South African Railways 15f class 1989

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  • Опубликовано: 18 окт 2024
  • I had the good fortune to spend ten weeks in South Africa in 1989 when steam still worked some regular goods traffic. The running shed at Springs 50 klms east of Johannesburg had a number of 15f's who worked daily goods - one of which was 15 klms south to the industrial town Nigel.
    These scenes show these over worked and under repaired engines as they fulfilled their last call to duty. Within months the shed was closed. Five days a week in the early morning a train would make the journey to spend the whole day shunting and return late in the afternoon. Note the sound of one engine with just three exhaust beats!

Комментарии • 20

  • @johannvanaardt7221
    @johannvanaardt7221 8 лет назад +5

    Amazing.. Springs is my hometown, my father was a train driver and could well have been driving one of these at the time.

  • @quhitcorse1943
    @quhitcorse1943 8 лет назад +5

    wonderful record of a passed age

  • @lancewalton4807
    @lancewalton4807 4 месяца назад

    Great footage
    For the best sounds of those 15F you must put your Head phones on.
    Just Love that Steam.

  • @anilpille189
    @anilpille189 5 месяцев назад +1

    Old Memories of Steam locomotive

  • @andrewdutoit9571
    @andrewdutoit9571 2 года назад

    Beautiful, those days never to be repeated.

    • @eisbeinGermany
      @eisbeinGermany Год назад

      to think how dirty unsafe country is now

  • @mpeterll
    @mpeterll 8 лет назад +1

    I think the 15F looks so much better with the big 6-axle tender.

  • @jimmyat460
    @jimmyat460 8 лет назад +4

    They sure did do a lot of reverse running.

    • @symphonyofsteam
      @symphonyofsteam  8 лет назад +3

      Yes, the journey out in the morning was largely downhill, so they ran tender first, then after shunting all day they would do the uphill journey home funnel first.

  • @DaleSchultz-mixmox
    @DaleSchultz-mixmox 6 лет назад +5

    As I kid I remember SA steam locos almost always slipping wheels.... even shunting in Durban harbour. Were the engine drivers just showing off/ scaring the kids I wonder?

    • @chygwelanmeneth
      @chygwelanmeneth 2 года назад +1

      The 15F's adhesive factor was a bit low - too much power for the weight on the drivers. Made them slippery - but once going on good track were great runners, well, they were in 1975 when they were still well maintained.

    • @eisbeinGermany
      @eisbeinGermany Год назад

      i grew up in Welkom, we lived next to the tracks, from 1964 to 1978, and experienced to much joy watching them going past, the high school was just on the otherside of the tracks, I would walk over the tracks to get to school, was the houses, open piece of ground an then the tracks and school next to the tracks, loved those eyeras, now the country is a hell hole

  • @MarlonVanderLinde
    @MarlonVanderLinde 8 лет назад +6

    This is something you don't (won't?) see everyday :'(
    Also, 1:50, is that wheelslip I hear?

    • @eisbeinGermany
      @eisbeinGermany Год назад

      yes, some drivers i think did it on purpose, I grew up in WElkom 1964-78 and we lived next to the rail line, when thy did the shunting thy would let the wheels spin like that,

  • @allanwilson8161
    @allanwilson8161 3 месяца назад

    Why are so many of them running tender first ?

    • @symphonyofsteam
      @symphonyofsteam  3 месяца назад

      Most of this vid is from the morning run down to Nigel from the Springs depot, which was mostly down hill. They would go down in the morning tender first with a light train, spend the day shunting, then they would return, funnel first up the grades back to Springs. In 1989 that was a daily Mon - Friday routine. It was magnificent!!!

  • @gordonvincent731
    @gordonvincent731 2 года назад +2

    Where were these steam engines built, and by who?

    • @eisbeinGermany
      @eisbeinGermany Год назад

      good question, im trying to think , as far as I know in SA, at one time Nigel Couch Works built the cars,

    • @Stokerheizer
      @Stokerheizer 4 дня назад

      The first locos were built by Berliner Maschinenbau in Berlin and Henschel in Kassel, both in Germany. The rest were built by North British Locomotiv Company and Beyer Peacock in GB.