
This 2-10-0 steam locomotive is a
Pennsylvania Railroad class
I1s, the most successful class of such locomotives in North America. Note the firebox placed above the rear drivers.
Under the
Whyte notation for the classification of
steam locomotives, a '2-10-0' is a locomotive with two
leading wheels, generally arranged in a radially swinging
leading truck, and ten coupled
driving wheels, five on each side. This arrangement was often named 'Decapod', especially in the
United States, although this name was sometimes applied to locomotives of
0-10-0 "Ten-Coupled" arrangement. In the
UIC classification system commonly used in
Europe, this wheel arrangement is '1'E'.
These locomotives were popular in
Europe, particularly in
Germany, and in
Russia;
British use of the type was confined to the period during and after
World War II. In the
United States, the 2-10-0 was not popular but was a favorite of a small number of railroads, mostly in mountainous terrain.
The 2-10-0's main advantage was that five out of six of its axles were powered, meaning almost all the
weight was available for traction rather than being distributed over pilot and trailing wheels. The long rigid
wheelbase, caused problems on tightly curved track, so
blind drivers were the norm, either on the central axle, and/or on the second and/or fourth axles. Often
lateral motion devices were attached to the leading driven axles.
The wheel arrangement's disadvantages included the
firebox size restriction caused by the lack of trailing wheel. This meant the firebox was fitted in between the wheels (common on earlier locomotives) and was long and narrow, or if mounted above the driving wheels, was wide and long but shallow. Many locomotives chose the latter option. A firebox mounted over the drivers also restricted the diameter of the driving wheels, which inturn limited counterbalancing and speed. Lack of counterbalances at speed ensured a rough ride for the crew. Most 2-10-0s did not operated at speeds greater than 50 mph (80 km/h).
The type operated as freight engine, although locomotives in
Germany and the
United Kingdom proved capable of hauling
passenger trains.
United States
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Pennsylvania Railroad I1s Locomotive
The first Decapods built for the
Lehigh Valley Railroad in
1867; proved too rough on the track because of their long coupled
wheelbase, one pair of drivers were removed. No more followed for 24 years, until the
Erie Railroad bought six for pusher service between
1891 and
1893. In low-speed service where high tractive effort was critical, these Decapods were successful. Small numbers of other Decapods were built over the next twenty years, mostly for service in steeply
graded mountainous areas where power at low speeds was the requirement. The type did not prove as popular as the successful Consolidation (
2-8-0) type. Among the Decapods users was the
Santa Fe. The engines were
tandem compounds but their ongoing reversing limitations became the genesis of the
2-10-2 wheel arrangement.
The first boost in the number of Decapods occurred when
Imperial Russia ordered approximately 1200 Decapods from American builders during
World War I. When the
Bolshevik revolution occurred in 1917, over 800 had already been delivered, but more than 200 were either awaiting shipment or were in the process of construction. These stranded locomotives were adopted by the
United States Railroad Administration (USRA), the body created by the Government to oversee and control the railroads during the War, converted to American standards, and put to use on American railroads. Small and light-footed, these Russian decapods proved popular with smaller railroads, and many of them remained in service long after the USRA's control of the railroads ceased. Many indeed lasted until the end of steam on those railroads.
Swengel suggested the 2-10-0 arrangement was 'obsolete' by 1916, when the
Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) commenced an experiment with a 2-10-0 locomotive at its Juniata plant.
[1] Most 10 coupled engines constructed for U.S. railroads, during World War 1 were of the USRA 2-10-2 arrangement, then the PRR committed to 122 of the 2-10-0s.
[2] Swengel argued that that commitment to the 2-10-0, nicknamed "Deks", was controversial even in 1916, but it was even more so by 1922 following PRR's additional orders. Soon, the PRR became the biggest user of the Decapods in the United States. The type was ideally suited to the Pennsy's heavy graded
Allegheny Mountains routes; power and lugging ability, not speed. The PRR bought 598 2-10-0s, building 123 at its own shops and ordering the rest from the
Baldwin Locomotive Works in one of the biggest locomotive orders of all time. The PRR's 2-10-0s eventually developed 94,024 lbs of tractive effort, delivered steam at 250 psi, had superheating higher than normal engines, had a limited grate area of 70 square feet, had an axle loading of 70,00lbs, weighed-in at 386,100 lbs , had blind drivers on the second, third and fourth driving axles and possessed stokers.
[3] The debate about whether the PRR's 2-10-0s were the best or not, predicted Swengel, 'must remain a great unknown.'
The PRR decapod, class
I1s, was unlike the Russian decapod; it was huge, taking advantage of the PRR's heavy trackage and high
axle loading, with a fat, free-steaming boiler that earned the type the nickname of 'Hippos' on the PRR. Two giant cylinders (30½ x 32 inch) gave the I1s power and their giant tenders permitted hard and long workings between stops. They were unpopular with the crews, for they were hard riding.
[4] Indeed, one author described them as the holy terror of the PRR. The last operations on the PRR was 1957.
4
A small number of other Decapods were ordered by other railroads; those built for the
Western Maryland Railroad were the largest ever built, at almost 420,000 lb (190,500 kg) weight. A small short line railroad, the
Durham and Southern Railway, bought a few new Decapods from Baldwin. Nos. 200-201 were bought in May 1930 and No. 202 was purchased in September 1933.
Thirteen Decapod locomotives survive in the USA, including six Russian Decapods and one PRR I1s. Two, including one Russian decapod at the
Illinois Railway Museum, are operational.
Germany

A BR50.
The 2-10-0 arrangement was a very popular one in Germany. The first were built by the individual state railways from
1915 to
1918, and these later became the
DRG BR 58. The DRG then produced a number of standard classes of 2-10-0s: the heavy 3-cylinder
BR44 (1753 built), the two-cylinder version
BR43 (35 built), and the lightweight
BR50 (3164 built). During wartime, the BR44 and BR50 designs were simplified as ÜK (''Übergangs Kriegslokomotiven'', or interim war locomotives). By 1941, it was clear that even these were too complicated, expensive, time-consuming to build, and used too much of materials in short supply, so new ''Kriegslocomotive'' (war locomotive) designs were developed; the lightweight
BR52 (6161 built) and the intermediate weight
BR42 (844 built).
Postwar locomotives of these types, particularly the BR 52, were spread all over Europe and were taken into service by the railways of many different countries.BR 44 in France (150 X);BR 50: in Belgium: class 25;in Denmark: class N. BR 52: in Austria: class 52; in Belgium: class 26; in Norway: class 63.
United Kingdom
Locomotives with ten driving wheels were rare in British railway history. Two
0-10-0s were the first; a
tank locomotive for the
Great Eastern Railway in
1902, built for suburban passenger service and named "Decapod", and a
tender locomotive for the
Midland Railway in
1919, built for the specialised task of
banker for trains over the
Lickey Incline.
The first 2-10-0 was built during the Second World War, as a variant of the "Austerity" 2-8-0 for lightly built railways. The only 2-10-0 type built in significant numbers was the 251 strong
Class 9F introduced by
British Railways in the
1950s. It included
92220 ''Evening Star'', the last steam locomotive built by British Railways, in 1960.
Finland
The
State RR Co. of
Finland purchased 20 American Decapods after
WWII - these were originally built for the Soviet Union, but never delivered to them. Of the 20 engines, 10 were made by
Baldwin, 10 by
ALCO. Since they were originally built for the USSR, they had the correct gauge for Finland, too (1524 mm/5 ft. exactly). One (ALCO # 75214, 1947) is preserved at the
Finnish Railway Museum in
Hyvinkää, Finland.
France
From 1910 to 1951, the French industry built more than 500 decapods for three railway companies (Paris-Orléans, Nord, Est) and for the national railways (
SNCF). Moreover, at the end of
World War II, SNCF inherited more than 200 units of German decapods built in France, mostly BR 44. The last decapod, a SNCF 150P, was withdrawn in 1968. All 2-10-0s, of French or of German design, proved reliable and powerful in service. One can notice that some engines of the Paris-Orléans company were dedicated to passenger service on difficult mountain lines.
Soviet Union
2-10-0 were fairly common freight locomotives in the former Soviet Union. They came from several sources: US imports (series Ea and Eb, built by ALCO and Baldwin, respectively), German war tropy BR52 class locomotives and locally built. The locally built 2-10-0 locomotives were represented by SO (Sergo Ordjonikidze) and L (Lebedyanski) -series locomotives. The L-series locomotives were one of the more advanced steam locomotives built in the former Soviet Union. They used stocker to feed coal and had a relatively low axle load(18 tonn)to be compatible with the war-torn railroads of the former Soviet Union.Several examples of these locomotives are still preserved in working order.
References
★
Pennsy Power: Steam and Electric Locomotives of the Pennsylvania Railroad 1900-1957, Staufer, Alvin F., , , , 1962,
★
The American Steam Locomotive, Vol. 1, The Evolution of of the Steam Locomotive, Swengel, F.M., , , MidWest Rail Publications, 1967,
★
I remember Pennsy, Woods, Don, , , Audio-Visual Degins, 1973,
1. Swengel, pp.190-191.
2. Swengel; Staufer, p.65.
3. Swengel.
4. Staufer
External links
★
Illinois Railway Museum's roster page for SLSF 1630 (the operable 2-10-0)