Bavarian B V

Bavarian B V
Quantity 101
Year(s) of manufacture 1853–1862
Retired 1925
Wheel arrangement 2-4-0
Axle arrangement 1B n2
Gauge 1,435 mm
Length over buffers 13,609–13,910 mm
Service weight 30.0 t
Adhesive weight 20.5 t
Axle load 10.2 t
Top speed 70 km/h
Driving wheel diameter 1,448–1,470 mm
Leading wheel diameter 1,150 mm
No. of cylinders 2
Cylinder bore 406 mm
Piston stroke 610 mm
Boiler Overpressure 8+10 bar
Grate area 1.19–1.31 m²
Evaporative heating area 86.90–90.20 m²
Tender 3 T 6.5/7
Tender service weight 6.5/7.0 m³

The Bavarian B V (Bayerische B V) steam engines were early German 2-4-0 locomotives of the Royal Bavarian State Railways (Königlich Bayerische Staats-Eisenbahnen).

They were the first locomotives produced in Bavaria in large numbers — 101 in all. The first series of 14 locomotives was similar in many respects to the Class A V. The second series of 15 locomotives had Crampton boilers. The first two series were built without a steam dome on the boiler, but were later fitted with domes. The third series had steam domes on the rear section of the boiler. The fourth and last series had one at the front. All were equipped with Class 3 T 6.5 and 3 T 7 tenders.

One example — the Nordgau — is in the Nuremberg Transport Museum (Verkehrsmuseum Nürnberg). Built by Maffei in 1853, and remaining in service until 1907, it is the oldest preserved locomotive in Germany. Nordgau was sectioned lengthwise in 1925 in the main workshop at Munich, in order to provide a visual display of the operation of a steam locomotive.

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