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GWR Route: Moreton-in-Marsh to Shipston-on-Stour
Moreton-in-Marsh Station: gwrmm3071
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GWR Atlantic 4-4-2 No 102 'La France', fitted with a later
GWR boiler, is seen on a Worcester to Paddington express on 7th August 1923.
This locomotive, built to a French design, was originally ordered by Churchward
in order to compare the performance of this design to his own. A number of
steam engine designs had applied the marine principle of re-using exhaust steam
that still had considerable energy, in a second, lower-pressure set of
cylinders. Churchward bought the De Glehn compound engine No 102 in 1903 and
after having been tested in this configuration was subsequently rebuilt as a
4-6-0 (having been designed to accommodate this change). This engine had two
high pressure cylinders between the frames, with pistons linked to the front
driving wheels, and two lower pressure cylinders visible on the outside of the
frames and wheels, set further back and acting on the second set of wheels; 4
cylinders in all. The French compound had a high boiler pressure when compared
with its test rivals, and only when tested alongside 200lb/psi two cylinder
engines without compounding (simple engines) was a valid comparison made.
Churchward found no efficiency advantage - but what he did
find was that the smoother riding of the 4-cylinder engine encouraged
economical use of steam by crews (who had tended to use long cut-offs to dampen
rocking in two cylinder engines), and also gave huge scope for more power. The
problems of loads on rods and axleboxes was also reduced by the French division
of the drive across two sets of wheels. The concept of the GWR 4-cylinder
engine was born. The first of these new engine was No. 40, later named North
Star, which emerged from Swindon works in 1906, in Atlantic 4-4-2 wheel
configuration. It was as revolutionary to steam express locomotive building as
Admiral Fisher's HMS Dreadnought was to battleship building in the same decade,
and influenced all express steam engine designs in the UK after it. The new
engines of the 'Star' class, were all built with a 4-6-0 wheel arrangement, and
No. 40, North Star was converted to this layout in 1909. 73 engines of this
successful class were built, many lasting into the 1950s. One, Lode Star,
remains as a static exhibit at the National railway Museum in York. The above
courtesy of the 6023 King
Edward II Project.
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