Orenstein & Koppel

Orenstein & Koppel (normally abbreviated to "O&K") was a major German engineering company specialising in railway vehicles, escalators, and heavy equipment. It was founded on April 1, 1876, in Berlin by Benno Orenstein and Arthur Koppel.

Orenstein & Koppel
Orenstein und Koppel
TypePublic
IndustryManufacturing
FoundedApril 1, 1876 (1876-04-01)
FounderBenno Orenstein
Arthur Koppel
DefunctJanuary 1, 1999 (1999-01-01)
FateAcquired
Area served
Worldwide
ProductsRailway vehicles
Heavy equipment
Escalators
ParentNew Holland Construction

Originally a general engineering company, O&K soon started to specialise in the manufacture of railway vehicles. The company also manufactured heavy equipment and escalators. O&K pulled out of the railway business in 1981. Its escalator-manufacturing division was spun off to the company's majority shareholder at the time, Friedrich Krupp AG Hoesch-Krupp, in 1996, leaving the company to focus primarily on construction machines.[1] The construction-equipment business was sold to New Holland Construction, at the time part of the Fiat Group, in 1999.[2][3]

Founding and railway work

Steam engine manufactured for Patiala State Monorail Trainways at National Rail Museum, New Delhi

The Orenstein & Koppel Company was a mechanical-engineering firm that first entered the railway-construction field, building locomotives and other railroad cars.

First founded in 1892 in Schlachtensee, in the Zehlendorf district of Berlin, and known as the Märkische Lokomotivfabrik, the O&K factories expanded to supply the Imperial German Army under Kaiser Wilhelm II with field-service locomotives, or Feldbahn. O&K supplied all manner of railway equipment to the Army. Because of strained capacity at the Schlachtensee shops, work transferred in 1899 to a site in Nowawes, later Babelsberg, near Potsdam. Around 1908, O&K acquired the firm of Gerlach and König in Nordhausen, building petrol and diesel locomotives there under the trade mark "Montania".

Diversification

Excavator from O&K
Siemens-Schuckert Orenstein & Koppel underground trains built for the Buenos Aires Underground from 1934 to 1944.

O&K expanded to build freight and passenger cars, and above all, excavators for construction. The company also built other heavy equipment, including graders, dump trucks, forklift trucks, compressors, crawler loaders, wheeled loaders, road rollers, and truck cranes.

The company also began manufacturing escalators, transmissions, rapid-transit railway lines, buses, tractors, and cargo ships. Passenger liners, shipboard cranes, and shipbuilding enterprises rounded out the company's profile. Because of the company's thriving export business, a worldwide system of branch offices was created.

In the early years of the 20th century, O&K built bucket chain trenchers, at first from wood, and—after 1904—completely from steel. These were propelled by steam or oil engines. O&K also made railway trenchers for work in heavy soils.

In the First World War, O&K built railway engines and cars of all sizes for the German government. With the collapse of Imperial Germany in November 1918, the victorious Allies put further restrictions on German manufacturing and military capacity, seizing all army Feldbahn engines as per the terms of the Versailles Treaty that ended the First World War. The treaty also removed access to export markets; at the end of 1925, work stopped for three months as a result of the lost business. By 1935, business had recovered and the company produced 5,299 locomotives. After the war, O&K's American subsidiary, the Orenstein-Arthur Koppel Company, was seized by the Alien Property Custodian and sold at an auction where only United States citizens were allowed to place bids.[4]

Besides the Feldbahn contracts, the company produced Series 50 steam locomotives and standard gauge vehicles in the 1930s. They also delivered some broad gauge CSÉT shunting locomotives with a gauge of 5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm) to the Irish Sugar Company (Comlucht Siúcre Éireann) in Ireland (2 of which have been preserved). The company produced diesel locomotives, and Series 44 and Series 50 steam engines, for the national railway company, Deutsche Reichsbahn-Gesellschaft.

In 1922, they manufactured their first continuous-track steam shovel. In 1926, diesel engines replaced steam engines; the company converted earlier steam units to diesel power as the need arose. O&K merged with a kerosene-engine builder, selling the engines under the O&K banner.

Nazi era and the Second World War

Kriegslokomotive built by O&K

At the Spandau factory, O&K built cable-operated excavators and bucket-wheel excavators for use in the lignite coal mines of eastern Germany. Under the Aryanisation scheme of Adolf Hitler's Nazi Germany, the Orenstein family's shares in the company were forcibly sold in 1935; Orenstein and Koppel was placed under trust administration, and the Babelsberger works were taken over and renamed in 1941. O&K existed in name only, but more commonly used the abbreviation MBA (Maschienenbau und Bahnbedarf AG).

After heavy bomb attacks on Berlin caused a fire in the company's plant-administration buildings, factory production minister Albert Speer redistributed work and factories around the country to lessen the risk from a single attack. For the remainder of World War II, no more locomotives were built in Berlin. Four hundred and twenty-one locomotives already under construction were shifted to Prague to protect the existing factories. During the war, O&K provided 400 Class 52 locomotives.

East Germany

After the end of the war, the locomotive plant in Nordhausen went idle. Under the German Democratic Republic, O&K changed its name to the VEB Company, and resumed heavy mechanical manufacturing at Nordhausen, producing cable-operated excavator shovels, among other things.

Excavator from O&K in 1957

By 1946, the Babelsberg factory resumed production of locomotive boilers, and one year later the plant delivered its first postwar locomotive.

The German Democratic Republic nationalised the railroads and rolling stock manufacturers. The O&K plants in Babelsberg were renamed the LOWA Lokomotiv Plant Karl Marx (LKM). The LKM became the sole manufacturer of diesel locomotives for the GDR, such as the large DRG V180. In the late 1950s, the plant developed steam and diesel engines for the Deutsche Reichsbahn narrow-gauge railways, building approximately 4,160 engines.

Construction of steam locomotives ended in 1969, leaving diesel-hydraulic locomotives as the company's priority. The company's last diesel locomotive was the DB Class V 60D, manufactured until 1976. Over the course of 30 years as LKM, the company produced approximately 7,760 locomotives; about a third of that number were manufactured for export.

By 1964, the company had expanded into air-conditioning and refrigeration technology.

West Germany

In West Germany, the enterprise resumed operation after World War II in 1949, under the name Orenstein & Koppel AG, with headquarters in Berlin. In 1950, it incorporated under that name after merging with the Lübecker Crane Company. After the construction of the Berlin Wall in 1961, the head office moved to Dortmund.

By the mid-1970s, the enterprise had grown steadily. In 1972, O&K had five working plants: West Berlin, Dortmund, Hagen, Hattingen/Ruhr, and Lübeck; it maintained a central spare-parts service in Bochum. That year, the company had 8,530 employees. The company had 24 business and sales offices in West Germany, and agencies on all five populated continents.

The West German company emphasised the manufacture of railroad cars and construction equipment, particularly excavators. In 1961, O&K manufactured Europe's first series of fully hydraulic excavators. They manufactured over 55,000 hydraulic excavators; more than 700 of those were rated at over 100 tons' service weight. O&K also manufactured the world's largest hydraulic excavator, at 900 tons' service weight with a shovel capacity of over 52 cubic metres (68 cu yd) and an engine output of 2,984 kilowatts (4,055 HP).

The company also diversified into escalator manufacturing.

Decline

After 1964, the railway-manufacturing unit was separated from the other production units.

The railway business was transferred to Bombardier, which continues to manufacture rolling stock in Berlin. The Babelsberg site became an industrial park.

The escalator-manufacturing division was sold to the company's majority shareholder at the time, Friedrich Krupp AG Hoesch-Krupp, in 1996.[1]

The construction-equipment business was sold to New Holland Construction, at the time part of the Fiat Group, in 1999.[2][3]

Steam locomotives

Tank locomotives with two coupled axles (Type 0-4-0)

0-4-0, 20 hp, 600 mm, 5.4 t
0-4-0, 50 hp, 750 mm, 8.8 t
0-4-0, 160 hp, 900 mm, 21 t
0-4-0, 110 hp, 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in), 17.5 t
0-4-0, 250 hp, 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in), 28 t

Based on O&K's experience, they have created a number of type 0-4-0 standard designs, which have proven to be particularly suitable for many companies. Locomotives of these standard designs were always under construction, and locomotives of the most common strengths were always in stock, so that they could be dispatched immediately on request. Two-axle locomotives were mainly used by construction companies and industrial establishments; accordingly, special emphasis was placed on simple and practical construction. In particular, the locomotives were characterised by high tractive power, while the smaller types were generally based on a lower speed in favour of tractive power.[5]

The standard-gauge locomotives in this category were particularly suitable for shunting and for operating purposes on branch lines.[5]

For light railways, especially for narrow-gauge railways, with steep gradients, tight curves and generally a light superstructure and substructure, locomotives with only two axles did often not meet the requirements in terms of tractive force and caused wear of the track and the wheel tyres due to their wheel load. Therefore, larger locomotives with more axles were available, as shown below.

Tank locomotives with three coupled axles (Type 0-6-0)

0-6-0, 20 hp, 600 mm 5.8 t, coal fired
0-6-0, 50 hp, 750 mm, 10.2 t, wood fired
0-6-0, 70 hp, 900 mm, 13.2 t, coal fired
0-6-0, 140 hp, 1000 mm, 19.500 t, coal fired

As with the two-axle coupled locomotives, the full weight of the machines with three coupled axles was used as adhesion weight. However, since the wheel pressure was distributed over six wheels instead of four, locomotives of this category could run on much lighter rails than two-axle locomotives with the same weight and therefore the same tractive force. This type of locomotive could therefore be used wherever the existing track required the most powerful locomotive possible without exceeding the permissible wheel pressure, or where the superstructure was to be constructed relatively lightly. Particularly on longer lines, the latter was considered for the sake of substantial savings. However, the track curves must be larger when using this locomotive than with the four-wheelers.[6]

Locomotives with two coupled axles and one svivelling axle (Types 2-4-0 or 0-4-2)

Locomotive with two coupled axles, one front svivelling axle and a separate tender, 50 hp, 750 mm, 9.5 t
Locomotive with two coupled axles and one rear svivelling axle, 40 hp, 700 mm, 10 t

If the locomotive had to travel through small curves with a light superstructure, it was advisable to purchase a locomotive with two axles and a svivelling axle. This type was especially suitable for longer distances because, it allowed a light superstructure and was also able, to carry larger supplies than 0-4-0 locomotives with the same wheel pressure. The design also had the advantage that the centre of gravity could be set lower than on other types. This, together with the large wheelbase, gave the machines a particularly smooth ride. It could also run at a relatively higher speed, so that, according to the above, it was mainly suitable for small railways and feeder lines. Depending on the particular conditions, O&K installed the svivelling axle at the rear or at the front, but always in such a way that the greatest possible adhesive weight was maintained. Since the full weight of this type of machine could never be used as the adhesive weight, this construction was less suitable for carrying large loads. For such cases OK recommended the use of multi-axle coupled locomotives of the Gölsdorf type or, if small curves were available, to the locomotives of the Mallet or Klien-Lindner type, as shown below.[7]

Coupled compound locomotives (Type 0-4-4-0, Mallet design)

0-4-4-0, 90 hp, 600 mm, 15 t
0-8-0, 110 hp, 800 mm, 22 t

In many cases, where 0-4-0 or 0-6-0 steam locomotives were no longer sufficient, O&K built 0-4-4-0 or 0-6-6-0 compound locomotives, Mallet design, which supplemented the more conventional looking 0-4-2 locomotives (in Germany categorized as 2×2/2 and 2x3/3 double compound locomotives in comparison to the more conventional looking 2/3 locomotives). Apart from the possibility of being used on light superstructures and small curves, the locomotive had the advantage of great tractive power due to the composite arrangement of the cylinders, as the full weight was used as adhesion weight. The design was such that the boiler, driver's cab and storage boxes were connected to the rear frame, which carried the high-pressure cylinders, while the front frame, on which the low-pressure cylinders were located, was connected to the rear frame by two vertical hinges. The boiler with the water boxes rested on a slide track of the front frame, so that the latter could move freely under the boiler. The steam passed from the regulator in fixed pipes to the high-pressure cylinders and, after expansion in these, through an absolutely steam-tight, flexible, well-insulated pipe to the low-pressure cylinders. The exhaust steam entered the exhauster through a vertical movable pipe. A special valve made it possible to feed boiler steam directly to the low-pressure cylinders, so that all four cylinders came into operation immediately when the locomotive was started-up.[8]

Locomotives with coupled hollow axles with radial and lateral movement (Klien-Lindner design)

0-8-0, 20 hp, 750 mm
0-4-0, 90 hp, 600 mm
0-6-0, 140 hp, 1000 mm
0-8-0, 160 hp, 750 mm

For railways with steep gradients and relatively light track construction, locomotives with two or three coupled axles often did not meet the requirements of increased traffic. Due to the high costs involved, the existing tracks could often not be converted, and heavier locomotives with a larger number of axles were used. Where small curvatures precluded the use of long, fixed wheelbases, locomotives with steerable bogies or, for the sake of simplicity, locomotives with curvilinear coupled axles were often used. The acquisition of such locomotives was also advisable for such new designs where the track systems and bridges were easier and cheaper to build. Since 1901, locomotives with coupled hollow axles have been built in particular according to the Klien-Lindner design, which has proved extremely successful in operation. The advantages of this design were:

  1. Large tractive force at a given permissible wheel pressure
  2. Large wheelbase with the best curve mobility and equal spring loading on both sides of each end axle and thus safe running of the locomotive
  3. Shock-free running into curves, as well as safe return to the centre position when running on straight track
  4. Equally good running when driving forwards and backwards
  5. Low wear of the rails and wheel tyres
Locomotives with coupled hollow axles with radial and lateral movement (Klien-Lindner design)

The arrangement and mode of operation was as follows: The laterally and radially movable coupled axle was installed as the end axle, and in the case of eight- or ten-wheelers, these steering axles arranged at both ends ensured that the locomotive could enter the curves without difficulty. All axles were coupled in the usual way by fixed rods and mounted in axle bushes "bb" outside the wheels, following the spring play. The axle bushes sit in a continuous, fixed frame on which the steam cylinders are arranged in the usual way. The steering axle consists of a core axle "a" fixed in "bb" and driven in the usual way, and a hollow axle "c" which is firmly connected to the wheels and can be moved laterally and radially and which encloses the core axle, which is provided with a ball attachment in the middle, by means of a two-part ball cup "d".[9]

The load on the axle was distributed by the ball pivot of the core axle "a" as it were by a transverse balancer on both wheels of the axle and thus equal wheel pressures and safety against derailment are obtained. The hollow axle is driven by a driving pin "f" pressed into the ball pivot of the core axle with sliding pieces at both ends, which have the necessary lateral play in the housing of the hollow axle for the deflection of the axle. In order to return the hollow axle to its central position after deflection, either return springs are arranged in the central housing, or, as can be seen in the following illustration, counter-guides "g" are arranged which, by means of brackets, enclose the hollow axles in the auxiliary bearing positions "ee" and effect unconstrained, shock-free adjustment of the hollow axle, since both end axles must execute their radial or lateral movement simultaneously. In order to counteract the unsteady running of the steering axles on the track and any lurching of the locomotive, these locomotives are fitted with an adjustable safety device which holds the drawbar frames in the central position on the track by means of spring tension; no pressure is exerted against the bearing points with this resetting device. These axles do not require any maintenance except for periodic lubrication. The periodic lubrication mentioned is only necessary at intervals of 1 to 2 months and is carried out after loosening the two lubricating screws "s" located on the centre of the axle by introducing grease or viscous oil into the sliding boxes of the driving pin. Only during a general inspection of the locomotives is it necessary to also inspect the hollow axles to make sure that the internal parts are in good condition.[10]

O&K have used the Klien-Lindner axles for the Royal Prussian State Railways and many other railway in large numbers. The administration of the military railway has also introduced 0-8-0 locomotives with steerable coupled axles in place of the 0-6-0 field railway locomotives previously built.

Locomotives with laterally movable coupled axles (Gölsdorf design)

0-8-0 locomotive with laterally movable Gölsdorf axles, 60 hp, 750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in), weight 14 t
Principle of the Gölsdorf axles shown on a ten-coupled steam engine

Locomotives of the Gölsdorf design were only suitable for lines, on which there were relatively few and large curvatures. In this case it was sufficient to shift one or more coupling axles sideways in such a way that the movable axles were not guided in their axle bearings but by their own flanges. The bearings of the coupling rods have the same lateral play on their journals as the axles in the axle bearings. This type of construction has proven itself well on eight- and multi-wheel locomotives, but it was not suitable for very small curvatures. In terms of performance and even load distribution, etc., it was equivalent to the more common Klien-Lindner locomotives. They were used for main, branch and small railways.[11]

Two of the five axles of a ten-wheel locomotive could move sideways relative to the frame because their axle boxes fixed them rigidly to the frame. The other axles, however, were fitted into their bearings and attached to their drives in such a way that they can be moved sideways during curve running, depending on the sideways forces acting on them. In addition the connecting and coupling rods, through which linear forces from the steam pistons were translated into the rotation of the wheels via the crank pins, also had to be able to move sideways.

Tramway locomotives (Type 0-4-0)

An early oil fired locomotive, possibly O&K 2900/1908, 20 hp, metre gauge, 0-4-0, 7.7 t, often listed as coal fired
O&K tramway locomotive, 30 hp, metre (3 ft 3⅜ in) gauge, 0-4-0, service weight ca 8.75 t
O&K 797/1901 of Societa Guidovia Camuna, 50 hp, metre gauge, 13 t

O&K built tramway locomotives, which were used for operation on tramways serving public traffic, either with a driver's cab at the front and rear or with only one driver's cab in the middle of the locomotive; furthermore with a power unit cover in two different designs. Whereas one version only served to conceal the engine from road traffic, the other version served to protect the engine parts against dust. The desired type of covering is to be specified. The weight of this locomotive was relatively high and therefore it could develop a great performance immediately when starting up, even on short gradients. This was effectively supported by a high steam overpressure, which O&K usually provided for these locomotives with 14 bars (200 psi).[12]

The fairing of all moving parts was intended to protect other road users such as pedestrians from serious injuries in case of accidents. It also prevented horses from shying and protected the transmission from dirt and dust on the unpaved roads that were common at the time. Often there was no stoker on tram locomotives, which meant they were operated by the driver in one-man operation. The short axle stands also ensured that narrow curves could be negotiated in city centres. Often, standing boilers were used for reasons of space.

Mining and tunnel locomotives

40 hp, 600 mm
70 hp, 600-750 mm
With retractable chimney
Compressed air locomotive

For operation in tunnels or mine, O&K built locomotives in compliance with specific profiles. In the case of steam locomotives, it was possible to run them at high speed by fitting suitable devices and using particularly large boilers that could store a larger quantity of steam before passing through the tunnel. For use during tunnel construction or in underground mines, steam locomotives with oil firing equipment were particularly suitable, whereby smoke development and spark emission did not take place. The handling of these locomotives did not differ in any other respect from that of an ordinary locomotive. Furthermore, fireless locomotives were also very suitable for operation in tunnels and mines, as they completely avoid the nuisance of smoke, gases and sparks. Compressed air locomotives, which, however, required a special stationary system to generate the compressed air were also made and sold in smaller numbers.[13]

Fireless locomotives

Four-wheel fireless locomotive, empty 8 t, built to any gauge
Fireless locomotive for standard gauge, service weight 15 tons
Fireless locomotive for 600 mm or 2 ft gauge, service weight 4.8 tons
Fireless locomotive for mines, 500 mm (19+34 in) gauge, weight 3.9 tons

Fireless locomotives were particularly suitable for use inside factories, yards etc., where it was essential to secure absolute freedom from any risk of fire. They were largely used for shunting purposes for paper mills, oil mills, wool mills, timber yards, gunpowder factories and similar works. These locomotives were constructed without fire boxes, the necessary steam being taken from a stationary boiler. The locomotive is able to work for several hours with one filling and can be operated with minimum expense as the driver needed less skills than that of a conventional steam engine.[14]

Rack locomotives

O&K 7000/1914, 30 hp, 600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in) gauge, 0-4-0T, So­cié­té Chiron Frères, Chambéry for adhesion and rack operation
O&K 2365/1907, 125 hp, 850 mm (2 ft 9+1532 in), 0-4-0T, Gewerk­schaft Vereinigte Burgholzhausen, Herdorf (Kunsterthalbahn)[15]

O&K delivered several types of cogwheel locomotives for mixed railways, on which ordinary operation alternated with cogwheel operation. Mixed railways were used in changing terrains with only single steep gradient, which could not be negotiated by ordinary adhesion locomotives. Accordingly, only these steep gradients were equipped with toothed bars. The mode of operation was as follows: The two steam cylinders outside the frame drove the driving gearwheel for the rack by means of a double gearing with the appropriate transmission. This driving gear wheel sat on a special axle fixed in the frame and was connected to the friction axles by coupling rods, so that the gear wheel axle and friction axles were driven simultaneously. The locomotives could therefore run on normal rail tracks as well as on toothed tracks. On the toothed track, the driving gear and the friction wheels worked together. The effect of the latter was also utilised on the toothed track and the load on the rack was relieved accordingly. The locomotives worked either on a simple flat steel rack or on Riggenbach ladder rack.[16] A cumulative number of only 6 to 9 rack steam locomotives were made by O&K in total. Their track gauge ranged from 400 mm (15+34 in) to 1,300 mm (4 ft 3+316 in).[17]

Locomotives with a separate tender

Locomotive with six coupled wheels and front bissels, type 2-6-0, for coal, service weight 28.3 t + 21.5 t, built for a Chinese Railway
Eight-wheel coupled locomotive, type 0-8-0, 150 hp, 2ft 6in gauge for wood fuel with separate tender, built for Siam

Locomotives with a separate tender did not carry all their fuel and water on board the locomotive and were thus particularly useful for travelling long distances without being refuelled. The locomotives were equipped to be either heated by coal, wood or oil, because a larger heating and grate area were required. The main types had from four to twelve wheels for the locomotive and four, six or eight wheels on the tender.

The water tanks were firmly fastened to the frame of the tender, while maintaining a low centre of gravity. The coupling between locomotive and tender was similar to that of the waggons, to ensure that the locomotive could be driven without the tender for shunting or on short distances. The tender was easily accessible from the engineer's cab. If the locomotive was heated by wood, the tender had a special fence to increase the volume of its load.

Coupled compound locomotives (Type 0-6-6-0, Kitson-Meyer design)

O&K 11350/1927 (Type 0-6-6-0, Kitson-Meyer design) for Puente Alto-El Volcán Railway

After Orenstein & Koppel (O&K) had delivered the prototype of a Kitson-Meyer locomotive for the 600 mm gauge to the Chilean military railway in 1927, an order for three locomotives followed in 1937. In 1939, the locomotives with the factory numbers 13306 to 13308 were completed. The locomotives had riveted bridge and bogie frames. The boiler, cab, reservoir and ash box were also riveted. The engines located at the two bogie ends worked on the centre axle set. This wheelset could also be sanded. The control system was of the Heusinger type. While the prototype had a Westinghouse brake, the production locomotives had a Knorr brake. The air pump was attached to the rear water tank, while the main air tank was above it on the water tank. The locomotive had electrically operated headlights.

Due to the beginning of the Second World War, the vehicles could not be delivered to Chile. They were then tested by O&K on the Rehagen-Klausdorf army training area and probably also on lines of the Mecklenburg-Pomeranian narrow-gauge railway. In 1944, the Deutsche Reichsbahn acquired the locomotives to use them on lines in occupied Poland. Therefore, in the second half of the same year, they were handed over to Gedob Direktion Krakow, where they were stationed at BW Jedrzejow.[18]

List of Orenstein & Koppel narrow-gauge steam locomotives

The list of Orenstein & Koppel narrow-gauge steam locomotives shows photographically documented samples of representative Orenstein & Koppel (O&K) steam locomotives with a gauge of less than 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in). The factory produced 14,387 steam locomotives from 1899 to 1945 at its Berlin site (Drewitz, Nowawes, Babelsberg) with the works number range from 337 to 12965.

Works
No
YearPhotoWheel
arrangement
GaugePowerUse
36618990-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)20 hpDelivered via the O&K sales office in Budapest to Earl Károly Imre in Nagymágócs near Oroszhaza. 1941 used at the fortifications in Szolyva and in 1945 returned to Mattersburg in Austria. Now being operated in Feld- und Industriebahnmuseum Freiland, Austria.[19]
36718990-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Delivered via the Swedish general agent Carl Ström to the Hamra–Tumba Järnvägen of Gustaf de Laval on Gotland in Sweden. From 1916 owned by the construction company Byggnads AB, who sold it to the city of Stockholm in 1917 for work on Hammarbyleden.[20]
18990-6-0 FLFireless locomotive
41818990-6-0785 mm (2 ft 6+2932 in)Bröl Valley Railway, BTE 14–17
53119000-4-2600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpInitially at sugar mill Nakel (Cukrownia Nakło), now Narrow Gauge Railway Museum in Wenecja, Poland[21]
53318990-6-2600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpKleinbahngesellschaft Krone, für Wirsitzer Kleinbahn '9'
576-5780-4-4-0
Mallet
750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)120 hpKalan
5911900600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)80 hpKirchlengernHille railway (Wallückebahn) in Germany
5961900Initially 0-4-0, later 0-6-01,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)125 hpSoest No 9 of the Ruhr-Lippe-Eisenbahngesellschaft in Germany
61419000-4-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)30 hpInitially Pakis Baru 1, now Statfold Barn Railway
6170-6-2750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)100 hpTwo-cylinder locomotive with three coupled axles and one radial axle. Steam bell, outer frame, upper water tanks. Delivered to the Rosenberger Kreisbahn
68319000-4-0508 mm (1 ft 8 in)10 hpDinty, Cosmopolitan Proprietary Mine, Kookynie, Western Australia[22][23]
ca 19000-4-0610 mm (2 ft)Moira Coal Mine, Collie, Western Australia
ca 19000-4-0Sugar cane plantation of the Nederlandsch-Indische Spoorwegen
ca 1900Douglas, Port Douglas Tramway from Mossman to Port Douglas in Queensland, Australia
68719010-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)20 hpCeper 2, PG Gondang Baru, Klaten, Indonesia
71819010-4-0610 mm (2 ft)30 hpMagnet № 2, Magnet Silver Mining Co, Tasmania,[22] now Wee Georgie Wood Railway
71919010-4-0610 mm (2 ft)30 hpOrdered by North Mount Farrell Mining in Tasmania but not operated there, later Cairns Town Council, Edge Hill Tramway, Queensland[22]
72319000-4-0610 mm (2 ft)30 hpKearsney–Stanger Light Railway in the Colony of Natal (now KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa)[24]
72419000-6-0610 mm (2 ft)50 hpKearsney–Stanger Light Railway in the Colony of Natal (now KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa[25]
7254-2-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)40 hpMonte Alegre for the Usina Monte Alegre sugar mill in Piracicaba in São Paulo Brazil
73119020-4-2610 mm (2 ft)40 hpEast Murchison United Ltd, Lawlers, Western Australia[22]
77219010-4-2600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpJatiroto J70, Jatiroto, PG Jatiroto, Indonesia
77319010-4-2600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpNgadirejo 71, PG Ngadirejo, Kediri, Indonesia
77719010-4-2600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpPajarakan 2 Kelut, PG Pajarakan, Probolinggo, Indonesia
ca 19010-4-2700 mm (2 ft 3+916 in)60 hpTender locomotive with open cab, traction pump, suspension, hand bell, melting plug. Built according to Dutch-Indian regulations. Delivered to India.
8100-4-0The so-called Stink Express disposed waste and sewage sludge in Jodhpur, Rajasthan, India
81919010-4-0825 mm (2 ft 8+12 in)20 hpBurdekin, James Boyd, firewood supplier, Charters Towers, Queensland, Australia[22]
85119020-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)30 hpInitially P. Dinndorf, Strasbourg, now agricultural museum in Eschach-Seifertshofen, Germany
882Delivered 19010-4-4-0
Mallet
610 mm (2 ft)Magnet Tramway No. 2, Tasmania. Supplied by Central Mining & Tramway Appliances Proprietary Ltd 1901.[26][22]
89319010-4-2600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpMerican 4, PG Merican, Kediri, Indonesia
89419010-4-2600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpMerican 6, PG Merican, Kediri, Indonesia
89819010-4-2600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpRejosari 1 PG Rejosari, Madiun, Indonesia
93019020-4-4-0
Mallet
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)80 hpNo 5 Hamra, Östra Södermanlands Järnväg, Sweden
ca 19020-4-4-0
Mallet
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Toul № 1, Public works company Estrade-Taher, France
ca 19020-4-01,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)125 hpTwo-cylinder compound locomotive with two coupled axles. Supplied to the Ruhr-Lippe-Kleinbahnen. Steam bell, vacuum brake (König system), central lubrication device
ca 19020-4-0
ca 1902–19120-4-4-0
Mallet
750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)Sigi railway, Tanzania
100119050-6-0107 hpAsturias, № 6, narrow gauge railway Valdepeñas–Puertollano (El trenillo de La Calzá), Spain[27]
108019030-6-01,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)Sold to Jallut via the Orenstein & Koppel office in Brussels[28]
10890-4-4-0
Mallet
1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)Lenz Type ii, built by Orenstein & Koppel, No 11–16
116619030-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)50 hpMinas de Utrillas[29]
116219030-4-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)80 hpInitially Jacob & Bartisch construction company, Leipzig, later lignite mine Concordia, Nachterstedt, from 1930 lignite mine Gewerkschaft Humboldt, Thüste-Wallensen 8, since 1966 exhibited at the playground Seelze-Letter, since 1994 Emmerthal-Lüntorf, since 1996 narrow gauge museum Rittersgrün, Saxony, Germany
11671903Bn2t600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)50 hpTurba 3, Minas de Utrillas, Spain, since 1983 at the heritage railway Paderborn, since 1985 Guldental 1, Heddesheimer Feldbahn H&G Faust
133919040-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)10 hpInitially Rigeo–Eretria railway, now railway museum Athens
1358ca 19120-4-4-0
Mallet
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Mallet locomotive with outer cylinders for the Bromberger Kreisbahnen ("von Eisenhardt")
1403, 140419050-6-02 ft (610 mm)Hacienda Tenextepango, Morelos, Mexico, 24 inch 0-6-0's O&K works Nos. 1403-4/1905 (delivered via Arthur Koppel) and 2128/1906 (via Hermann Sommer). The mill was dynamited in 1913 during the Mexican revolution
141119040-4-0560 mm
(22 Zoll)
20 hpNorthern Colliery Company, Waro Limestone Scenic Reserve, New Zealand. Sold on to New Zealand Cement Co. on Limestone Island in the 1910s and from there to Wilson's Portland Cement Co. in Portland in 1918, where it was operated as Bertha. It later went to the Museum of Transport and Technology in Auckland, where it is still preserved as a museum.[30]
1904–19120-8-0785 mm (2 ft 6+2932 in)200 hpNo 11–20, (since 1910 Kattowitz 113–122), No 23 and 24, Kattowitz 125–126) and Kattowitz 127–130, seven were renumbered to 99 401–406 and 407–408.
145019050-4-4-0120 hpAtlamaxac, built for Mr. Sebastian de Mier's ranch in Atlamaxac, Puebla, Mexico.
145919050-4-01,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)Domburg of the Utrecht builder J. van Noordenne, who sold it in 1908 to the builder Arntz in Millingen. Unusual track gauge of 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) instead of 900 mm.
147319050-4-4-0
Mallet
762 mm (2 ft 6 in)60 hpInitially sugar mill Pakis Baru, now Statfold Barn Railway
14800-4-020 hpSydney (Alte Normalien, old standard) was used by Orson Wright & Co between 1907 and 1911 in the construction of the Ambergate Reservoir. The locomotive passed to H. Arnold & Son on 10 May 1912.[31]
149819040-6-01,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)50 hpRajahgopal, Cochin State Forest Tramway
ca 1903–19050-4-4-0
Mallet
610 mm (2 ft)Magnet Tramway No. 3, Tasmania. Supplied by Central Mining & Tramway Appliances Proprietary Ltd between 1903 and 1905. Front (low pressure) cylinders 12 inches × 12 inches; rear (high pressure) cylinders 8 inches × 12 inches; wheel diameter 2 feet 1 inch; rigid wheelbase 4 feet 3 inches; total wheelbase 10 feet; boiler pressure 170 lb per square inch; weight in service 18 tons.[32]
156719052-4-0891 mm (2 ft 11+332 in)
(Swedish 3 ft gauge)
Borgholm, initially Borgholm-Böda Järnväg (BBJ) No 1., later Ölands Järnvägar Nr. 7[33]
156819052-4-0891 mm (2 ft 11+332 in)
(Swedish 3 ft gauge)
Initially Borgholm-Böda Järnväg (BBJ) No 2., later Ölands Järnvägar No 8[33]
160219050-4-0Grytgöl, № 4, Ljusfallshammar, Sweden[34]
161119060-4-0891 mm (2 ft 11+332 in)
(Swedish 3 ft gauge)
Göta sulfitfabrik (Västergötland)[35]
162719050-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)40 hpBertha, № 12, Chemin de fer des Chanteraines
169419200-4-0610 mm (2 ft)Gas Light and Coke Co (G. L. C. C.), Kensal Green
169619060-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)20 hpForest railway locomotive on the grass verge of Avenida Mitre between Avenida López Torres and Calle 25 de Mayo in Posadas, Argentina. The cow-catcher is probably based on the imagination of the erectors. The driver's cab also seems to be a simplified replica.
17671905610 mm (2 ft)Matheran Hill Railway
177519064-2-0610 mm (2 ft)50 hpNo. 1 South-Western Railway Company, Knysna, South Africa[36]
178619050-4-4-0
Mallet
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)80 hpPesantren 150, PG Pesantren Baru, Kediri, Indonesia
18781906600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Built for Caminho de Ferro Mossamedes, Angola
178719050-4-4-0
Mallet
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)80 hpPesantren 151, PG Pesantren Baru, Kediri, Indonesia
184719064-4-0891 mm (2 ft 11+332 in)
(Swedish 3 ft gauge)
Der Kaiser, initially Borgholm–Böda Järnväg BBJ No 3, later Ölands Järnväg ÖJ No 9, since 1947 SJ w3p 3059, scrapped in 1953[37][38]
1870–1875, 2069–2070, 2356–2361, 2731–2734, 3182–3184, 4198–41991906–19100-8-0
1'Dnv2t (No. 1-6)
1'Dn2t (others)
1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)Lüderitz Bay Railway and South African Railways
202919060-4-0T600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)20 hp

LVD1, Parada Sud Quarry near Pueblo Centenario.[39] Hanko & Co, Argentinia, preserved by Círculo de Estudios Ferroviarios del Uruguay (CEFU) at the Railway Museum in Montevideo Central Station, Uruguay, ex Lucas José Obes

204619060-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Used by ASEA for the construction of the northern part of the Lidingöbanan
205319060-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)40 hpFrankfurter Feldbahnmuseum No. 4
207619060-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)40 hpUsed by ASEA for the construction of the Lidingöbanan
209819060-4-4-0
Mallet
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)30 hpWonolangan 7, PG Wonolangan, Probolinggo, Indonesia
212819060-6-02 ft (610 mm)Hacienda Tenextepango, Morelos, Mexico, 24 inch 0-6-0's O&K works Nos. 1403-4/1905 (delivered via Arthur Koppel) and 2128/1906 (via Hermann Sommer). The mill was dynamited in 1913 during the Mexican revolution
22200-4-21,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)Khartum–Wadi Halfa railway
224019070-6-0610 mm (2 ft)100PSNo. 2 South-Western Railway Company, Knysna, South Africa[36]
227119070-4-0610 mm (2 ft)30 hpInitially Public Works Department of Victoria, land reclamation work at the Coode Canal, Port Melbourne, later Western Australian Public Works Department, Point SamsonRoebourne[22]
230319070-4-0610 mm (2 ft)30 hpHarvey, Western Australia (see also No 2271/1997)
234219070-6-0610 mm (2 ft)150 hp739 Matheran, Matheran Hill Railway, heute National Rail Museum of India, New Delhi.
234319070-6-0610 mm (2 ft)150 hp740 Matheran, Matheran Hill Railway, now Leighton Buzzard Light Railway
237819070-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)30 hpUtrillas, Lancashire Mining Museum (West Lancashire Light Railway until 2021)
242419070-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)20 hpSimilar to 2461/1907. Whim Creek Copper Mine near City of Karratha, Western Australia.[22]
19070-8-0Naters, Switzerland
234619070-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)20 hpHacienda San Nicolás del Monte Chaparro, Michoacán, Mexico
2413-24160-8-0Loetschberg №42, Switzerland
244819080-4-0Delivered to Lötschbergbahn as a construction locomotive, later probably Simplon No. 4, used at Brig during the construction of the Simplon Tunnel
247519070-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Fia, № 1, Aspa Bruk (Ägare Munksjö AB), Sweden[40]
25250-4-0891 mm (2 ft 11+332 in)
(Swedish 3 ft gauge)
Skånska Järnvägar
260419070-6-01,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)150 hpCochin State Forest Tramway
260919070-4-4-0
Mallet
610 mm (2 ft)110 hpOrenstein & Koppel Ltd, London-Berlin, General-Agents, The ‚Central' Mining & Tramway Appliances Proprietary Ltd 40, Hunter Street, Sydney[41] Magnet Tramway, now Bennett Brook Railway
264119070-4-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)Union Bergb. Wien (1907–), Rheinregulierungsbahn Steffi (1937–), now Technisches Museum, TMW-Depot Marchegg
264919080-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)40 hpTacot des Lacs
ca 19080-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Taube (pigeon), the US army conficated the German locomotive in World War I near Cierges in France
267719070-8-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)200 hpLoetschberg N° 32, compressed air locomotive
268119070-4-01,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)20 hpBauru, São Paulo, Brazil
26971908600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Moortje, Efteling Stoomtrein Maatschappij, near Kaatsheuvel between Waalwijk and Tilburg, Netherlands
272819080-4-4-0
Mallet
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpRejo Agung 23 PonenII, PG Rejo Agung, Madiun, Indonesia (See also: N0 4494/1910)
2748610 mm (2 ft)Dunkley Brothers, North East Dundas Tramway
276219070-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)35 hpPG Tulungagung 1, Mojopanggung, Java, Indonesia
279719080-4-4-0
Mallet
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)80 hpInitially Compania Minera de Torreon, Mexico, later Cia. Minera de Penoles-Avalos, Mexico, since 1964 № 1, Cripple Creek and Victor Narrow Gauge Railroad, Colorado, USA
296619080-4-2600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)40 hpDe Maas 4, PG De Maas, Besuki, Indonesia
296719080-4-2600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Lumajang, PG Jatiroto , Indonesia
300919080-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)140 hpiKKP No 1, Kleinbahn Klockow–Pasewalk, since 1950 DR 99 4612[42][43]
301019080-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)140 hpiKKP No 2, Kleinbahn Klockow–Pasewalk, since 1950 DR 99 99 4613[42][43]
30190-4-2Initially Hollandse Anneming Maatschappij, later harbour locomotive of SA Railways in Paardeneiland, Cape Town
305319080-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Dampf
50 hp
Aquilla, initially Wuytack de Gand, Belgium, later S. A. de Beton Belges, then Rail Rebecq Rognon[44]
3127Gerald & Lorna Dee Collection, Museums Victoria
313619080-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in) or 610 mm (2 ft)40 hpAmberley Museum Railway
3161-316319080-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)40 hpIsland of Angaur in German New Guinea, from 1918 Nanyo-Agency (南洋庁) in the Japanese South Seas Mandate. The following 600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in) gauge O&K locomotives were supplied to Deutsche Südseephosphat AG, Angaur: Nos 3161, 3162 & 3163 in 1908, No 4236 in 1910 and No 4783 in 1911.
317419080-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Ortal Group K6, Tramways du Lot-et-Garonne, Tonneins, France[45]
321619080-4-0900 mm90 hpUnterengstringen ZH, gravel pit Kieswerk am Hardwald, Dietikon, Switzerland
324719090-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)20 hpHacienda San Nicolás del Monte Chaparro, Michoacán, Mexico
324819090-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Railway from Embleton Quarry to Christon Bank station and to the small harbour at Craster, Northumberland, Fanny Gray (O&K 3248/1909) in front of Dunstanburgh (Jung 812/1904)
337719080-8-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)Glückauf, Trusebahn, later DR 994531
143019080-8-0785 mm (2 ft 6+2932 in)200 hpKattowitz II. The Urskog–Hølandsbanen from Sørumsand to Skulerud in Norway (750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in) gauge) got an offer for an O&K locomotive like the one, but never bought it.
331019090-6-0610 mm (2 ft)60 hpGerman Annie, № 4, Proserpine Central Mill Co Ltd, Queensland, Australia[22]
33111909C'1 n2t610 mm (2 ft)120 hpKaiser, Gin Gin Central Mill Co Ltd, Wallaville, Queensland, Australia[22]
331719090-4-2610 mm (2 ft)40 hpJatiroto 23J, Lumajang, PG Jatiroto, Indonesia
33241909Sugar mill Ketanen, Modjokerto, East Java, Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia)
33251909Sugar mill Ketanen, Modjokerto, East Java, Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia)
335819090-3-0Monorail locomotive (Ewing System)Patiala State Monorail Tramways, now National Rail Museum of India, New Delhi. The locomotive's three wheels run with double wheel flanges on a steel rail laid along a road and transfer about 95% of the weight. A support wheel prevents the locomotive from tipping over.
336219090-4-0T900 mm or 891 mm140 hpH. Weber, Unnam, construction of the Osterfeld-Hamm railway delivered to Datteln Skanska Cement AB Schweden, later Limhama, preserved as Cementa, N° 16 at Hesselby Jernvägar, Gotland, Sweden
345219100-4-4-0
Mallet
80 hpCompagnie de l'Union in Mazaugues, France
348819090-4-0T+T600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)30 hpDelivered to Genietroepen, Utrecht for Kamp van Zeist, Netherlands
349319092-4-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)The Borneo Co. Ltd. in Lampang in Siam
349819090-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)20 hpAnita № 6, Mines at Dícido, Mioño, Spain
35090-6-0
37240-4-0Bei Drabo in Östergötland, Sweden
375319090-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpPagottan 1, PG Pagottan, Madiun, Indonesia
377119090-6-0610 mm (2 ft)50 hpGoodwood Tramway, Kalgoorlie and Boulder Firewood Co, Beria, Western Australia[22]
378919100-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)100 hpKanigoro Nr. 5, PG Kanigoro, Madiun, Indonesia
390219090-4-4-0

Mallet
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)30 hpFrankfurter Feldbahnmuseum No 13
39042-4-0From Orenstein-Arthur Koppel Company, 30 Church St., New York via Schwab & Tillmann, agent for Cuba, San Ignacio 76, Habana to Central dos Amigos,[46]
394019100-6-6-0
Mallet
1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)500 hp55 t, NWE No 32 of three Nordhausen-Wernigeroder Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft
398019100-8-0760 mm (2 ft 5+1516 in)80 hpInitially Toth Mihaly, Budapest, later 764.211, then 6110 Rachita Museum Satului, Bukarest, since 2004 Măriuța, Mocăniță pe traseul CFF Vișeu, Romania
395219100-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)100 hpPurwodadi 8, PG Purwodadi, Ngawi, Indonesia
ca 1910Theo, Sugar mill Tjoekir in Jombang, Indonesia
396119100-8-0610 mm (2 ft)50 hpGoodwood Timber and Tramway Co Ltd, Port Albert, Victoria, Australia[22]
399919100-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Ortal Group K4, Tramways du Lot-et-Garonne, Tonneins, France[45]
401119100-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)20 hpFerrocarril Austral Fueguino, El Tren del Fin del Mundo, now plinted at the jail of Ushuaia
401719100-4-0Initially 600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in), later 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)20 hpFC Midland de Buenos Aires and Talleres Libertad, later Domingo Faustino Sarmiento Railway X-5, now Plaza Once, Buenos Aires, Argentina[47]
4028600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Makatea, Tuamotu, French Polynesia
405819100-4-0Carnarvon Tramway, Western Australia[48]
408319100-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)40 hpMünster
411519100-8-0T750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)40 hpLovcen, BAr/Virpazar, Montenegro, now on display at Podgorica station
413419100-4-0+t750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)Cornellá, No 14, Narrow gauge railway Palamós–Girona–Banyoles and later narrow gauge railway Valdepeñas–Puertollano[49]
413519100-4-0+t750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)Mercedes, No 15, Narrow gauge railway Palamós–Girona–Banyoles and later narrow gauge railway Valdepeñas–Puertollano[49]
420119102-6-02 ft (610 mm)Ingenio Tilapa №1, Aldama Sugar Mill, Puebla, Mexico
420219102-6-02 ft (610 mm)Ingenio Tilapa №2, Aldama Sugar Mill, Puebla, Mexico
424419100-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpPagottan 2, PG Pagottan, Madiun, Indonesia
426419100-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpKanigoro 2, Madiun, Java, Indonesia
430019100-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpOlean 7, PG Olean, Situbondo, Indonesia
436019100-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpOlean 2, PG Olean, Situbondo, Indonesia
440019100-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60PSKebonagung 2, PG Kebonagung, Malang, Indonesia
440319110-6-01,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)Preußische Staatsbahn, Gattung T3, N° 89 6143
444519100-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpPurwodadi 10, PG Purwodadi, Ngawi, Indonesia
19100-6-01,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)Nr. 59. Initially Ferrocarriles del Estado and a construction company of Santiago del Estero, later Tranway Rural Reconquista[50]
19100-4-040 hpInitially Isnardi Alves & Cia, since 1913 Cia. Matte Laranjeira at Estrada de Ferro Guairá a Porto Mendes, since 1944 N° 4 of Serviço de Navegação da Bacia do Prata (SNBP), operational until 1959 or 1916, now exhibited at Guaíra, Paraná, Brazil
4614-462119111'Dn21,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)Lüderitz Bay Railway and South African Railways
462319110-6-0Initially 750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in),
later 914 mm (3 ft)
60 hpFirst locomotive of the FCCSA, preserved at Estación Wánchaq, Cuzco, Peru
46311911Bn2t762 mm (2 ft 6 in)Grafton Copper Mining Co in Cangai near Grafton in New South Wales, Australia
435919100-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpPurwodadi 16, PG Purwodadi, Ngawi, Indonesia
449419100-4-4-0
Mallet
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpRejoagung № 23 PonenII[51][52] (see also No 2728/1908)
ca 19100-3-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)20 hp2-2 coupled tender locomotive, 5.4 tonnes (5.3 long tons; 6.0 short tons) used at the Battles of the Isonzo, 25 May 1918
467619110-4-01,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)30 hpMizuma Town, Kurume, Fukuoka, Japan
4698-47001911Japan[53]
472019110-4-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)30 hpInitially Usines Carrières de Vaujours et Livry-Gargan, later Roche-sur-Foron, Haute Savoie, now Stefanie, Chemin de fer touristique d'Abreschviller
4819Delivered to Francisco Brunet Manati. The lettering "Orenstein & Arthur Koppel, Comp. Berlin-Nueva York, Agentes Generales para la usla de Puerto-Rico, Koerber & Co, San Juan" is unusual. O&K delivered only 19 locomotives to Puerto Rico, and the name Koerber does not appear in the delivery lists. Orenstein & Koppel - Arthur Koppel was otherwise used.
486319110-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpGempolkerep 15, Mojokerto, Indonesia
486819110-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpAsembagus 16 Slamet, Asembagus, Situbondo, Indonesia
487019110-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpWringinanom 6, PG Wringinanom, Situbondo, Indonesia
488019110-8-0610 mm (2 ft)South-Western Railway Company, Knysna, South Africa[36]
493019110-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)30 hpInitially Wegerif, Amsterdam, later brick works Ijsseloord, Arnhem, Netherlands, since 1968 Aagje, Efteling Stoomtrein Maatschappij, near Kaatsheuvel between Waalwijk and Tilburg, Netherlands
498719200-6-01,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)60 hpDiss & Co, Puerto de Adra, Spain
499019110-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpWonolangan 2, PG Wonolangan, Probolinggo, Indonesia
499119110-4-4-0
Mallet
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)80 hpAsembagus 8, Asembagus, Situbondo, Indonesia
502019110-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Tx2-355, Narrow Gauge Railway Museum in Wenecja, Poland,[54] now Plac Strzelecki, Wroclaw
508119110-6-2508 mm (1 ft 8 in)50 hpThe Sons of Gwalia Ltd, Leonora, Western Australia, Koppel[22]
510219120-4-0914 mm (3 ft)140 hpPoldark Mine bei Wendron, Cornwall
515219110-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)80 hpKanigoro 4, PG Kanigoro, Madiun, Indonesia
517919120-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)50 hpKatharina, Moor- und Fehnmuseum Elisabethfehn in Barßel, Germany
ca 19120-4-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)50 hp
519919110-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpRendeng 02, PG Rendeng, Kudus, Indonesia
521719120-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpGempolkerep 14, Mojokerto, Indonesia
529719120-4-01,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)40 hpMiyazaki Kotsu Railway SL No 1 (1913–1962), now JR Lyushu Nichinan Line
5301–5305191220 hpDelivered to Argentina. The main dimensions changed in 1912 from 145 mm × 260 mm cylinders and 900 mm axle distance (Alte Normalien, old standard) to 150 mm × 275 mm cylinders and 1200 mm axle distance (Neue Normalien, new standard)
53351912C n2750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)80 hpSri Maharacha Timber Company SRJ, Si Racha, SRJ 6, now Surasak Montri Public Park, Si Racha Thailand
543819120-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpMerapi 15, Asembagus, Situbondo, Indonesia
544019120-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpOlean 4, PG Olean, Situbondo, Indonesia
565819120-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Stockholms Elektricitetsverk, Untraverket 1, 1916 decommissioned, since 1917 Vattenfall CF 10, decommissioned 1952.[55]
566219120-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)50 hpInitially Argentina, now Apedale Valley Light Railway. After leaving Statfold Barn Railway for a private site in Whaley Bridge in 2013, it came to Apedale in May 2022 after a full restoration to steam. The original livery from Argentina has been retained by the owners, and it is paired with a tender from its time in Argentina. It will be based at Apedale for the foreseeable future and will operate occasionally on passenger trains throughout the year.
566819130-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in) or 610 mm (2 ft)30 hpInitially Penrhyn Quarry Railway. 1963 sold to Bressingham Steam and Gardens'. Since 1995 at Bredgar and Wormshill Light Railway.[56]
567219120-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Petter, No 1, Lindfors-Bosjöns Järnväg[57][58]
574519120-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)20 hpInitially Ferrocarriles en el cono sur FCS (Argentina), now Chapel Hydraulique GmbH, Kimmerle-Ring, Günzburg, Germany
575419132-6-01,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)200 hpE 94, Vale de Vouga, Comboios de Portugal, Portugal
575519122-6-01,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)200 hpE 96, Decauville-Locomotive No. 5755/1913, Vale de Vouga, Comboios de Portugal, Portugal, now Musée des tramways à vapeur et des chemins de fer secondaires français in Butry-sur-Oise in département Val-d'Oise, 30 kilometres (19 mi) north of Paris
575619132-6-01,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)200 hpCompanhia Real dos Caminhos de Ferro Portuguese E 91, Vale de Vouga, Comboios de Portugal, Portugal
575719132-6-01,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)200 hpCompanhia Real dos Caminhos de Ferro Portuguese E 97, Vale de Vouga, Comboios de Portugal, Portugal
580519120-6-0762 mm (2 ft 6 in)90 hpNo 201 of Japanese government railways, later LCK 31 of the Taiwaneses government railway, now plinthed in Hualien, Taiwan
574419120-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Initially Obras de Irrigacion del Territoria del Rio Negro, later Moño Azul, near Vista Alegre Sur and Centenario, Neuquén, Argentina, now Rebecca, Devon Railway Centre, Bickleigh, Devon, England[59]
582919130-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)50 hpTrain de Rillé
583419130-4-0610 mm (2 ft)20 hpNo 11, P C Allen, weight: 5.57 tonnes. Was in service at a Solvay Alkali Plant in Torrelavega, Spain. Named after the chairman of ICI from 1968 to 1971, who was a light railway enthusiast and instigated the rescue of this locomotive. Now Leighton Buzzard Light Railway.
585619120-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpOlean 1, PG Olean, Situbondo, Indonesia
585719120-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpSumberharjo 2, PG Sumberharjo, Pemalang, Indonesia
585919120-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpPesantren 9, PG Pesantren Baru, Kediri, Indonesia
588519120-4-01,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)40 hpJohoku Kotsu Park, Itabashi, Tokio, Japan
59331913Putte was used from 1914 to 1934 between Båven and the Likstammen lake (Båven–Likstammen Järnväg, Axalabanan), Sweden
59901912originally 0-4-0T, later 0-4-2T600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpSold in 1912 to Decauville São Paulo (as an agent or reseller), later Craig & Martin Brasil, later Estrada de Ferro Perus – Pirapora – EFPP No. 8 (chemin de fer de Cimento Portland Perus – Cajamar), later converted to 0-6-2, now LP Assessoria Industrial e Restaurações Ltda. – Votorantim, SP[60][61]
600819120-4-4-0
Mallet
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpCandi 6, Sidoarjo, Indonesia
632019130-6-0Elza, former Zrenjanin Sugar locomotive, at Mokra Gora
0-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)The US army conficated the German locomotive in World War I near Abainville in France and appplied the lettering U.S.A. X6023 (but this was not O&k 6023, which was a 0-8-0+T, for sugar mill Tjoekir, Java)
60240-4-4-0
Mallet
610 mm (2 ft)Cia. Minera Penoles-Avalos, Mexiko
603919120-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpPurwodadi 11, PG Purwodadi, Ngawi, Indonesia
638919130-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)80 hpTasik Madu III, Solo, Java, Indonesia
5896 und 589719120-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Nybergs Gruv AB 1 and Nybergs Gruv AB 2, Nyberget Morgårdshammar (Nybergets Järnväg NJ, Nybergs Gruv - Avesta Jernverks AB), Sweden[62]
5896 und 589719120-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Nybergs Gruv AB 1 and Nybergs Gruv AB 2, Nyberget Morgårdshammar (Nybergets Järnväg NJ, Nybergs Gruv - Avesta Jernverks AB), Sweden[62]
612619130-4-0Hällefors Bruk, No. 6
651919130-4-0610 mm (2 ft)10 hpSold via Decauville to the South Australian Irrigation and Reclamation Department in Pompoota on the Murray River[22]
652019130-4-0610 mm (2 ft)10 hpSold via Decauville to the South Australian Irrigation and Reclamation Department in Pompoota on the Murray River.[22]
653319130-4-0762 mm (2 ft 6 in)50 hpInitially Mitsui Bussan Kaisha, Kobe, now Igasa Railway, Okayama, Japan
655919140-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Société Sucrière de Pithiviers, Sermaises, second from left in the photo
66030-4-020 hpEzeiza, Argentina
662019130-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)20 hpLotta 1 Östra Södermanlands Järnväg
662519130-4-0T600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Joh. Köppe, Bitterfeld, Finkenherd, Strabag, later Museum Prof. Dr. Bandtlow, Passau, preserved as Monika N° 3 at Besucherbergwerk Fortuna, Solms-Oberbiel, Germany
664119130-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)30 hpMontalban, West Lancashire Light Railway
676019130-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in) Initially gas and electricity works, Stockholm, since 1918 Stockholm 5 at Stockholms Stads Lantegandomsnämnd, since 1933 Smöjens Kalkbrott 4, ausgemustert 1956.[62]
67631914Gypsum mines at Reisdorf in Luxemburg
677019140-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)40 hpSmedjebacken, Sweden
680519140-4-0Millaquin Mill, Bundaberg, Queensland
689219200-6-01,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)60 hpPuerto de Adra, Spain
693719141'0-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)30 hpPurwodadi 3, PG Purwodadi, Ngawi, Indonesia
694419130-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)100 hpPurwodadi 5, PG Purwodadi, Ngawi, Indonesia
694619130-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpKedawung 14, PG Kedawung, Pasuruan, Indonesia
696219130-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)20 hpValdés Vergara der Fleischverpackungsfabrik Bories, 4 km von Puerto Natales in Chile. Sie wurde 1915 von der Sociedad Explotadora de Tierra del Fuego gekauft. Sie wurde für die Ausstellung im Museum des Hotels The Singular Patagonia in den alten Industrieanlagen in Puerto Bories restauriert.
697619130-4-2600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)30 hpTasik Madu XV, Solo Java, Indonesia
706319150-6-0760 mm (2 ft 5+1516 in)Forest railwayy Rečkov
70670-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)30 hpBakrie Sumatera Plantations Railway, Bunut, Kecamatan Kota Kisaran Barat, Kabupaten Asahan, Sumatera Utara, Indonesia
708619140-4-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)Tove. Geliefert an Ramseyer & Brechtbühler, Rubigen, Schweiz. Verkauft 1918 an die Baufirma Wright, Thomsen & Kier. Brabrand 1956.
719419140-6-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)Initially Harbour of the fort of Reval, Tallinn, later military railway on Kirkkomaa Island, Kotka, since 1946 paper mill Äänenkoski, decommissioned in 1964, plinthed since 1982, Äänekoski Selluloosatehdas, Äänekoski, Finland
715019140-4-4-0
Mallet
La France bei Haudainville, beschlagnahmt bei der Firma Rondant & Demenois.
730019150-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Lotta, Nr. 2, Lindfors-Bosjöns Järnväg[57][58]
742919140-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)50 hpChemin de fer des Chanteraines[63]
744319190-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)50 hpNr. 3 Dylta, Östra Södermanlands Järnväg
745919210-6-0700 mm (2 ft 3+916 in)Erst De Danske Hedeselskab, Jllan, heute Hedelands Veteranbane, Høje-Taastrup Kommune, Dänemark
747919180-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)30 hpLukas, initially gravel pit Kissingen near Augsburg, later Schinznach-Dorf, Baumschulbahn (orchard railway), Converted into a tram engine
761019180-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Initially Kalk- u Mergelwerke Heinrich Möller, now Eisenbahnmuseum Bochum
764219220-6-0762 mmInitially Towada Railway & Co., Sanbongi-machi, Schi-no-hara, later Izumo, Ōigawa Tetsudō, Japan
769619190-4-0643 mm№ 5, Karolina, Delary-Strömsnäsbruks Järnväg, Sweden
769719200-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Bromberger Kreisbahn
1920750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)O&K No. 12, Bañoles, Palamós–Girona–Banyoles railway. They had six O&K-Lokomotiven, which had been built in 1910 for a contractor in Belgium. Five of these were davon 0-4-0 and one was 0-4-2. They were numbered 11 to 16 and were called Andrea, Bañoles, Celrá, Cornellá, Mercedes and Gerona.[64]
ca 19200-4-0ca 20 hp
772919140-6-0785 mm (2 ft 6+2932 in)140 hpBasaltine, initially Basalt AG, Linz am Rhein, later playground at Bad Godesberg, now Rheinisches Industriebahn-Museum, Cologne, Germany
732519200-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)OjakkalaOlkkala railway, now heritage railway in Kowjoki, Finland
744619160-4-0760 mm (2 ft 5+1516 in)40 hpLotte, Phönix Stahlwerk, J. C. Bleckmann, Hönigsberg, Austria
77691918891 mm (2 ft 11+332 in)
(Swedish 3 ft gauge)
Stockholm–Roslagens Järnvägar No. 33 († 1946)
78500-6-0Narrow gauge urban railway Jabłonna-Karczew, Poland
789919210-4-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)Zakłady Starachowickie 9, Starachowice, Polen
787519140-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)70 hpPangka 9, PG Pangka, Slawi near Tegal, Indonesia
787819140-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)70 hpGempolkerep 11, Mojokerto, Indonesia
1914D h2t785 mm (2 ft 6+2932 in)Oberschlesische Schmalspurbahn, Prussian T 38, Kattowitz 211 to 37, DR 99 411–421, 32,25 t
ca 1914C'1 n2t1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)Ferrocarril Argentino del Norte
ca 1919E h2785 mm (2 ft 6+2932 in)Oberschlesische Schmalspurbahn, Prussian T 39, gear-driven rear axles, System Luttermöller
790019210-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Narrow gauge railway Rogów–Biała Rawska
790819170-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Heeresfeldbahn No 508 B, 99.3-016, Baba Milka, Niš, Serbia[65]
796119170-8-0891 mm (2 ft 11+332 in)
(Swedish 3 ft gauge)
Bahnstrecke NordmarkKlarälven, Sweden
799919140-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Heeresfeldbahn Brigadelok No 482, depot administration of the 1. Eb-Brigade, Rehagen-Klausdorf (am Mellensee), later Polish State Railways PKP No 4232, since 1945 No ML 631 Latvian Railways LVD, since 1994 No ML 631, Museum of Maritime Fishing, Ventspils, Lithuania
806519160-6-01,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)Initially Rotterdamsche Tramweg Maatschappij № 54, Hellevoetsluis, now Rotterdamsche Tramweg Museum RTM, Ouddorp, Netherlands
808319150-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Tramway de Pithiviers à Toury and Chemin de fer Froissy-Dompierre
809019160-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)1000 hpRejosari 10 Salak, PG Rejosari, Madiun, Indonesia
816519160-6-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)Initially WKD 66, later Ty3-1162, Museum Sochaczew[66]
82711916Dn2t600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Depot administration of the 1. Eb-Brigade, Rehagen-Klausdorf (am Mellensee) "853", since 1920 4CL-5 or ML 629 Latvian Railways LVD, since 1994 im agricultural museum Talsi, Latvia
828519170-10-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Initially Thalbahn Habsheim, later Tramway de Pithiviers à Toury No. 5-3, now Chemin de fer Froissy-Dompierre
829319160-6-0700 mm70 hpInitially Dononbahn, later Waldeisenbahn Alberschweiler, later Lambert Freres, Cormeilles-en-Parisis, now Stoomtrein Katwijk Leiden[67]
841819170-6-0Initially 600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in), since 1919 760 mm (2 ft 5+1516 in)Depot administration of the 1. Eb-Brigade, Rehagen-Klausdorf (am Mellensee) No 487, since 1919 Hungarian forest railway No 357.305, later plinthed, saw mill Lenti, sice 1996 plinthed at saw mill Csömödér
845719210-4-0600 mm20 hpSpain, preserved at Museum Ponferrada, Spain ex Antracitas Gaiztarro[68]
85001918Mariska, Goods railway station Dúbrava (now Vysoká pri Morave zastávka), Zohor–Záhorská Ves railway, Slovakia
857519180-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Nr. 1958, Depot administration of the 1. Eb-Brigade, Rehagen-Klausdorf (am Mellensee), later Tx 1958 Polish forest administration ZKL, forest railway Hajnowka, since 1987 railway museum Sochaczew, Poland
859019180-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)65 hpiTx 1113, Płociczno, Poland
19180-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)65 hpiTx 1114, Czarna Białostocka, Poland
859419180-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)70 hpInitially T.P. Ruvenhorst & Humbert, now Association pour la préservation et l'entretien du matériel à voie étroite, Saint-Germain-d'Arcé, France
862719180-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)70 hpInitially Heeresfeldbahn Brigadelok No. 13, later Sucreries Coucy-le-Château, now Chemin de fer Froissy-Dompierre
871819180-10-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Heeresfeldbahn No 2643 with outer frame and Luttermöller rear axles
873419180-10-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)T914, sugar mill San Martin del Tabacal in Salta, Argentina
ca 19190-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)5,4 t, heated by wood or coal
ca 19190-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)10,2 t, heated by wood or coal
ca 19190-4-0900–1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)20 t
ca 19190-8-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)110 hp21 t
ca 1919Egypt
ca 1919Chemin de fer de Zambezia, Mozambique
880019200-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)50 hpNiederlausitzer Kohlenwerke (open cast lignite mines)
914719190-6-0Cement factory Klagshamn, Sweden[69]
910319200-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpRejosari 6 Arjuna, PG Rejosari, Madiun, Indonesia
919319200-6-01,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)Erst Rotterdamsche Tramweg Maatschappij № 56, Hellevoetsluis, heute Rotterdamsche Tramweg Museum RTM, Ouddorp, Netherlands
919919200-6-0Hällefors Bruk, No. 8, Sweden
924419250-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)40 hpFrankfurter Feldbahnmuseum No 18
930719200-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpGempolkerep 18, Mojokerto, Indonesia
930819200-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)70 hpGempolkerep 2, Mojokerto, Indonesia
930919200-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpPurwodadi 15, PG Purwodadi, Ngawi, Indonesia
931019200-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)70 hpWonolangan 3, PG Wonolangan, Probolinggo, Indonesia
934919200-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)90 hpTulungagung 2, Mojopanggung, Java, Indonesia
935619200-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60PSKebonagung 10, PG Kebonagung, Malang, Indonesia
935819200-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpOlean 5, PG Olean, Situbondo, Indonesia
938219200-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)80 hpPrajekan 3, jetzt Asembagus 3, Asembagus, Situbondo Indonesia
941219200-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpAsembagus 5, Asembagus, Situbondo Indonesia
941819200-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)KJI Nr. 23, Nr. 99 4301, Kleinbahnen des Kreises Jerichow I
942919200-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpPurwodadi 1II, PG Purwodadi, Ngawi, Indonesia
943019200-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpPagottan 3, PG Pagottan, Madiun, Indonesia
944719100-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)80 hpKanigoro 5, PG Kanigoro, Madiun, Indonesia
9550 and 955119210-6-0762 mm (2 ft 6 in)Oficina Peña Chica, Tarapacá Region, Chile
945419211D750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)№ 7 Loviisa-Vesijärvi railway, now Jokioinen Museum Railway, Finland
945919200-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Initially De Maas 3, now Asembagus 11, Asembagus, Situbondo, Indonesia
946819210-8-0, LuttermöllerUsina Santa Terezinha No. 14, Água Preta, Brazil
968519220-6-21,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)Initially Lok II of Staatliche Waldbahn Ruhpolding–Reit im Winkl, since 1940 Kleinbahn Leer–Aurich–Wittmund 14
970419210-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)40 hpSemboro 6, PG Semboro, Jember, Java, Indonesia
97521921Wakataka, Diorama Kyoto, Japan
978519210-6-01,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)Delivered to sugar factoriy Sobbowitz (785mm gauge), Ty 9785 of the sugar mill Gryfice, now exhibited at Pommersche Schmalspurbahnen in Gryfice[70]
986419220-6-02 ft 6 in (762 mm)50 hpN° 5 of the Uwajima Railway, the predecessor of the Yosan Line, shown here as Ke 223 of the government
988119210-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)40 hpI, Zuckerfabrik PG Tasik Madu, I, Solo, Java, Indonesia
990619220-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)150 hpKebonagung 7, PG Kebonagung, Malang, Indonesia
9998610 mm (2 ft)Elouise, initially Matas Nacionais, Portugal, now Old Kiln Light Railway at Rural Life Living Museum in Tilford, near Farnham, Surrey
1014519220-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)20 hpStoomtrein Katwijk Leiden
1015419220-6-0760 mm (2 ft 5+1516 in)90 hpZreče, Slovenia.[71] Nos 10151–10180 were delivered to the SHS state railways (State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs, later Kingdom of Yugoslavia) as German World War I reparations.
1015519220-6-0T760 mm (2 ft 5+1516 in)Jugoslovenske Železnice, No 11034, JDŽ 71-014[71]
1015619220-6-0760 mm (2 ft 5+1516 in)Initially O-VIII, later SHS 3006, Jesenice Ironworks, later stored at Upper Sava Valley Museum, Jesenice, Slovenia[72]
10157–1017719220-6-0760 mm (2 ft 5+1516 in)Jugoslovenske Železnice, Nos 11021–11042, JDŽ 71-001 to 71-013 and 71-015 to 71-022[71]
1016819220-6-0760 mm (2 ft 5+1516 in)Initially O-IX, later 71-012, Slovenian Railway Museum, Ljubljana operational, in use at Zreče, Slovenia
1026119210-6-0T+T600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)50 hpLolita, built for Alfonso Pasquel, La Orduña Sugar Mill, Coatepec, Veracruz, Mexico
1028619260-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)90 hpMerican 7, PG Merican, Kediri, Indonesia
1030919220-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)30 hpPulau Raja 2, Pulau Raja (PTP VI), Indonesia
1037219220-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)90 hpPesantren 8, PG Pesantren Baru, Kediri, Indonesia
1043119220-4-0500 mm (19+34 in)10 hpSoc Agricola, Puente Pietra, Peru, probably used in Santa Rosa, Pueblo Nuevo, Chincha
1044219230-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)150 hpPagottan 8, PG Pagottan, Madiun, Indonesia
1044319230-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpGempolkerep 3L, Mojokerto, Indonesia
1045819230-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)70 hpWonolangan 6, PG Wonolangan, Probolinggo, Indonesia
1046219210-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)80 hpTasik Madu V, Solo Java, Indonesia
1049719220-8-2TCaminho de Ferro de Luanda, Angola, Nº 61, Classe 60
1049919250-8-2TCaminho de Ferro de Moçâmedes, Angola, Nº 68, Classe 60
1050119230-8-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)170 hpiKJI Nr. 15 der Kleinbahnen des Kreises Jerichow I[73][74]
1054219230-6-0760 mm (2 ft 5+1516 in)CFR 763.148, delivered via subsidiary in Budapest an Căile Ferate Forestiere (governmental forest railways) geliefert, now railway museum Sibiu (Hermannstadt), Romania
1054819230-6-0600mmErst Kungl Domänstyrelsen, Askekärr works, Stockholm, since 1937 Malma–Haggården railway, Kinnekleva, ca 1939 Nya Asfalt AB, ca 1942 Avesta Jernverks AB, since 1963 plinthed at Avesta, later Nr. 10, Avesta, Östra Södermanlands Järnväg
105501923Forest railway in Sweden
1055119230-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Empresa Mineira do Lena, Portugal
1059119230-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpSindanglaut 13, PG Sindanglaut 13, Cirebon Java, Indonesia
1060619230-10-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)120 hpPagottan 6, PG Pagottan, Madiun, Indonesia
1930
and
1934
0-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Nr. 10II to 12II of Mecklenburg-Pommersche Schmalspurbahn (MPSB)
1060719340-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)150 hpGempolkerep 12, Mojokerto, Indonesia
1066019230-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Sugar mill La Poveda in Arganda del Rey near Madrid, Spain
1072619230-6-0760 mm (2 ft 5+1516 in)Via subsidiary in Budapest to Wenkheim farm, Mosonszentmiklós, Ungarn, later Hungarian State Railways, forest railway Csömödér No 357.314, finally (shown at the front) Széchenyi-Museumsbahn, Nagycenk, Ungarn
1073819240-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)80 hpWringinanom 2, PG Wringinanom, Situbondo, Indonesia
1073919240-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)80 hpTasik Madu IV, Solo Java, Indonesia
107401923B1 n2tMerican 5, PG Merican, Kediri, Indonesia
1075019230-6-0+t600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Initially Sragi 14 Max, now Statfold Barn Railway
1080819240-6-0610 mm (2 ft)90 hpNo. 6 Pedemoura was used in the Duero valley in Portugal, to transport coal from the Minas de Pejao to a jetty on the river. Now preserved on the Leighton Buzzard Light Railway.
1084419240-8-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)Trusetal of Trusebahn[75]
1085719240-6-0WTCompanhia do Assúcar de Angola, Fazenda S. Francisco, Dombe Grande, Nº 6
1089119250-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Tulungagung 3, Mojopanggung, Java, Indonesia
1090319250-4-0914 mm (3 ft)90 hpKinder was used by Lehane McKenzie & Shand Ltd in the construction of the Fernilee reservoir in the Peak District of England
1091419240-6-0T750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)90 hpSugar Factory Zbiersk 4
1092219251,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)Kaijima class 32 at Nogata Coal Mine Museum
1095619250-10-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)SMT T-907, sugar mill Ingenio San Martin del Tabacal in Argentina. Now on a private field near Sheffield, United Kingdom
1100719250-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Py4-741, Sochaczew, Poland[54]
1103719250-6-0Polnische Schmalspurbahnen, Typ 3-191. Pińczówer Kleinbahn (Świętokrzyska Kolej Dojazdowa).[76][77]
1107319250-10-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)90 hpFrankfurter Feldbahnmuseum Lok Nr. 16
1126219260-4-4-0
Mallet
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpSemboro 15, Zuckerfabrik PG Semboro, Jember, Java, Indonesia
1113919260-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)110 hpPagottan 7, PG Pagottan, Madiun, Indonesia
1114219270-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)90 hpGempolkerep 19, Mojokerto, Indonesia
1127719260-4-4-0
Mallet
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpAsembagus 17, Asembagus, Situbondo, Indonesia
1129319260-6-01,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)225 hpSemboro 1, Jember, Java, Indonesia
117351928Bn2t600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)50 hpInitially Steenfabriek IJsseloord near Arnhem, now Stoomloc 6 at Stoomtrein Katwijk Leiden Netherlands[78]
1178819290-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Phosphat-Eisenbahn beim Dorf Vaitepaua auf der Insel Makatea[79][80]
1130919270-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)90 hpInitially Company Azucarera Conception, Argentina. 2008 Preston Services, GB. 2019 to Böhmetalbahn, Walsrode, Germany.
1134819270-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)70 hpMerican 8, PG Merican, Kediri Indonesia
1135019270-4-4-0
Kitson-Meyer
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Ferrocarril Militar de Puente Alto al Volcán
1136819280-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Lepra-Heilanstalt auf der Isla del Cerrito in Argentina
1155019270-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)90 hpKebonagung 5, PG Kebonagung, Malang, Indonesia
1156319280-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)110 hpRejosari 11 Gedek, PG Rejosari, Madiun, Indonesia
1160319280-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)60 hpSindanglaut 12, Zuckerfabrik PG Sindanglaut 12, Cirebon, Java, Indonesia
1163819280-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)150 hpGempolkerep 4, Mojokerto, Indonesia
1164819280-4-0700 mmVeenpark, Barger-Compascuum (Gemeinde Emmen), Netherlands
116840-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Stoomtrein Katwijk Leiden
1178419270-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Caminho de Ferro Mineiro do Pejão, São Domingos, Portugal
119271928C fl600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Semboro 3, Jember, Java, Indonesia
1119819260-4-01,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)Tren de Arganda bei Madrid
1169519280-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Le Petit Train de la Baie de Saint-Brieuc, Association des chemins de fer des Côtes-du-Nord
1159119280-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Stoomtrein Katwijk Leiden
ca 19282-6-01,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)22 t, SaigonMỹ Tho railway, Vietnam
1199019290-6-0 fl750 mmFireless locomotive, ÄänekoskiSuolahti railway, Minkiö narrow gauge railway museum
1220319330-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)50 hpTulangan 5 Mojopahit, scrap heap at CV Tersana Baru, Kediri, Indonesia
1224619330-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)50 hpYvonne, initially Steenfabriek Rijswijk Netherlands, later Eerste Drentse Vereniging van Stoomliefhebber EDS, Museum Veenpark
122471911Bn2t700 mm50 hpSawit Seberang 6 (früher 7), Sumatra, Indonesia
1226219310-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Rendeng 08, PG Gondang Baru, Klaten, Indonesia
1233119310-6-0760 mm (2 ft 5+1516 in)Sub Nigel Gold Mines No. 3 in Dunnattar, Transvaal, South Africa
1235019060-6-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)135 hpiPrignitzer Kreiskleinbahnen No. 22, 99 4504; scrapped in 1966
1237519320-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)90 hpPangka 10, PG Pangka, Slawi bei Tegal
1238819320-6-0Initially 762 mm (2 ft 6 in); later 600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Initially Beau Sejour Estate, Mauritius, now L'Aventure du Sucre, Beau Plan, near Pamplemousses, Mauritius
1240019322-8-2900 mm (2 ft 11+716 in)DR 99 2321-0, Bäderbahn Molli, Germany
1240119322-8-2900 mmDR 99 2322-8, Bäderbahn Molli, Germany[81]
1240219322-8-2900 mmDR 99 2323-6, Bäderbahn Molli, Germany
1243519330-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)50 hpTulangan 2 Sriwijaya, Kediri, scrap metal merchant CV Tersana Baru, ex PG Tulangan, Sidoarjo Indonesia
1249319340-6-0500 mm30 hpInitially sugar factory in Angola, now Feldbahn-Museum 500, Nuremberg,
125031934Initially 0-4-0, later 2-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Peter Büscher & Sohn, construction company, Münster, now No 43 heritage railway at Silver Dollar City, Missouri, United States
123501931750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)Initially MBB No. 9II, now Yekaterinburg children railway
1249319340-6-0WTCompanhia de Assúcar de Angola, Fazenda Tentativa, Caxito, Angola, Nº 7
1251819340-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)MPSB 12, 99 3462, Dampf-Kleinbahn Mühlenstroth, No. 12, Mecklenburg
1253619340-4-0WTCompanhia de Assúcar de Angola, Fazenda Tentativa, Caxito, Angola, Nº 8
1259519350-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)T1-009, Narrow Gauge Railway Museum in Wenecja, Poland
126431935600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Lundebanen
1270819360-6-0610 mm (2 ft)Buckeye used in Africa, in the 1980s on Gwelo & District Light Railway in Zimbabwe and finally on Peter Nott's Norgrove Gardens Railway in California
127221936Bredgar and Wormshill Light Railway
127401936610 mm (2 ft)In use until 1971 at Likomba Development Company, Cameroon, Africa, wood-fired, with a spark arrestor, now Elf, Leighton Buzzard Light Railway switched to coal
1278219360-6-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)Initially Åminnefors Railway, Pohja, later Jokioinen Railway, Finland
12788ca. 19360-4-0900 mm (2 ft 11+716 in)probably in Đông Triều, Vietnam
1286119360-4-0Trelew in Chubut, Argentina[82]
1279119360-6-0800 mmMedine Estate, now Casela Bird Park, Cascavelle, Mauritius
1280519360-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Berliner Parkeisenbahn, Oberschöneweide, Germany
1281419360-6-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)40 hpGunung Malayu 01, Gunung Malayu, PT Lonsum Sumatra, Indonesia
1290019370-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Initially Bungenäs, since 1951 Smöjens Kalkbrott 5 since 1964 in a museum in Gotland[62]
129741937600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)Stoomtrein Katwijk Leiden
1308819370-4-0T891 mm (2 ft 11+332 in)
(Swedish 3 ft gauge)
50 hpKullgrens Enka AB, Uddevalla, Sweden, initially preserved at Museum Uddevalla, now preserved at Hjo harbour, Sweden
1302119370-6-0920mm160 hpSA Belge des Mines d'Aljustrel, Aljustrel, Portugal
1310319380-4-0750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)110 hpQuarz-Susi, Quarzwerke, Frechen, Bachem/Frechen, now Rheinisches Industriebahn-Museum, Cologne, Germany
1311819380-8-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)90 hpJatibarang 12, PG Jatibarang, Tegal, Indonesia
1316519380-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)70 hpDeinste 9, Dossenheim quarries, Porphywerk Altvatter & Co, Dossenheim, later Witten-Bommern, Zeche Nachtigall coal mine
131681939Initially 0-4-0,
later 2-4-0
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)70 hpA31034/1, Müller-Altvater Co. construction company, Stuttgart, later Northfield & Cannon Valley Railroad in Northfield, Minnesota, now № 13 , heritage railway at Silver Dollar City, Missouri, United States
1316919390-4-0600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)70 hpA31034/2, Müller-Altvater Co. construction company, Stuttgart, later Northfield & Cannon Valley Railroad in Northfield, Minnesota, now № 14, heritage railway at Silver Dollar City, Missouri, United States
131771939
13306 to 1330819390-4-4-0,
C'C' h4t,
Kitson Meyer
600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in)310 PSI, 250 PSEDR 99 1641 to DR 99 1643, later PKP Tyyl-691 to Tyyl-693
ca 1940Overburden locomotive
1357119410-4-0900 mm (2 ft 11+716 in)110 hpDollart (BorkumIII), Borkumer Kleinbahn[83]
  • "Museal erhaltene Lokomotiven O&K, Werk Berlin". www.werkbahn.de. Jens Merte. January 1, 2014. Retrieved October 15, 2022.
  • "Preserved Orenstein & Koppel Steam Locomotives". www.chm.bris.ac.uk. Martin Murray. April 30, 2001. Retrieved November 2, 2022. With web links to 50 photos.
  • "845 locomotives built by: 'Orenstein & Koppel'". www.steamlocomotive.info. Doug Bailey. Retrieved November 2, 2022.
  • 379 F. 3d 1227 — Ungaro-Benages v. Dresdner Bank AG at OpenJurist—U.S. Federal court case, wherein Benno Orenstein's great-great-granddaughter sued Dresdner Bank and Deutsche Bank to recover her family's share of O&K taken under Aryanisation.
  • Documents and clippings about Orenstein & Koppel in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

Literature

  • Roland Bude, Klaus Fricke and Martin Murray: O&K-Dampflokomotiven : Lieferverzeichnis 1892–1945. Verlag Railroadiana, Buschhoven 1978, ISBN 3-921894-00-X. (Partial reprint of an Orenstein & Koppel publication)
  • Delivery lists of the locomotive works at werkbahn.de (nominal charge)

References

  1. "INTERNATIONAL BRIEFS: Escalator Deal by Krupp". The New York Times. New York. Bloomberg Business News. January 16, 1996. Retrieved March 8, 2011.
  2. Walker, Jonathan (March 1999). "O&K finds good home with New Holland—Orenstein and Koppel acquired by New Holland". Diesel Progress (North American Edition). Diesel & Gas Turbine Publications. Retrieved March 8, 2011.
  3. "New Holland Acquires German Excavator Company". Rental Equipment Register. Penton Media. January 1, 1999. Retrieved March 8, 2011.
  4. "Will Sell Plant of German Concern" (PDF). The New York Times. New York. September 12, 1918. Retrieved March 10, 2011.
  5. Tender-Lokomotiven mit zwei gekuppelten Achsen. O&K catalogue N° 800, page 27.
  6. Tender-Lokomotiven mit drei gekuppelten Achsen. O&K catalogue N° 800, page 34.
  7. Tender-Lokomotiven mit zwei oder drei gekuppelten Achsen und einer Laufachse. O&K catalogue N° 800, page 40.
  8. Lokomotiven für spezielle Zwecke, Doppel-Verbund-Lokomotiven (Bauart Mallet). O&K catalogue N° 800, page 44.
  9. Klien-Lindner Locomotives. German text. O&K Lokomotiven mit lenkbaren Kuppelachsen (Hohlachsen) mit Radial- und Seitenbewegung (Bauart Klien-Lindner). O&K catalogue N° 800, page 47.
  10. Lokomotiven mit lenkbaren Kuppelachsen (Hohlachsen) mit Radial- und Seitenbewegung (Bauart Klien-Lindner). O&K catalogue N° 800, page 48.
  11. Lokomotiven mit seitlich verschieblichen Kuppelachsen (Bauart Gölsdorf). O&K catalogue N° 800, page 53.
  12. Lokomotiven für Strassenbahnen. O&K catalogue N° 800, page 63.
  13. Mining and Tunnel Locomotives. O&K Lokomotiven für Tunnels und Bergwerke. O&K catalogue N° 800, page 60.
  14. Fireless Locomotives. O&K catalogue N° 850 (ca 1913), page 145.
  15. Friedrich Müller: Grundzüge des Kleinbahnwesens. Wilhelm Ernst und Sohn, Berlin, 1895.
  16. Zahnrad-Lokomotiven für vereinigte Reibungs- und Zahnbahnen. In: O&K catalogue N° 800, German, ca 1910, page 66.
  17. Jens Merte: Zahnradlokomotiven von Orenstein & Koppel.
  18. Rüdiger Fach: Werkfoto der Kitson Meyer Dampflokomotive. Erbaut von Orenstein & Koppel im Jahre 1927 mit der Fabrik-Nr. 11350. FFF-Info 2-2003, July 2003, page 13.
  19. Orenstein & Koppel Fabr. Nr. 366, Baujahr 1899.
  20. Ulf Diehl: Okända ånglok. Sidospår 4/2009.
  21. Cukrownia Nakło 531.
  22. John Browning: Orenstein & Koppel steam locomotives in Australia.
  23. "Dinty" in Service on the Gorge Line. Queenslander, 22 November 1928, p. 36.
  24. Kearsney-Stanger Light Railway 1901-c.1944.1 9 August 2010.
  25. Railway History Group: Bulletin No 113, November 2012.
  26. Derek A. Bayliss: The Origins of Orenstein & Koppel. The Industrial Railway Record. No 47, April 1973, p. 27-32.
  27. Crónicas de la vía estrecha (I R): De Valdepeñas a Puertollano en "el trenillo de La Calzá".
  28. Locomotive a 3 essieux accouples de 10 a 16 tonnes pour voies de 1000 et 1445 mm "Type entrepreneur" (O&K steam locomotive, works N° 1080, June 1903, 80 hp, 1000 mm gauge, Ct, 'Jallut über O&K Fil Brüssel'.)
  29. Señor Valero, Ejea de los Caballeros, Zaragoza, Spain.
  30. Museal erhaltene Lokomotiven O&K, Werk Berlin. 1 January 2014. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
  31. Ray Fox: The Origins of Orenstein & Koppel. The Industrial Railway Record. Nr. 46, February 1973, S. 361-371.
  32. Derek A. Bayliss: The Origins of Orenstein & Koppel. The Industrial Railway Record. Nr. 47, April 1973, S. 27-32.
  33. Josef Pospichal: Bahnen auf der Insel Öland: Borgholm - Böda Järnväg (BBJ), 891mm.
  34. Josef Pospichal: Schwedische Industrie-Dampflokomotiven, 600mm, Teil 2 (G – M).
  35. Josef Pospichal: Schwedische Industrie-Dampflokomotiven, 891mm.
  36. Locomotives of the South Western Railway Co. Ltd – The two-foot Narrow Gauge Forest Railroad in Knysna.
  37. Josef Pospichal: Ölands Järnvägar (ÖJ)
  38. BBJ 3 – ÖJ9 – SJ 3059.
  39. Parada Sud Quarry, 0-4-0T, No. LVD1, Montevideo, Uruguay.
  40. Josef Pospichal: Schwedische Industrie-Dampflokomotiven, 600mm, Teil 1 (A – F).
  41. F. Kemper: The origins of Orenstein & Koppel. The Industrial Railway Record, Nr. 40, S. 156-161.
  42. Klaus Jünemann, Wolf-Dietger Machel and Lothar Nickel: "Marie Klockow kümmt!" Die Geschichte der ehemaligen Kleinbahn Klockow– Pasewalk, 1. Teil
  43. Klaus Jünemann, Wolf-Dietger Machel und Lothar Nickel: "Marie Klockow kümmt!" Die Geschichte der ehemaligen Kleinbahn Klockow–Pasewalk, 2. Teil. Transpress Modell Eisenbahner, 2/86, ISSN 0026-7422, p. 4
  44. Arthur, Aquilla et Birland.
  45. Malcolm Ravensdale: The Secondary Railways of France (Les Chemins de Fer Secondaires Français) - Lot-et-Garonne 7. 20 November 2020.
  46. The Cuba review, Band VIII, June 1910, Nr. 7, S. 300.
  47. Murray: O&K Nº 4017/1910.
  48. Orenstein & Koppel No. 4058. Remains plinthed at Carnarvon.
  49. Ferrocarril de Valdepeñas a la Calzada de Calatrava y Puertollano. 3 May 2012.
  50. Carlos Mey: Historia y Arqueología Marítima – A la reconquista del ignoto ferrocarril al puerto. Pistas para reconstruir la olvidada historia del Ferrocarril de Reconquista a Puerto Reconquista.
  51. Decauville (kereta api industri) - Ponen II lokomotif uap terakhir di Rejo Agung Decauville (kereta api industri) - Ponen II lokomotif uap terakhir di Rejo Agung.
  52. A.E. Durrant: Photo of Rejoagung № 23 Ponen,
  53. 三重軌道 and 四日市鉄道
  54. Bogdan Pokropiński: Muzealne parowozy wąskotorowe w Polsce (dla toru szerokości 600 i 630 mm). Żnin: Muzeum Ziemi Pałuckiej, 2000. ISBN 83-910219-7-1. S. 9.
  55. Josef Pospichal: Schwedische Industrie-Dampflokomotiven, 600mm, Teil 4 (T – Ö).
  56. Visitors Guide. Bredgar and Wormshill Light Railway. 2008.
  57. BBV - Bosjöbanans Vänner.
  58. Lars-Gunnar Nyqvist: (LBB) Lindfors-Bosjöns Järnväg.
  59. Rio Negro Dam project, Argentina 0-4-0WT No. 'Rebecca', Devon Railway Centre, Bickleigh, Devon, UK.
  60. Museal erhaltene Lokomotiven O&K, Werk Berlin.
  61. EFPP (CBCPP) No. 10, Perus, Brazil.
  62. Josef Pospichal: Schwedische Industrie-Dampflokomotiven, 600mm, Teil 3 (N – S).
  63. Notice no PM92000245, base Palissy, ministère français de la Culture
  64. Ángel Rivera:Crónicas de la vía estrecha (LX R): De Palamós a Girona y Banyoles en "el tren petit" ...y el tren "pinxo" 4 November 2018.
  65. Cn2t.
  66. Ty3-1162
  67. Stoomlok 7, Stoomtrein Katwijk Leiden.
  68. El Ferrocarril de Ponferrada a Villablino ... y otros rincones ferroviarios en El Bierzo.
  69. John Bergman: Orenstein & Koppel, Berlin (OK).
  70. Bogdan Pokropiński: Parowóz przemysłowe Ty-9785. In: Świat Kolej Nr. 8/2010, S. 30–31.
  71. Josef Pospichal: JDŽ 71: SHS 3001 - 3030
  72. Pospichal, Josef. "Železarna Jesenice". Lokstatistik. Retrieved January 30, 2011.
  73. O&K 10501.
  74. O&K 10501 - DR "99 4644-3"
  75. O&K 10844.
  76. Klaus Jünemann und Klaus Kieper: Die Triebfahrzeuge der polnischen Schmalspurbahnen. Der Modelleisenbahner 4, 1970, S. 124.
  77. Ulrich Thorhauer : Świętokrzyska Kolejka Dojazdowa - 600/750 mm. Früherer Name: Jedrzejowska KD..
  78. Stoomloc 6, Ijsseloord.
  79. S. C. Martin: Makatea - About Half-way between Australia and South America. From Walkabout magazine, September 1st, 1948 LRRSA Light Railways, Nr. 169, February 2003.
  80. Musterlok - O&K 4028/1910.
  81. Fahrzeugportrait O&K 12401-
  82. Martin Coombs: Oddments of all kinds - Grun & Bilfinger SA, contractors.
  83. O&K 13571.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.