtains lines , such as the short north to Newcastle , where garratts were used for the big coal trains from fassifern. I’m a bit surprised that the Canadian 2-10-4 or i believe there are known as the seirkirk locomotives didn’t make the list.

  • @zingerboxdemolisher
    @zingerboxdemolisher Год назад +13

    Good to see the AD60 getting the respect it deserves.

  • @bendavies8881
    @bendavies8881 11 месяцев назад +9

    The United Kingdom does in fact have a dog in this fight, in the form of Gresley's U1. Even in the post steam era not many things surpassed it in terms of tractive effort!

  • @neilsonthegreat
    @neilsonthegreat Год назад +50

    I think LNER U1 should have taken the place of the AA-20 cause the U1 has a tractive effort of 72,940 lbf so 1000 lbf more than that Soviet AA-20

    • @bussesandtrains1218
      @bussesandtrains1218 11 месяцев назад

      Really!

    • @neilsonthegreat
      @neilsonthegreat 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@bussesandtrains1218 yeah

    • @hummingbird9149
      @hummingbird9149 11 месяцев назад +4

      The list is odd, as for one the first mentionedDRG Class 45 has well over 300 kN tractive effort, not 245 kN. Even the quite numerous Class 44, of which examples still run, clocks in at a nominal 291 kN. So yeah, not sure he got his figures from

  • @doge_sevens
    @doge_sevens Год назад +4

    Idk if Canada counts as not us but the Canadian Pacific Selkirks had a tractive effort of around 75,771

  • @PiersDJackson
    @PiersDJackson Год назад +6

    Regarding the "most powerful Garratt ever", the NSWGR AD60's are a close second to the Bengal Nagpur Railway class P - double mountain, at 69,655 lbf (309.84 kN).

  • @polandballrbx9954
    @polandballrbx9954 Год назад +4

    where is the SNCF 241s?

  • @bayernbahn1549
    @bayernbahn1549 Год назад +9

    Um yes, I'm completely speechless! Belgium!? But it would be somehow cool to see the locomotive as a replica. Oh yes, the video was of course great as always and I think almost everyone could learn something!

  • @kisarabanuja3254
    @kisarabanuja3254 Год назад +13

    Is nobody gonna talk about the LNER U1 garratts, it was the most powerful steam locomotive in Great Britain (possibly in Europe). I feel the Brits could have had a chance to be in the list after all.

    • @sawspitfire422
      @sawspitfire422 Год назад +5

      72,940lbs of tractive effort, should be ahead of that ghastly AA-20

    • @crocowithaglocko5876
      @crocowithaglocko5876 Год назад +2

      Agreed

    • @MercenaryPen
      @MercenaryPen Год назад +4

      to be fair, the U1 is a relatively obscure locomotive (similarly to the LMS Garratt that did banking duties on the Lickey incline), Darkness may not have been aware of the class

    • @kisarabanuja3254
      @kisarabanuja3254 Год назад

      @@MercenaryPen I am pretty sure he has mentioned both the classes of Garratts in his previous videos.

    • @neiloflongbeck5705
      @neiloflongbeck5705 Год назад

      ​@@MercenaryPenso? I'd not heard of the Class 45 before today 9r the AD60. As he's covered the U1 before, your defence is laughable.

  • @Tiger351
    @Tiger351 Год назад +5

    Most of the AD60's "branch line service" was coal haulage, my late Grandfather used to drive them from collieries around Lake Macquarie and the Mandalong Valley on occasion when he wasn't driving C36/38 passenger runs or the newer diesels.

  • @TheNightmareRider
    @TheNightmareRider Год назад +19

    Impressive! Though you missed one in the #2 spot. The SAR GL Class Garratt, blowing the NSW Garratt out of the water with 78,650 lbf (349.9 kN)! I do love that a Garratt managed to get on this list, though :).

    • @shaunbrierley5864
      @shaunbrierley5864 Год назад +7

      The East African Railways 59 class 4-8-2 + 2-8-4 Garratt was even more powerful, with a tractive effort of 83,350 lbf

    • @user-gz6hn1kb4y
      @user-gz6hn1kb4y Год назад +3

      dont forget 59 class from Kenya. South African GMAM' are also stronger than the AD 60

    • @nigelslade5276
      @nigelslade5276 11 месяцев назад

      All 59 class garratts were modified with Giesl ejector and gained another 3-4 % more power @@shaunbrierley5864

    • @ianmandy127
      @ianmandy127 9 месяцев назад +1

      And a gl is on a 3foot 6 inch line, very impressive for that gauge

    • @ianmandy127
      @ianmandy127 9 месяцев назад

      @@shaunbrierley5864 but it was oil fired i think where the gl was coal fired

  • @TheHoveHeretic
    @TheHoveHeretic Год назад +5

    At 72,940lbs TE, the U1 just gotta be an omission. Is one loco a 'class'?
    Edit: with 78, 940lbs @75% BP, surprised the SAR Class GL 4-8-2+2-8-4 didn't make the cut. A great example of what happens when a Garratt is designed by people who know what they're doing (Yes, LMS Garratts .... I'm looking at you), the GL class retired in the early 1970s, with over 40 years of the heaviest traffic on the SAR behind 'em .... and even then, only because there wasn't any work left needing steam haulage.

  • @ALCO-C855-fan
    @ALCO-C855-fan 6 месяцев назад

    DRG!!! DRG!!! DRG!!! Class 45!!! Thank you SO MUCH Darkness for including my country!^^❤🎉😊

  • @johnd8892
    @johnd8892 Год назад +7

    The Victorian Railways H class, Heavy Harry H 220, may have the others beat on the basis of the 3,600 HP recorded at 50 mph with a dynamometer car on a test run.
    Pity the other 3 planned H class were not built and the streamlining planned not proceeded with in war time conditions.
    Written by someone who climbed into the massive firebox and the huge water space of the tender of H 220 as a kid in the newly opened North Williamstown Railway Museum near me.
    Not that you can do that sort of thing anymore.

    • @PiersDJackson
      @PiersDJackson Год назад +1

      From a "What if..." perspective, if VR had continued with their intentions for the construction of minimum four H classes and an additional six S classes... to be named:
      S304 George Bass, S305 Hamilton Hume, S306 John Batman, S307 John Pascoe Fawkner, S308 Sir Redmond Barry, and S309 William Lonsdale;
      H220 George Higginbotham, H221 Sir Ferdinand Von Mueller, H222 Peter Lalor, and H223 Alfred Deakin.
      If you wonder why they're these names? They're the next names in the replacement S class Diesel-Electrics... then swapping over to the H for the "second series".

    • @wezza60
      @wezza60 11 месяцев назад +2

      Sad the beautiful VR S class pacifics were all scrapped before the preservation era, Luckily H220 survived.

  • @JordysRailVideos
    @JordysRailVideos Год назад +6

    Oh hey H220 "Heavy Harry" again

  • @sawspitfire422
    @sawspitfire422 Год назад +22

    I feel it makes sense no British locos ended up here. First of all our routes have very short distances between major junctions and stations compared to USA and Australia. Secondly our hills simply aren't as big as other places. The steepest grades on UK mainlines are only sustained for 5 miles or less, the famous Lickey incline only being 2 miles. Speed and acceleration has always been a more pressing factor for British rails than sheer slogging tractive effort, especially since even in the age of steam passenger travel made up a large portion of traffic on the lines. Even freight jobs had to perform quick dashes between sidings to clear the main for express passenger trains across a lot of the network, it's just how our railways were run.
    Edit: except LNER U1 which should be in second place on this list.... I mean if AA-20 is here U1 should be too

    • @markbarrile2930
      @markbarrile2930 Год назад +6

      I think one of the major factors limiting UK freight loco power was the lack of braked goods rolling stock.
      Having a loco that could drag a 1000 ton train wasn't much good it you couldn't stop it. Add to that the much smaller loading gauge that restricted having big big cylinders and the UK loco's were always going to be lower powered than their US or Australian contemporaries. That said, as far as efficiency and speed, UK stuff has it hands down.
      Long live the Duchess!

  • @ShinGhidorah17
    @ShinGhidorah17 Год назад +2

    Extreme missed opportunity to not include the NSB Class 49, the largest and strongest steam locomotive in Norway, which had a tractive effort of 468kN.

  • @WigglerFan5
    @WigglerFan5 11 месяцев назад +1

    as an Aussie, I am impressed how powerful some of our locos are. and if your wondering what the AD60s are, they are basically the Beyer-Garratts from the UK and southern Africa, but Aussie as well as like 2x more powerful! I am also a huge fan of the AD60 class. Also, for the next episode of the best train locos series, please include 3801 if you haven't in a prior episode. I havent watched them all yet because there are so many, but if you havent already include 3801 in the next episode.

  • @brycehill6678
    @brycehill6678 Год назад +3

    Huh. I woulda thought that Bertha would have snuck into #5. Guess not lol.

  • @martinanschutz7410
    @martinanschutz7410 Год назад +3

    First , the Belgien quadruplex could pull around 420kN or 92500lbs.
    The russian Yellowstone P38 449,65kN or 99042lbs.
    EAR class 59 Garrett 378kN / 83260lbs .
    And my favorite loco SNCF 160 A 1 , a 2-12-0 6hv pull 360kN /79295lbs.

  • @localcarthief
    @localcarthief Год назад +2

    You should take a look at the NSW D57 class, which was surprisingly more powerful than the AD60s

  • @infinity6450
    @infinity6450 Год назад

    When the AD60s popped up, I had to refrain from going "Aussie Aussie Aussie!"

  • @austinschmuck7814
    @austinschmuck7814 Месяц назад

    If you ever make a second one of these, you should definitely include the Soviet P38 locomotive. She was a 2-8-8-4, and had a tractive effort of 91,018 lbs (44913.86 kg) they only ever built 4 of them. From what I've found, she actually worked, unlike the massive AA-20.

  • @rannicel
    @rannicel Год назад +1

    I remember seeing the 45 class when I was 6 it was my favorite locomotive

  • @donutlordband24
    @donutlordband24 11 месяцев назад +1

    you said useful in regards to a train! you're transformation into the fat controller is complete

  • @nielsleenknegt5839
    @nielsleenknegt5839 7 месяцев назад

    "Why belgium, why?"
    "Because why not?"
    Refuses to elaborate.

  • @joshjones3408
    @joshjones3408 Год назад +1

    An a quadruplex.....they just dent get enough hugs when it was still the little engine that could. great video 👍👍👍👍

  • @sangheiliwarrior86
    @sangheiliwarrior86 Год назад +2

    The strongest steam locomotive I'm aware of from outside of the USA was a 4-8-2-2-8-4 Garratt built by Beyer Peackock for the Soviets. It had around 90,000 lbs of tractive effort, and I think it was also the largest steam locomotive in Europe at the time.

    • @TheHoveHeretic
      @TheHoveHeretic Год назад +1

      That one seems to have died a quiet death in the Soviet Union. AFAIK, not other Garratt trod SZD rails. Garratts always seemed better suited to warmer climes!

    • @PiersDJackson
      @PiersDJackson Год назад +1

      Along the lines of Garratts, David Wardale was contracted to do his development magic, for the Chinese Government Railways. In an effort to stop doubleheading of QJ class locomotives, he proposed building a Garratt reusing components of two QJ's. It is surmised that a prototype was built, but did not proceed due to government changes, and Wardle moving on.
      It would have been a 2-10-2+2-10-2, with four cylinders of 25.59" × 31.50" each, with a new build 94" diameter boiler, 132 ft² firebox, at 255psi, and mechanical stoker.
      The projected output was 126,470 lbf tractive effort and between 4950 Hp and 7150 Hp...

  • @FMAChet
    @FMAChet 11 месяцев назад

    14:19 What...Just...WHAT?!?
    I can't, I just can't comprehend the fact that kind of locomotive exsists.

  • @nickeinmal8924
    @nickeinmal8924 Год назад

    class 45 One of the few locomotives that I have seen live at the Eisenbahn Treffen in Bavaria,👍🏻🚂

  • @shadychandelure2602
    @shadychandelure2602 Год назад +1

    New video gets uploaded
    *glances at clock* 12:10 at night
    Me: yeah i got time

  • @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis
    @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis Год назад +1

    It still surprises me that the AA20 was not converted into a stationary steam boiler for heating train cars and buildings in Moscow.

  • @jonathanpan6110
    @jonathanpan6110 Год назад +2

    Where tf is the LNER U1

  • @MrJannie101
    @MrJannie101 3 месяца назад +1

    The China Railways QJ class should be on here too

  • @markstott6689
    @markstott6689 Год назад +3

    The 9F is better looking than anything that makes the list. Well, I at least think so. 😊❤😊

    • @Alexander-km8es
      @Alexander-km8es 4 месяца назад

      Nah I beg to differ heavy Harry has better smoke deflectors and is more intimidating in power over all

  • @davidnewby6095
    @davidnewby6095 Год назад +1

    how about a 5 most powerful uk steam locos next

  • @luukgodschalk2573
    @luukgodschalk2573 9 месяцев назад

    Can u make a vid of the longest steam engines

  • @tsuaririndoku
    @tsuaririndoku Год назад +2

    The reason why Belgium locos were powerful because it all not runs by coal but waffles

  • @thekayakingpyromaniac9876
    @thekayakingpyromaniac9876 Год назад

    nice to see garrets come up again

  • @penguinmaster7
    @penguinmaster7 Год назад

    a part of me wants a compilation of every time Darkness says "big chungus"

  • @WizardOfOss
    @WizardOfOss Год назад

    As for the why of that Belgian Big Chungus: Things like that happen when you enjoy their amazing beer too much...

  • @simonf8902
    @simonf8902 10 месяцев назад

    Fortunately we have a fully functioning Beyer Garrett in NSW 6029. And they were used extensively until the 1970s.
    And they are said to be the most powerful locomotive in the Southern Hemisphere.

  • @martinperry4327
    @martinperry4327 Год назад +2

    As already mentioned, the LNER U1 should have been on the list; en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/LNER_Class_U1

  • @4201productions
    @4201productions 11 месяцев назад

    The NSWGR AD-60 ended up being in service until the early 1970s due to their relatively simple maintenance procedures and reliability which is rather impressive, 6029 is A rather common sight on museum events, she is operational and runs regularly. They are also the most powerful steam locomotive in the southern hemisphere, 7th most powerful in the world.

  • @williamsquires3070
    @williamsquires3070 Год назад +1

    What if you rate the top 5 steam locomotives (any country) by power-to-weight ratio?

    • @marmion150
      @marmion150 11 месяцев назад

      If you did that, I think the winner would be the SNCF Chapelon 4-8-0s ,39.1hp per ton of engine weight.

  • @newobanproductions999
    @newobanproductions999 10 месяцев назад +1

    10:51 "Most powerful locomotives to operate on Australian railways."
    NSWGR 57 class 4-8-2: You do know we're stronger than the 60 class Garratts? We produce 65,000lbf or 289.1kN which we used to great effect, leading to crews calling us "Lazy Lizzies" as we made heavy workings seem effortless.

  • @ostsan8598
    @ostsan8598 11 месяцев назад

    Doing the rough calculation for the Belgian Quad, I get a high end estimate of 96,935 lb of tractive effort. But that's using the rough estimate formula for starting tractive effort, assuming that she has 8 cylinders that all see boiler pressure, no compounding. If she was a compound, then her tractive effort would be lower, due to the reduced steam pressure.

  • @henrywang3977
    @henrywang3977 Год назад +1

    I'd like to see more Chinese engines in your channel. There are some good examples.
    China designed a freight locomotive based on soviet FD engine and AV engine.
    The interesting thing is... it has more tractive power than AA20.
    Both engines has 20t axis load, one is 4-12-4 and 208t in engine weight, another is 2-10-2 and 134t in engine weight. AA20 is designed to have 320kN tractive effort, which it has never reached in actual use. While Qianjin has a 340kN tractive effort, although being a small engine comparing to American monster locomotives.
    It's designed to have 2980 horsepower, brought by well-designed firebox capable to chewing down almost any kind of coal better than lignite and peat, and sometimes may exceed the designed power output when running in good conditions. One of the commonly used tricks back in Mao era, was that the mechanical stoker can be turned off, switching to manual mode will save extra steam energy used to run the locomotive itself, therefore making the engine consume less coal or generate more power.
    I'm sure it deserves having a seat among most powerful non-American steam locomotives.
    And although desgined as a feright locomotive, with only 1.5m wheel diameter, Qianjin has a maximum speed of 85km/h, capable to be put in passenger service. And it was widely used in passenger service until 1990s.
    I guess it should be one the best cost efficient locomotive types. And I heard that Qianjin is the most fuel efficient one among mass-produced locomotives.
    There was a plan to further improve its power and efficiency, by introducing the same technology used on South Africa 25NC. And there was actually one engine (QJ-8001) made in this way. But such modification would hurt the cost efficiency, with limited improvements in the already good enough combustion efficiency and power output, and will not improve the tractive effort which is already near the physical ceiling of friction force brought by weight. And it's already 1987, only one years till the last of this type rolling down the assembly line in China, making way for the time of diesels and electrics, so the plan is shelved forever.
    There were 4714 Qianjin locomotives manufactured from 1956 to 1988 in total, including early prototypes and altered types and exportations.

    • @henrywang3977
      @henrywang3977 Год назад

      @HistoryintheDark So as there are other suggestions in the comment area on which else can be on the list... Do you like another video to include 5 more non-American steam engines?

  • @amichiganboiwhosereallazy1544
    @amichiganboiwhosereallazy1544 Год назад

    I dunno how relevant it is to any video but I just learned about the P&R 1187. A 0-4-0 camel back.

  • @jacebeleren9290
    @jacebeleren9290 Год назад

    And oh yeah my boi the Franco-Crosti quadruplex

  • @sonicplayset
    @sonicplayset Год назад

    I love the steam locomotives

  • @hmskinggeorgev7089
    @hmskinggeorgev7089 Год назад +1

    Since Canada Isn't part of the USA I'll add my nomination here. The Canadian Pacific K1a 4-8-4 Northerns 3100 & 3101 built by CPR's Angus shops in 1928. By all accounts they were well designed locomotives and their performance was great the only downside they had was their large weight restricting their route availability. The tractive effort on these two engines was 60800 lbs, BUT they were equipped with booster trucks that gave an additional 12000 lbs of force for a total of 72800 lbs. I think they would have fit in nicely but that's just my opinion. On a side note both engines made it into preservation.

    • @markbarrile2930
      @markbarrile2930 Год назад

      Agree, Canada is in 'Nth America' which makes them American but definitely not part of the USA, although most "USA'ns" do not seem to think of anyone being American unless they are from the USA.

  • @joshjones3408
    @joshjones3408 Год назад +1

    BIG CHUNGUS !!!!

  • @Brickticks
    @Brickticks Год назад +2

    The waffles have risen.
    All hail Belgium.

  • @benvars5889
    @benvars5889 Год назад +2

    As a Belgian i don't usually say this but, i'm proud to be Belgian

  • @merafirewing6591
    @merafirewing6591 11 месяцев назад +1

    I wonder if the AA20 would work with today's technology?

  • @The_Goldenhammer.
    @The_Goldenhammer. Год назад

    Can you talk about the DSB Litra E.

  • @TheGs4_4449
    @TheGs4_4449 Год назад

    Interesting to see the AA20 here. Somewhat obscure yet having her own spotlight.

    • @Alexander-km8es
      @Alexander-km8es 4 месяца назад +1

      If AA20 had taller driving wheels like the union pacific 9000 class it would have less tracktive effort

  • @FuelFire
    @FuelFire Год назад +1

    In germany, the number on a locomotive is read as if it's two most of the time (does that make any sense?) so say "010" is zero ten, "2322" is twenty-three twenty-two, "7235" is seventy-two thirty-five, et cetera

    • @henrywhite2984
      @henrywhite2984 Год назад

      If they are playing nice, they will say "seven two (pause) three five". If they are joking at the expense of a foreigner, it will be "two-and-seventy five-and-thirty".

  • @magi-nicolaualoguinpallach374
    @magi-nicolaualoguinpallach374 Год назад +1

    Great as allways but...some inexact.: the number 5 most tractive effort giant outside the USA was not german, whas spanish. The 2-10-2 Santa Fe built in Barcelona by La Maquinista Terrestre y Marítima (1941) had 55000lbs tractive effort. The whole serie had 22 locomotives. One of this (the Renfe's 151f-3101) is preserved in the Museu del Ferrocarril in Vilanova i la Geltrú (Catalonia, Spain)

  • @kingkyle8991
    @kingkyle8991 Год назад +2

    Top 5 most powerful non standard gauge steam locomotives please.

    • @johnd8892
      @johnd8892 Год назад +1

      Two from this list would make the non standard gauge list.
      Heavy Harry H 220 at 5:25 being to the Victorian Railways standard gauge of 1600 mm broad gauge.
      The Soviet dud loco AA also to the Russian broad gauge of 1520 mm or so.
      More broad gauge track in the world than narrow gauge.

    • @wezza60
      @wezza60 11 месяцев назад

      Heavy Harry ran on 5'3" gauge, and was constructed to be converted to Standard Gauge if required.

    • @johnd8892
      @johnd8892 11 месяцев назад

      @@wezza60 as i said 1600 mm gauge. You do know that is the metric conversion of those archaic units I hope.
      The 1435 mm gauge is irrelevant since it was never converted. The saga of converting an R class to 1435 mm over many years of costs and problems likely to prevent any more conversions of the gauge convertible ( in theory ) VR locomotives out of the question as would the magnitude of getting H 220 running again

  • @austinmilich648
    @austinmilich648 10 месяцев назад

    HEAVY HARRYYYY

  • @Marc_von_Hoffrichter
    @Marc_von_Hoffrichter Год назад +1

    Australia, hold my beer!

  • @danielbedrossian5986
    @danielbedrossian5986 Год назад +1

    It's funny how a Traxx or a Taurus how cazy strong for their 4 axial. I know they are these recent two decades electrik locomotives, but still they basically the uper limit without giving much more axial load.

  • @mailstorminurbox
    @mailstorminurbox 11 месяцев назад

    someone tell me what this list would be like if usefulness was accounted for

  • @fanofhiro808
    @fanofhiro808 Год назад +1

    What about then Bulgarian 2-12-4? Wiki says that their tractive effort was around 85.000 lbf

  • @andrewwoolner9845
    @andrewwoolner9845 Год назад +1

    You completely missed the Canadian Pacific Selkirk locomotives, which had
    78,000 lbf (350 kN) traction. Should be #2 on your list……

  • @roelantverhoeven371
    @roelantverhoeven371 Год назад +1

    drink 5 belgian trappist triple ales, and you'll understand ;) we're out there, and we love it LOL

  • @thinaphonpetsiri9907
    @thinaphonpetsiri9907 Год назад

    That Belgian Quadruplex could have been the absolute Banker for any long train that needed go uphill.

  • @Nightmare_52
    @Nightmare_52 Год назад +1

    ah there is my baby, AA20
    so big and so useless but i love it nontheless

  • @gamerfan8445
    @gamerfan8445 Год назад +2

    Where the USSR P28 Yellowstone? They can easily be on here.

  • @joejoejoejoejoejoe4391
    @joejoejoejoejoejoe4391 9 месяцев назад

    None of the loco's done by Andre Chapelon?

  • @cameronb2765
    @cameronb2765 Год назад +1

    When 5 came up, I was thinking I wonder how much our Harry has, and Harry was next 😅

  • @TB587.3
    @TB587.3 2 месяца назад

    I think 45 010 shloud be restored to operating condition. What do ya'l think?

  • @johnd8892
    @johnd8892 Год назад

    The NSWGR AD60 Garrett at 7:47 .
    Some film of a double headed pair as late as 1968 hauling heavy bogie hopper coal trains up steep grades :
    ruclips.net/video/ePpG4tVHSMQ/видео.html
    Also the preserved 6029 in a parallel running train "race" a few years ago where you can get a good feel how complicated and well preserved it is :
    ruclips.net/video/dQ7bz2nzztE/видео.html
    Searching for 6029 will show lots more recent running of this locomotive.

  • @nigelgresley87546
    @nigelgresley87546 Год назад +3

    Concerning the USSR AA20, if anything the boiler was UNDERPOWERED

    • @BarometricQuad
      @BarometricQuad Год назад +1

      At 85% Cutoff . AA20 could produce atleast 88355 lbs of tractive effort (at full power)

    • @BarometricQuad
      @BarometricQuad Год назад +1

      yeah. AA20 was pretty much underpowered

    • @sangheiliwarrior86
      @sangheiliwarrior86 Год назад

      @@BarometricQuad I guess the best comparison is the UP 9000 class, which had around 96,000lbs of tractive effort.

  • @thephantheo3059
    @thephantheo3059 Год назад +1

    there was also the 242 A1 at 265kn

  • @jacebeleren9290
    @jacebeleren9290 Год назад

    Garratt my beloved ❤

  • @josephida8390
    @josephida8390 Год назад +2

    I honestly don't know if the Soviet P38 Yellowstones are more powerful then the AA20?

    • @austinschmuck7814
      @austinschmuck7814 Месяц назад

      I was looking for someone else to comment this, if he ever does a second one, hopefully she will be on it. The p38 had 99,018 lbs of tractive effort. (44913.86 kg) Making her quite the stronk girl.

  • @natehill8069
    @natehill8069 11 месяцев назад

    Well, we were one of the leading countries in developing railroads during the age of steam (our railroads were already in decline as Diesel's came out) and we have some of the longest routes and largest hills in the world, so it makes sense most of the big ones would be ours.

  • @chaparral82
    @chaparral82 6 месяцев назад

    you forgot Alsace Lorrain G16 and SNCF 160A six cylinder compound

  • @kevwebb2637
    @kevwebb2637 Год назад

    The AA20 is basically the same tractive effort as the S-2.

  • @Vincent5482
    @Vincent5482 7 месяцев назад

    i would like say that YES 4 AD60 class locomotives exist. but only 3 are under proper preservation as 6042 is sitting in a field rotting away and the museum that owns it is on the other side of the state. google it im not joking

  • @andreimihailov671
    @andreimihailov671 Год назад

    wtf where is bdz class 46 with its 381kN?

  • @stup1299
    @stup1299 7 месяцев назад

    Technically the Garratts are UK engines - Beyer Peacock's works was in Openshaw, Manchester, UK.

  • @markbarrile2930
    @markbarrile2930 Год назад +3

    Great video, however there is another Australian loco that drops into this top 5 and might mean the poor old German giant drops off.
    The NSWGR D57 class. These 228 ton 3 cylinder 4.8.2 locomotives are rated as having a tractive effort of between 56000 and 62000 lbs (apparently some had 200 psi boilers and some had 220 psi boilers but I can't find that confirmed anywhere).
    There is 1 remaining in static preservation. However like Heavy Harry H220, it's axle load would very much limit any operational use so a return to service is very unlikely.

    • @InevitableMe
      @InevitableMe Год назад +1

      That's at Valley Heights Rail Museum, isn't it?

  • @joshjones3408
    @joshjones3408 Год назад +1

    Not being mean but there no gerrits here because most of us can see a flop when we see one ...but we've made a lot of own flops so not pointing fingers just saying,....an 4,14,4 um jenny crank thats all i can say😶 great video 👍👍👍

  • @whatsthebigidea8157
    @whatsthebigidea8157 Год назад

    Hey now are you considering the selkirks cp rail as american?

  • @backofthefridgeguy
    @backofthefridgeguy 3 месяца назад

    Do the most powerful British steam engines

  • @nunciothebluesteam5730
    @nunciothebluesteam5730 Год назад

    1:51 both engines BR 9F and Australia garrat 10:24 are more strong from Union pacific 2-8-0

  • @harrisonallen651
    @harrisonallen651 Год назад +3

    Go Australian locomotives

  • @alastairmellor966
    @alastairmellor966 Год назад +1

    No British engines on the list? Remind me again where Beyer Peacock had their Factory building Garatts for export to Australia.

    • @MrStantheman103
      @MrStantheman103 Год назад +1

      Manchester rings a bell. And not Manchester in the USA. 😂

  • @joshjones3408
    @joshjones3408 Год назад +1

    O i don't know About that big chungus is um his bizzy in b.f.n.a an i don't thank they could handle tha big chungus putting a bunch of f.u.b.a.r down on there rails 😆😆 Great video 👍👍👍

  • @mikebrown3772
    @mikebrown3772 Год назад

    Where are the BIG Garratts? Built for South Africa and the British LNER U1?

  • @tl-Jadon
    @tl-Jadon Год назад

    I already knew number one would bring an absolute unit back to the spotlight. I may be American but uh POWWWAAAAAAAAA

  • @eaglerider27
    @eaglerider27 6 месяцев назад

    I’m pretty sure pounds of force is not the same pounds of tractive effort

  • @resender329
    @resender329 Год назад

    Belgium here

  • @hummingbird9149
    @hummingbird9149 11 месяцев назад

    DRG Class 45 had a tractive effort of over 300+ kN, not sure where you got 245 kN from. The more numerous Class 44, of which some still run, boasts 291 kN. Heck the std. WW2 Class 52 Kriegslokomotiv had a tractive effort of 230 kN.

    • @SiqueScarface
      @SiqueScarface 9 месяцев назад

      Wikipedia lists 420 kN for the Class 45.