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No. 517Ocean Swell in 1947 | |||||||||||||||||||
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TheLondon and North Eastern Railway (LNER)Class A2/3 was a class of 4-6-2 steam locomotives. They were newly constructed locomotives, fulfilling the requirement identified byEdward Thompson for a standard express passenger locomotive of the4-6-2 arrangement with 6 ft 2 in (1.880 m) driving wheels. Fifteen engines were constructed according to this original design, but following the retirement of Thompson as CME, the remaining fifteen locomotives that were planned were immediately redesigned and ultimately emerged asPeppercorn Class A2.
When Edward Thompson was appointedchief mechanical engineer of theLondon and North Eastern Railway in April 1941, he envisaged a new standardisation programme involving ten locomotive designs including twoPacific types.[1] These were an express passenger type (designated A1) with 6 ft 8 in (2.032 m)driving wheels and a 'heavy passenger and freight' type (designated A2) with 6 ft 2 in (1.880 m)driving wheels. He was not able to proceed with his plan due to the Second World War but did try out some of his ideas by rebuildingNigel Gresley'sP2 class2-8-2 asA2/2 pacifics and building the last fourV2 class already on order asA2/1 Pacifics. In April 1944, Thompson finally received authority to build thirty new locomotives of his A2 type during 1945, and a further thirteen during 1946.[2]
The basic design of the locomotive was similar to the A2/2 rebuilds in terms of the frames, boiler and motion, but boiler pressure was increased to 250 psi (1.72 MPa) and the cylinder diameter was reduced to 19 in (483 mm).[2] The locomotives retained Thompson'sdivided drive with the middle cylinder driving the first pair of driving wheels and the outside cylinders the middle pair. However, in order to have threeconnecting rods of the same length with three independent sets ofWalschaerts valve gear, the outside cylinders were set back behind the bogie.
The locomotives were due to be built at Doncaster works but were subject to various delays and so only the first, No. 500 appeared in traffic in May 1946, prior to Thompson's retirement aged sixty-five, the following month. Fourteen further examples were then under construction and appeared under Thompson's successorArthur Peppercorn, between July 1946 and September 1947. After trials during the summer and autumn 1946 Peppercorn decided not to build the remaining locomotives authorised until he had made modifications to the design.[2] In fact,O. S. Nock has suggested that the Doncaster staff had begun amending the design before Thompson's retirement.[3] The class was then redesignated A2/3, and thePeppercorn design became the standard A2 class.
The class performed adequately but according to Nock, they suffered from 'the long spacing between the bogie and the leading coupled wheels, resulting in undue flexing of the frames and constant troubles from the outside pipe connections to the valve chests.'[3] However, in the opinion of Allen the A2/3 class were 'the best 4-6-2s turned out during his [Thompson's] superintendence.'[4]
With the exception of the prototype engine 60500 Edward Thompson (who was named after the designer,Edward Thompson) all of the locomotives were named after the winners of major flat races between 1941 and 1946; apart from Honeyway (winner of theChampion Stakes in 1946), all won one or more of theBritish Classic Races:[5]
| LNER No. | BR No. | Name | Entered stock | Withdrawn | Disposal Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 500 | 60500 | Edward Thompson | 24 May 1946 | 16 June 1963 | 12 September 1963 |
| 511 | 60511 | Airborne | July 1946 | November 1962 | |
| 512 | 60512 | Steady Aim | August 1946 | June 1965 | |
| 513 | 60513 | Dante | August 1946 | April 1963 | |
| 514 | 60514 | Chamossaire | September 1946 | December 1962 | |
| 515 | 60515 | Sun Stream | October 1946 | November 1962 | |
| 516 | 60516 | Hycilla | November 1946 | November 1962 | |
| 517 | 60517 | Ocean Swell | November 1946 | November 1962 | |
| 518 | 60518 | Tehran | December 1946 | November 1962 | |
| 519 | 60519 | Honeyway | February 1947 | December 1962 | |
| 520 | 60520 | Owen Tudor | March 1947 | June 1963 | |
| 521 | 60521 | Watling Street | May 1947 | November 1962 | |
| 522 | 60522 | Straight Deal | June 1947 | June 1965 | |
| 523 | 60523 | Sun Castle | August 1947 | June 1963 | |
| 524 | 60524 | Herringbone | September 1947 | February 1965 |

On 7 January 1957, No. 60520Owen Tudor was hauling an express passenger trainwhich overran signals and crashed into the rear of a local train atWelwyn Garden City,Hertfordshire.[6][7]
The A2/3s were withdrawn from stock between August 1962 and March 1965 and none were preserved.
| Year | Quantity in service at start of year | Quantity withdrawn | Locomotive numbers | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1962 | 15 | 8 | 60511/14–19/21 | |
| 1963 | 7 | 4 | 60500/13/20/23 | |
| 1964 | 3 | 0 | – | |
| 1965 | 3 | 3 | 60512/22/24 |
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Apple Green Engines produce a ready-to-run model of the A2/3 in 4 mm scale. PDK and DJH both sell 4 mm scale kits of the A2/3. Crownline have also produced a 4 mm scale kit, but this is no longer available.
DJH also sell a kit of the A2/3 for O gauge (7 mm scale).
As of 2020 Hornby have announced a ready to run A2/3 for their range of models aimed for release in December 2020