British Rail Class 08

The British Rail Class 08 is a class of diesel-electric shunting locomotives built by British Railways (BR). As the standard BR general-purpose diesel shunter, the class became a familiar sight at major stations and freight yards. Since their introduction in 1952, however, the nature of rail traffic in Britain has changed considerably. Freight trains are now mostly fixed rakes of wagons, and passenger trains are mostly multiple units or have Driving Van Trailers, neither requiring the attention of a shunting locomotive. Consequently, a large proportion of the class has been withdrawn from mainline use and stored, scrapped, exported or sold to industrial or heritage railways.

British Rail Class 08
08 801 at Penzance station in 1990
Type and origin
Power typeDiesel-electric
BuilderBritish Railways:
Crewe Works
Darlington Works
Derby Works
Doncaster Works
Horwich Works
Build date1952–1962
Total produced996
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte0-6-0DE
 • UICC
Wheel diameter4 ft 6 in (1.372 m)
Wheelbase11 ft 6 in (3.505 m)
Length29 ft 3 in (8.92 m)
Width8 ft 6 in (2.591 m)
Height12 ft 8+58 in (3.877 m)
11 ft 9+58 in (3.597 m) (08/9)
Loco weight49 long tons (49.8 t; 54.9 short tons) to
51 long tons (51.8 t; 57.1 short tons)
Fuel capacity668 imp gal (3,040 L; 802 US gal)
Prime moverEnglish Electric 6KT[1]
RPM range300–680 rpm (D3503–D4192)[1]
Engine typeFour-stroke inline-six diesel[1]
AspirationTurbocharger[1]
Displacement5,655 cu in (92.67 L)[1]
GeneratorDC
Traction motorsDC English Electric 506, 2 off
Cylinders6[1]
Cylinder size10 in (254 mm) × 12 in (305 mm) (bore × stroke)[1]
TransmissionDiesel-electric transmission, double reduction gearing
MU workingNot originally fitted, some retrofitted with type Blue Star
Train heatingNone
Train brakesVacuum, later Air & Vacuum or Air only
Performance figures
Maximum speed15 mph (24 km/h) or 20 mph (32 km/h)
Power outputEngine: 350 or 400[1] hp (261 or 298 kW)
Tractive effortMaximum: 35,000 lbf (160 kN)
Brakeforce19 long tons-force (190 kN)
Career
OperatorsBritish Railways
InterCity
Network SouthEast
Rail Express Systems
Freightliner
Eurostar
DB Cargo UK
GNER
National Express East Coast
East Coast
Virgin Trains East Coast
LNER
Midland Mainline
East Midlands Trains
East Midlands Railway
Arriva Rail North
Northern Trains
Harry Needle Railroad Company
Foster Yeoman
Mendip Rail
Numbers13000–13116, 13127–13136, 13167–13365;

later: D3000–D3116, D3127–D3136, D3167-D3365 (renumbered from above), D3366–D3438, D3454–D3472, D3503–D3611, D3652–D3664, D3672–D3718, D3722–D4048, D4095–D4098, D4115–D4192;

later 08 001–08 958
Axle load classRoute availability 5 or 6 (see text)
Withdrawn1967–present
Disposition82 preserved, 10 converted to Class 09s, 6 converted to Class 13s, 5 exported to Liberia, 100 in service, remainder scrapped

As of 2020, around 100 locomotives remained working on industrial sidings and on the main British railway network. On heritage railways, they have become particularly common, appearing on many of the preserved standard-gauge lines in Britain, with over 80 preserved, including the first one built.[2]

History edit

08 032 at Foster Yeoman's Torr Works, 2008

The Class 08 design was based on the LMS 12033 series (later TOPS Class 11) design. There were also 26 of the near-identical but higher-geared Class 09, and 171 similar locomotives fitted with different engines and transmissions (some of which became Class 10), which together brought the total number of outwardly-similar machines to 1,193.

The pioneer locomotive, number 13000, was built in 1952 although it did not enter service until 1953.[3][4] Production continued until 1962 with 996 locomotives produced, making it the most numerous of any British shunting locomotive class,[5] and indeed, the most numerous of any British locomotive class overall.[a]

The locomotives were built at the BR's Crewe, Darlington, Derby, Doncaster and Horwich works.[6]

In 1985, three locomotives were reduced in height for use on the Burry Port and Gwendraeth Valley Railway in southwest Wales, and became Class 08/9. The remainder of the class were reclassified as sub-class 08/0. A further two were converted to 08/9s in 1987.[7]

The first locomotive to be withdrawn was D3193 in 1967. Four other 08s were withdrawn before TOPS reclassification in 1973. Withdrawals continued in subsequent decades until by the beginning of the 1990s most of the class had been withdrawn. As part of the privatisation of British Rail in the mid-1990s most of the survivors passed to EWS with some going to passenger operators for use as depot shunters. At the same time as the withdrawals, many were purchased by heritage railways.

In mid-2008, EWS had over 40 class 08s in operation, with a greater number stored. Freightliner also had about five in operation, as did the locomotive company Wabtec. FirstGroup operated fewer than five; additionally, some work at industrial sidings – two for Foster Yeoman, one for Mendip Rail, one for Corus, one at ICI Wilton, two for English China Clays, amongst others. A few other businesses in the rail industry operated single examples.[2]

Exported locomotives edit

Sixteen English Electric 0-6-0DE 350 hp locomotives, based on the Class 11/Class 08 design but modified for 1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in) gauge, were built new and exported 1951–53 to Australia, entering service on the Victorian Railways as the F class.

Five Class 08s were exported to Liberia, numbers 3047, 3092, 3094, 3098 and 3100.[8] All five locos remain in Liberia and have been considerably robbed of parts in the intervening years.[9]

In 2007, 08 738 and 08 939 were equipped for multiple operation at Toton TMD and repainted in Euro Cargo Rail livery before being sent to France in April 2009.[10]

Operations edit

08 509 in Rail Blue livery at Chesterfield Goods Yard

As the standard general-purpose diesel shunter on BR, almost any duty requiring shunting would involve a Class 08; thus the many locations where two portions of a train were merged, or where additional stock was added to a train, were hauled (briefly) by a Class 08, thus the class was a familiar sight at many major stations and terminals.

Technical description edit

The Class 08 design was based on the LMS 12033 series (later TOPS Class 11) design.[citation needed]

The engine is an English Electric (EE) 6 cylinder, 4-stroke, 6KT. Traction motors are two EE 506 motors with double reduction gear drive. The main generator is an EE 801.[11]

In 1955, locomotives D3117 to D3122 entered traffic fitted with Crossley 6-cyl ESNT6 engines and two Crompton Parkinson traction motors. The same year, D3137 to D3151 entered service with Blackstone 6-cyl ER6T engines and GEC traction motors, as did D3439 to D3543, D3473 to D3502, DD3612 to D3651 and D4049 to D4094. Another batch, D3152 to D3166 had Blackstone engines but BTH traction motors.[12]

Design variations edit

There were variations on the basic design, which were given the following TOPS design codes:

TOPS design codeElectrical systemMax speedWeightBrakesRoute availabilityNotes
08-0AV90 V20 mph (32 km/h)49.8 long tons (50.6 t; 55.8 short tons)vacuum5
08-0BX110 V50.4 long tons (51.2 t; 56.4 short tons)dual
08-0CA90 V49.6 long tons (50.4 t; 55.6 short tons)air
08-0DV15 mph (24 km/h)49.8 long tons (50.6 t; 55.8 short tons)vacuum
08-0BX50.4 long tons (51.2 t; 56.4 short tons)dual
08-0FA49.6 long tons (50.4 t; 55.6 short tons)air
08-0KX110 V50.4 long tons (51.2 t; 56.4 short tons)dual
08-0LXScharfenberg coupler adapter fitted
08-0MA49.8 long tons (50.6 t; 55.8 short tons)air
08-0NA90 Vfitted with Buckeye couplings
08-0PA51.0 long tons (51.8 t; 57.1 short tons)6
08-0QA
08-0RA110 V
08-0SA49.0 long tons (49.8 t; 54.9 short tons)

Class 08/9 edit

08 266 (left) alongside cut-down 08 993 (right) at the Keighley & Worth Valley Railway in 2017, showing the lower height of the 08/9 subclass.

Class 08/9 locomotives were modified from the standard class by being given headlights and cut-down bodywork in which the overall height was reduced to 11’ 10" (3.61 m), for use on the Burry Port and Gwendraeth Valley Railway up to Cwmmawr. In 2007, three were used on infrastructure trains on the Manchester Metrolink.[7]

TOPS design codeElectrical systemMax speedWeightBrakesNotes
08-9AV90 V15 mph (24 km/h)49.8 long tons (50.6 t; 55.8 short tons)vacuum brakes08 991 converted from 08 203
08 992 converted from 08 259
08-9CX50.4 long tons (51.2 t; 56.4 short tons)dual brakes08 993 converted from 08 592
08-9DA49.6 long tons (50.4 t; 55.6 short tons)air brakes08 994 converted from 08 462
08 995 converted from 08 687

BR Class 13 edit

Six Class 08 units were adapted for a specialist role at Tinsley Marshalling Yard, where there was a requirement for more powerful shunters. These locomotives were permanently coupled together in pairs as a 'master and slave' (the slave unit with its cab removed) and reclassified as Class 13. All were withdrawn by 1985.[13][14]

Fleet edit

A full list of Class 08s operating on the National Rail network[15]
NumbersOwnersLocationComments
08220English Electric PreservationNottingham Transport Heritage Centre, Ruddington
08308, 08523, 08573, 08613, 08885, 08936RMS LocotecWeardale Railway, Wolsingham, County Durham
  • 08308 carries the number "23". In 2023 it became a battery powered prototype for Positive Traction of Chesterfield.[16]
  • 08613 carries the symbol "H064"
  • 08885 carries the symbol "H042" and the number "18"
08375Port of Boston, Lincolnshire
08423, 08788, 08847, 08874PD Ports, Grangetown, Middlesbrough
  • 08423 carries the name LOCO 2 and the number "14"
  • 08847 carries the name LOCO 1
08588, 08700Ilford Depot, London
  • 08588 carries the symbol "H047"
08622, 08809Ketton Cement Works, Rutland
  • 08622 carries the symbol "H028" and the number "19"
  • 08809 carries the number "24"
08648Inverness Depot, Highlands
08754Wolverton Works, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire
  • Carries the symbol "H054"
08756, 08871Derby RTC, Derbyshire
  • 08871 carries the symbol "H074"
08762Attero Recycling, Rossington, Doncaster, South Yorkshire
  • Carries the symbol "H067"
08331Class 20189Midland Railway, Butterley
08389, 08877, 08924Harry Needle Railroad CompanyTremorfa Steelworks, Cardiff
  • 08924 carries the name CELSA 2
08417, 08428, 08742, 08765, 08782, 08786, 08798, 08799, 08824, 08943Barrow Hill Roundhouse, Chesterfield, Derbyshire
  • 08824 carries the name IEMD 01
08500, 08578, 08602, 08802, 08818, 08892, 08904Worksop Depot, Nottinghamshire
  • 08602 carries the number "004"
  • 08818 carries the name Molly and the number "4"
08502, 08676, 08685, 08804East Kent Light Railway, Shepherdswell
08527, 08630, 08711, 08918, 08994Nemesis Rail, Burton-on-Trent, Staffordshire
  • 08630 carries the name CELSA 3
08623, 08682, 08714, 08879, 08905Hope Cement Works, Derbyshire
  • 08682 carries the name Lionheart
08653, 08701, 08706Battlefield Line Railway, Leicestershire
08834Allerton Depot, Liverpool
08865Central Rivers Depot, Barton-under-Needwood, Staffordshire
  • Carries the name GILLY
08868Arriva Train Care, Crewe, Cheshire
08872European Metal Recycling, Attercliffe, South Yorkshire
08401, 08571Ed Murray & SonsHunslet Engine Company, Barton-under-Needwood, Staffordshire
08445Daventry International Railfreight Terminal, Northamptonshire
08472, 08596Craigentinny Depot, Edinburgh
08615, 08823Shotton Works, Deesside
  • 08615 carries the name UNCLE DAI
  • 08823 carries the name KEVLA
08643Merehead Rail Terminal, Somerset
08669, 08724, 08853Doncaster Works, South Yorkshire
  • Carries the name Bob Machin
08405Railway Support ServicesNeville Hill Depot, Leeds
08411, 08460, 08536, 08568, 08593, 08632, 08652, 08663, 08709, 08730, 08752, 08921, 08927Rye Farm, Wishaw, Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands
  • 08460 carries the name SPIRIT OF THE OAK
  • 08568 carries the name St. Rollox
  • 08927 carries the number "D4157"
08441, 08484Crown Point Depot, Norwich
  • 08484 carries the name CAPTAIN NATHANIEL DARELL
08480, 08511Felixstowe Terminal, Suffolk
08507Cholsey & Wallingford Railway, Oxfordshire
08516Arriva Train Care, Bristol Barton Hill
08580Garston Car Terminal, Liverpool
08670Bescot Yard, West Midlands
08683Eastleigh East Yard, Hampshire
08703Willesden Euroterminal Stone Terminal, Greater London* Carries the name Jermaine
08738Chasewater Railway, Staffordshire
08846Tyseley Depot, Birmingham
  • Carries the number "003"
08899Whitemoor Yard, March, Cambridgeshire
  • Carries the name Midland Counties Railway/175 1839-2014
08939Springs Branch Depot, Wigan, Greater Manchester
08410, 08598, 08600, 08774, 08912AV DawsonAyrton Rail Terminal, Middlesbrough
  • 08774 carries the name ARTHUR VERNON DAWSON
08418, 08485, 08678West Coast RailwaysCarnforth Depot, Lancashire
  • 08678 carries the number "555"
08442, 08735, 08810Arriva UK TrainsArriva Train Care, Eastleigh, Hampshire
  • 08442 carries the number "0042"
  • 08735 carries the name Geoff Hobbs 42
  • 08810 carries the name RICHARD J. WENHAM/EASTLEIGH DEPOT/DECEMBER 1989 - JULY 1999
08447Russell LogisticsAssentra Rail, Hamilton, Glasgow
08451AlstomArlington Fleet Services, Eastleigh, Hampshire
08454, 08721Widnes Technology Centre, Cheshire
08611, 08696Wembley Depot, Greater London
08617Oxley Depot, Wolverhampton
  • Carries the name Steve Purser
08764, 08887, 08954Polmadie Depot, Glasgow
08790Longsight Depot, Greater Manchester
  • Carries the name LONGSIGHT TMD
08483, 08780Locomotive Services LimitedCrewe Diesel Depot, Cheshire
  • 08483 carries the name Bungle
  • 08780 carries the name Zippy and the number "D3948"
08631Weardale Railway, Wolsingham, County Durham
08737Southall Depot, Greater London
  • Carries the number "D3905"
08499Transport for WalesCanton Depot, Cardiff
  • Carries the name REDLIGHT
08525, 08690, 08908, 08950East Midlands RailwayNeville Hill Depot, Leeds
  • 08525 carries the name DUNCAN BEDFORD
  • 08690 carries the name DAVID THIRKILL
  • 08950 carries the name DAVID LIGHTFOOT
08530FreightlinerHunslet Engine Company, Barton-under-Needwood, Staffordshire
08531Felixstowe Terminal, Suffolk
08575, 08785Nemesis Rail, Burton-on-Trent, Staffordshire
08585Southampton Maritime, Hampshire
  • Carries the name Vicky
08624Trafford Park Terminal, Greater Manchester
  • Carries the name Rambo PAUL RAMSEY
08691, 08891Ipswich Yard, Suffolk
  • 08691 carries the name Terri
08567Arlington Fleet ServicesArlington Fleet Services, Eastleigh, Hampshire
08605, 08704Riviera TrainsKnottingley Depot, West Yorkshire
  • 08605 carries the name WIGAN 2
08616West Midlands TrainsTyseley Depot, Birmingham
  • Carries the names TYSELEY 100/Bam Bam and the number "3783"
08805Soho Depot, Birmingham
  • Carries the name Hunslet[17]
08629EurophoenixEastleigh East Yard, Hampshire
08641, 08644, 08836Great Western RailwayLaira Depot, Plymouth
  • 08641 carries the name Pride of Laira
  • 08644 carries the name Laira Diesel Depot/50 years 1962-2012
08645Long Rock Depot, Penzance, Cornwall
  • Carries the name St. Piran
08822St Philips Marsh Depot, Bristol
  • Carries the name Dave Mills
08649Meteor PowerWolverton Works, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire
  • Carries the name Bradwell
08650, 08933Mendip RailWhatley Quarry, Somerset
08787, 08947Hunslet Engine Company, Barton-under-Needwood, Staffordshire
  • 08787 carries the number "08296"
08743, 08903SembCorp UtilitiesWilton, Middlesbrough
  • 08743 carries the name Bryan Turner
  • 08903 carries the name John W Antill
08783, 08913European Metal RecyclingKingsbury Recycling Plant, Warwickshire
08850North Yorkshire Moors Railway
08925GB RailfreightHNRC, Worksop Depot, Nottinghamshire
08934Whitemoor Yard, March, Cambridgeshire
  • Carries the number "D4164"
08937Bardon AggregatesMeldon Quarry, Devon
  • Carries the number "D4167"
08948EurostarTemple Mills Depot, Greater London
08956LORAMBarrow Hill Roundhouse, Chesterfield, Derbyshire
08757, 08922UnknownRye Farm, Wishaw, Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands
  • 08757 carries the name EAGLE C.U.R.C.
08784Nottingham Transport Heritage Centre, Ruddington
08795Landore Depot, Swansea
08825Bescot Yard, West Midlands
08870Great Yarmouth, Norfolk

Preservation edit

08 915 at the North Tyneside Steam Railway

Continuing in its designed-for role as a shunter, the Class 08 has been found useful by numerous heritage railways in the UK. With over 70 examples preserved,[2] they are the second most numerous class of preserved locomotive in the UK.

Models edit

Several manufacturers have produced models of Class 08 shunters. In OO scale, Wrenn, Tri-ang, Hornby Railways and Bachmann Branchline all produced models. Lima also produced a model in several different liveries, but it was of the near-identical Class 09.

Since 2000, both Bachmann Branchline and Hornby have released much more detailed models, in a variety of liveries and with a variety of appropriate detail variations.

In British N Gauge, Graham Farish produced a relatively crude all-metal version, made in England, lacking outside frames and with a too-wide bonnet that was discontinued in 2007. A more detailed version with outside frames and a scale-width diecast bonnet was unveiled 2008 under the brand Graham Farish by Bachmann following the sale of the company.[18]

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Since the most numerous British main-line (non-shunting) class, the Class 47, numbers 512 examples.[19]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "Preface, General Data". Diesel Engine Instruction and Maintenance Manual. Strand, London: English Electric. p. Instruction 701/9/1/1, Instruction 703/10/2/1–703/10/2/2, Instruction 704/1/1/1–704/1/1/2.
  2. ^ a b c Fleet status (subsection Class 01-14) wnxx.net Archived 20 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ BR Standard 0-6-0 Diesel-Electric Shunting Locomotive Railway Gazette 19 June 1953 pages 704/705
  4. ^ New Standard Shunter Diesel Railway Traction July 1953 pages 149-151
  5. ^ British Rail in the 1980s and 1990s: Diesel Locomotives and DMUs, page 13, Kenny Barclay, Amberley Publishing Limited, 2017
  6. ^ Marsden, Colin J. (1981). The Diesel Shunter – A Pictorial Record. Oxford: Oxford Publishing. ISBN 978-0-86093-108-9.
  7. ^ a b British Railways Class 08 Diesel Electric 0-6-0 Shunter No. D3759 / 08 993 Archived 28 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine Keighley & Worth Valley Railway
  8. ^ A brief look at the diesel locomotives built by Derby Locomotive Works from 1932–1967 derbysulzers.com
  9. ^ [1] June 2010 Update
  10. ^ Class 08s in France Today's Railways Europe issue 162 June 2009 page 8
  11. ^ Webster, Neil; Fox, Peter. British Railways locomotives and coaching stock (1999 ed.). Sheffield: Platform 5. p. 13. ISBN 1 902336 07 0.
  12. ^ British Rail Motive Power. Shepperton: Ian Allan. 1960. pp. 167–173.
  13. ^ Marsden 1981, pp. 109–109.
  14. ^ Marsden, Colin J. (2018). "Locomotive Directory". Modern Locomotives Illustrated. No. 230. p. 43.
  15. ^ Pritchard, Robert (2022). Locomotives: The complete guide to all Locomotives which operate on the national railway and Eurotunnel networks (36th ed.). Sheffield: Platform 5 Publishing. ISBN 9781909431829.
  16. ^ "British pioneers spark new battery-powered life into centurion shunter". RailTech.com. 20 October 2023. Retrieved 3 November 2023.
  17. ^ "Overhaul for West Midlands '08'". Rail Express. No. 331. December 2023. p. 21.
  18. ^ "Farish Class 08 diesel shunter emerges at Redhill". bachmann.co.uk. 17 May 2008. Archived from the original on 1 October 2011.
  19. ^ Railway Centre York: A Pictorial and Historic Survey, David Mather, Pen and Sword Transport, 2022

Further reading edit

External links edit