The four locomotives were built in 1904 by the firm of
Borsig. The
frame was designed as a water tank. Due to the steep inclines it had a large boiler, the boiler barrel consisting of two shells.
It had an
Allan valve gear with trick valves. The connecting rods drove the third
coupled wheels. The loco had an
Exter counterweight brake for the engine and a Körting
vacuum brake for the train. This was probably replaced in 1926 by a
Westinghouse compressed-air brake. When the
Deutsche Reichsbahn took over the operational running of the state-owned by privately operated line from the Deutsche Eisenbahn-Betriebsgesellschaft, a subsidiary of the firm of Vering & Waechter who had built the line, these engines were incorporated into their fleet as numbers 99 7201 to 99 7204. In 1964/1965 the steam locomotives were retired and replaced by diesel locomotives. Until then they had managed all the traffic, no other locomotives were even employed in a temporary role.
Preserved
All the locomotives have been preserved until the present day.
99 7201 stood for a long time as a monument near Passau, before being acquired in 2007 by the Hirzbergbahn.
99 7203 was used by the Albtalbahn from 1964 to 1966 for maintenance of way duties. It then went to the Karlsruhe gasworks and, later the Viernheim narrow gauge museum. Finally it ended up with the Ulmer Eisenbahnfreunde and has been in museum railway service since 1990 on the
Amstetten–Oppingen line.
99 7204 (formerly No. 4) was bought from a timber factory in
Oberbernbach and stored on an industrial site at
Oberbernbach in Bavaria for a long time before being transferred in 1999 to the Märkische Museum Railway in
Herscheid. In 2014 it was sold to a private individual in the Netherlands who planned to restore it.[1]