| Chosen Government Railway DeRoI class (デロイ) Korean State Railway Chŏngisŏ class (전기서) Korean National RR Dero3 class (데로3) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Builder's photo of DeRoI-33 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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TheMitsubishiDeRoI-class (Japanese:デロイ) was a group of threeboxcab-styleelectric locomotives with regenerative braking (type EL14AR[1]) and the capability for multiple-unit control manufactured byMitsubishi in 1946.[2] They were very similar to theToshiba-builtDeRoI-class locomotives and theDeRoNi-class locomotives built byHitachi. They were built for theChosen Government Railway (Sentetsu), but the war ended before delivery took place. They were delivered to theKorean National Railroad after thepartition of Korea, which designated them 데로3 ("Dero3").[3] During theKorean War all were captured by theKorean People's Army and taken toNorth Korea, where they were put into service by theKorean State Railway as theChŏngisŏ (Korean:전기서, "Electric 3") class.
The first electrified railway in Korea was the 29.7 km (18.5 mi) 1,067 mm (42.0 in) narrow gauge streetcar line inSeoul running fromSeodaemun toCheongnyang-ni viaCheongno andDongdaemun, which was opened on 18 April 1898 by theHanseong Electric Company. This was actually the first railway of any type in Korea, having preceded the 33.2 km (20.6 mi)Gyeongin Railway fromNoryangjin toJemulpo, which opened on 18 September 1899. The first electrified standard gauge mainline railway in Korea was the privately ownedGeumgangsan Electric Railway, which on 1 August 1924 opened a 28.8 km (17.9 mi) line fromCheorwon toGeumhwa electrified at 1,500 V DC. Later, the line was extended from Cheorwon toNaegeumgang; the 116.6 km (72.5 mi) extension was opened on 1 July 1931.[3]
TheGovernment-General of Korea began working on a national electric power policy in November 1926, and the resulting plan was completed in December 1931. Chapter 4, "Utilising Electricity in Transportation in Korea" dealt with the electrification of Korea's railways. In 1937, a plan to electrify theBokgye–Gosan section of theGyeongwon Line, theJecheon–Punggi section of theGyeonggyeong Line and theGyeongseong–IncheonGyeongin Line was submitted to the Imperial Diet, which approved it in 1940.[3] Sentetsu issued its requirement for an electric locomotive in 1938, beginning discussions withMitsubishi in that year regarding the implementation of the electrification plan. Part of the Railway Bureau's goal with the electrification plan was to set a new world speed record, and to go with that, a state-of-the-art locomotive was desired. The project entailed many Japanese firsts, including the first use of 3,000 V electrification, and, specific to theDeRoI class locomotive, the first use of regenerative brakes.[4][3] The resulting design was very similar to theEF12 class of theJapanese National Railways.
When the electrification of rail lines in Korea was begun in 1943, Sentetsu ordered twentyDeRoI class locomotives of 135 tons - sixteen fromToshiba[5] and four from Mitsubishi[4] The original class name, デロイ (DeRoI), comes from theSentetsu classification system for electric locomotives: DeRoI =De, for "electric" (from 電気,denki),Ro, to indicate six powered axles (fromJapaneseroku, 6), andI (from Japaneseichi, 1), indicating the first class of electric locomotive with six powered axles.[6]
Design work was undertaken by Mitsubishi, with Shinichi Matsuda designing the control circuits and Saneyoshi Hirota designing the main motor.[4] The design was very similar to theEF12-class of theJapanese National Railways. The electrical components were manufactured by Mitsubishi Electric, while the mechanical components were produced by Mitsubishi's Mihara Vehicle Works.[7]
Though generally quite similar in appearance to theHitachi-builtDeRoNi type and theToshiba-builtDeRoI type locomotives, there were a number of features that distinguished the Mitsubishi-builtDeRoI class from the others. These included: equal spacing of side windows; a distinctive ventilator shape, including two relatively large ventilators; and a distinctive arrangement of the deck railings.[7]
The four units ordered by Sentetsu were intended for use on theKyŏnggyŏng Line, but none were completed by the end of thePacific War; three were nearly complete. After the war, theAllied General Headquarters (GHQ) inTokyo ordered the construction and delivery of a further ten units to Korea as war reparations, including the three near-complete Mitsubishi units.[5] Mitsubishi-built units 31 and 32 were delivered in August 1946, while number 33, although likewise completed in June 1946,[8] wasn't delivered until June 1948.[9] The remaining, unfinished unit was scrapped at the factory. These were all delivered to the southern zone of occupation, but during the Korean War all three of the Mitsubishi-builtDeRoI locomotives were captured and taken to the North.[10]

As the Korean War caused the destruction of the electrification of North Korea's rail lines, they sat disused until 1956.[11] In that year they werereclassifiedChŏngisŏ (전기서, "Electric-3") class and numbered 전기서1 through 전기서3, and were refurbished at the engine shops atYangdŏk for use on the Yangdŏk-Ch'ŏnsŏng section of theP'yŏngra Line, which had been electrified in 1956 as the first stage of North Korea's electrification plans.[11]
No information on the subsequent disposition of these locomotives is available at present.