This article is about the South Australian Railways steam locomotive class. For the South Australian Railways diesel locomotive class, see
South Australian Railways 600 class (diesel).
The 600 class were part of an order for 30 steam locomotives[note 1] placed with
Armstrong Whitworth, England, in 1924, as part of the rehabilitation of the state's rail system overseen by railways commissioner
William Webb. The 600 class design was based on the
USRA Light Pacific, although modifications were made by SAR's Chief Mechanical Engineer, Fred Shea, including those necessary to fit South Australia's tighter
loading gauge, which was lower than that of the United States. They arrived in
Adelaide in 1926.[1]
609 was named Duke of Gloucester after hauling the Duke's Royal Train in 1934 and so became Australia's first "royal" engine.
The entire class received upgraded boilers and front ends from the late 1930s onwards, and was reclassified as the 600C class. They were also fitted with large smoke deflectors over their lifetime. Ten locomotives of the
South Australian Railways 620 class were built at
Islington Railway Workshops in 1936–1938, to a similar design.
All examples of the 600 class were withdrawn between 1955 and 1961. None were preserved.[1]
^
abOberg, Leon (1984). Locomotives of Australia 1850s-1980s. Frenchs Forest: Reed Books. p. 148.
ISBN0 7301 0005 7.
Further reading
Colquhoun, Douglas; Stewien, Ronald; Thomas, Adrian (1971). 600: the Pacific locomotives of the South Australian Railways. Walkerville, South Australia:
Australian Railway Historical Society, SA Division.
ISBN0909970068.