Poland 1974
I visited with a friend in the summer of 1974, when taking photographs of the railways was somewhat difficult, to say the least, hence the rarity of colour pictures of steam in action in the country.
A quick note on Polish locomotive classifications! A capital letter comes first: T (Towarowy) denotes a freight engine, O (Osobowy) a mixed traffic engine and P (Pospiesny) an express passenger engine. The second letter is in lower case and denotes the wheel arrangement: e.g. m = 4-6-2, k = 4-6-0, l = 2-6-2, y = 2-10-0 etc. If the locomotive is a tank engine, then the second letter is also a capital – K (Kusy), to denote tank engine, the wheel arrangement letter follows this! The letters are followed by a number: 1 – 10 denote ex-Prussian or Deutsche Reichsbahn locomotives; numbers from 11 – 19 denote ex-Austrian; 20 - 99 denote a Polish construction designed from that year! 100 and above denote miscellaneous designs. So as above, Ok1 is a mixed traffic 4-6-0 of ex-Prussian origin (Prussian P8), Ol49 is a mixed traffic 2-6-2 designed and built in Poland from 1949. An example of a tank engine would be OKo1, which is a mixed traffic 4-6-4T of ex-Prussian origin (Prussian T18). Very complicated!
I hope I've got that right, and apologies for not having the correct accents on letters - my English keyboard doesn't seem to support them!
Read MoreA quick note on Polish locomotive classifications! A capital letter comes first: T (Towarowy) denotes a freight engine, O (Osobowy) a mixed traffic engine and P (Pospiesny) an express passenger engine. The second letter is in lower case and denotes the wheel arrangement: e.g. m = 4-6-2, k = 4-6-0, l = 2-6-2, y = 2-10-0 etc. If the locomotive is a tank engine, then the second letter is also a capital – K (Kusy), to denote tank engine, the wheel arrangement letter follows this! The letters are followed by a number: 1 – 10 denote ex-Prussian or Deutsche Reichsbahn locomotives; numbers from 11 – 19 denote ex-Austrian; 20 - 99 denote a Polish construction designed from that year! 100 and above denote miscellaneous designs. So as above, Ok1 is a mixed traffic 4-6-0 of ex-Prussian origin (Prussian P8), Ol49 is a mixed traffic 2-6-2 designed and built in Poland from 1949. An example of a tank engine would be OKo1, which is a mixed traffic 4-6-4T of ex-Prussian origin (Prussian T18). Very complicated!
I hope I've got that right, and apologies for not having the correct accents on letters - my English keyboard doesn't seem to support them!
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PKP Ty43-55, Sedizow, August 1984
From the Geoff Plumb Collection of original slides. PKP Ty43 class 2-10-0 No. Ty43-55 sits on the turntable at Sędziszów loco depot, seen during an Eisenbahn Kurier tour of Poland in August 1984. Photo by James Shuttleworth. These locos were the same as DR Class 42. Details of this photo kindly updated by Marek Ciesielski, for which many thanks.
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tom
on May 5, 2012the photos are fantastic ! Thank you.