Metropolitan Railway K Class LNER Class L2 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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![]() No. 114, circa 1928 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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TheMetropolitan Railway K Class consisted of six2-6-4Tsteam locomotives, numbered 111 to 116.[1]
They were built byArmstrong Whitworth in 1925, using parts manufactured at theRoyal Arsenal,Woolwich, to the design of theSouth Eastern and Chatham RailwayN class2-6-0 locomotives and part of a family of 200 or so "mogul" engines designed byRichard Maunsell.[2] Final design was by the Metropolitan Railway's George Hally.[3] The boilers had been made byRobert Stephenson and Company of Darlington.[4] Some unusual variations included footsteps below the buffer beam and curved handrails at the front either side of the smokebox.[2]
TheK Class were used on heavy freight trains alongLondon'sMetropolitan Railway mainline, including coal to the power station atNeasden,[1] although they were used on occasional passenger trains. In 1937, all six were transferred to theLondon and North Eastern Railway (LNER) where they were based at Neasden (LNER) Shed. The LNER numbered them 6158–6163, and classified them as L2 Class.[1] They were used for passenger services for a short stint in 1938 and 1942 whenH2 4-4-4T's were unavailable for maintenance or transferred elsewhere.[3]
All were withdrawn and scrapped between 1943 and 1948.[2]
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