NZR P class (1885)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/NZR_P_class_(1885) an entity of type: Thing

The P class was a class of steam locomotives built to haul freight trains on the national rail network of New Zealand. The class consisted of ten individual locomotives ordered from the British company of Nasmyth, Wilson and Company in 1885, but miscommunications about the weight limitations imposed on the locomotives meant they did not start work until 1887. This debacle came at a time when the New Zealand Railways Department (NZR) was suffering from a lack of motive power to work on its rapidly expanding network and was part of what prompted a shift towards American and home-grown manufacturers. rdf:langString
rdf:langString NZR P class (1885)
rdf:langString NZR P class (1885)
rdf:langString NZR P class
xsd:integer 3826073
xsd:integer 1084642936
rdf:langString None
rdf:langString October 1930
xsd:integer 1885
xsd:integer 1886
xsd:date 1886-02-08
rdf:langString October 1930
rdf:langString Steam
xsd:integer 1930
xsd:integer 272
xsd:integer 10
xsd:integer 1
xsd:integer 2
rdf:langString P 268, with a steel cab, beside a water tank at Frankton.
rdf:langString The P class was a class of steam locomotives built to haul freight trains on the national rail network of New Zealand. The class consisted of ten individual locomotives ordered from the British company of Nasmyth, Wilson and Company in 1885, but miscommunications about the weight limitations imposed on the locomotives meant they did not start work until 1887. This debacle came at a time when the New Zealand Railways Department (NZR) was suffering from a lack of motive power to work on its rapidly expanding network and was part of what prompted a shift towards American and home-grown manufacturers. The classification of this class as "P" was the first example of the re-use of a classification that had previously been used for an earlier class. The members of the P class of 1876 had been sold to private companies or the Public Works Department, leaving the classification unused. The Railways Department chose to assign it to this class, setting a pattern that was followed with other classes in years to come, with the most prominent example being the A class of 1906 re-using the classification of the A class of 1873. Initially, seven of the P class locomotives were deployed in Otago, with the remaining three based in Auckland, and in 1899, the Auckland fleet expanded to four when one was transferred north from Otago. The locomotives started their lives with wooden cabs in a Gothic style, but they were later replaced with steel cabs.
rdf:langString Two, outside
xsd:integer 2
rdf:langString Two
<millimetre> 15240.0
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 7600
xsd:gYear 1885
xsd:gYear 1885
xsd:double 15.24
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 10

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