As the railways expanding across the state and with new lines being built from many coastal centres, it didn’t take long before six wheeled rollingstock was being ordered for the various networks. Some of this rollingstock was in excess of 40 ft. long. Up and down the coastal plains with larger radius curves, there operation was satisfactory. As the lines expanded towards the west and with the need to cross over the Great Diving Range, smaller radius curves were required. These range sections had curves as small as 5 and 4 chains. Not the best operating conditions for long six wheeled vehicles. Short four wheeled and bogies wagons operated on these sections with minimal issues.
The Grover’s Bogie patented
by J. W. Grover in 1870 entered service on the QR in 1879. Grover’s bogies are
a two wheeled (one axle) arrangement which pivoted in the centre to the wagon
floor, both bogies are joined diagonal with rods. On a curve the rods pull the
bogies in the opposite direction to steer the wagon around the curve. Between
1879 and 1881, 16 Adams’ wagon were converted and fitted with Grover’s
bogies. These wagon were 20 ft. over the
body. In 1880 the Northern Railway (Townsville) imported five wagons from the
Birmingham Railway Carriage and Wagon Company fitted with Grover’s bogies.
Over the following years
various contracts of wagons entered service fitted with Grover’s bogies.
ABG Butter Wagons built
around 1900 (115 built), Some were altered to carry cheese ABGC/ABGX, ABGF
fruit, ABGCP perishables.
ALG Louvred wagons in
service around 1900 (784 built).
AG Box Wagons built
around 1905 (248 built).
FG Open sided wagons built around 1906
(2639 built).
FGM Open sided wagons to carry cars
built around 1911. (246 built).
FGW Water Wagons, (plan date 1917)
numbers altered due to requirements. 1924 – 192 in service, 179 in service
1930, 236 in service 1945-46. Between 1946 and 1957, up to 40 ran as WGF platform
wagons.
MG sheep/pig wagons built around 1913,
(129 built).
SG Timber wagon in service around 1915
(26 built).
ZG horse box wagon (1885) had two stall, 64 in service. In 1916 three stall wagons entered service, in 1922 they were reclassed to ZXG. As this traffic declined most were converted to runner as ZGR, ZXGR. The ZGR were fitted with 7” x 3” journals, and were rated as a 5 ton axle load, the ZXGR were fitted with 8” x 4” journals and were rated as 8 ton axle load.
Others wagons fitted with Grover’s bogies included BG Box wagons, ICG cattle wagons, QG platform / runner wagons.
Most wagon had a 20 ft. body with 12 ft.
wheel centres. A few like the ABG wagons had a 16 ft. body with 11 ft. wheel
centres. Some runners had even a shorter
wheel centres.
ABGC for
cheese.
ABG at
Landsborough for Maleny butter.
Butter was
conveyed from various SEQ towns to the Butter Board at Hamilton.
Some other locations others were Kingston, Beaudesert, Esk, Oakey, Caboolture, Eumundi, Cooroy, Mumbubbera.
QR drawing suggest in their early days some of these wagons had roof ice hatches.
ABGF Fruit
wagon.
FG open goods wagon
From 1969 most
goods wagons were painted grey, for many wooden wagons the number was moved
from the solebar to the sides.
FG 7362 with empty 44 gal. drums. Cannon Hill.
FGM open goods
wagon with ends that fold down for end loading of cars.
AG covered
goods wagons.
AG Camp Wagon
Redbank.
Some early AG
and ALG wagons were 16 ft. over body with 11 ft. wheel centres.
Do you like the
gutter on the side for collecting water and the down pipe to a tank in the corner. The pole beside the door is most likely a
radio aerial, going back a year or two before TV, workers in isolated locations
stay connected to the world listening to the local radio station.
Some AG had doors similar to the sides.
There were a couple different door types on ALG wagons.
ALG with a louvred
style of door
This photo illustrates the most common style of ALG wagon.
AG and ALG placed for loading.
This illustration shows how
wagons can be used in operations adding a reason for your railway. A truck can
be placed on the layout besides a siding marking the location for placement of
a wagon for loading/unloading. Next time you run the layout, the truck can be
removed indicating the wagon is ready to be added to a train. This practice
occurred at most public loading locations across the rail network, like station
yards or isolated siding with vehicle access.
Double swing
door style ALG wagon. These wagons had a canvas roof.
BG 11914
Ipswich 1958. Service 1913 – 1973
Reclassed in
1972 to EBG.
From 1972, wagons in explosive were identified with “E” in front of their class.
I have only viewed
two photos of these wagons, both were different and they different to the QR
Plan.
MG sheep/calf/pig
wagon.
ZGR runner
wagon with low sides.
Marking show
the wagon tare is 4 Tons 6 cwt. Carry shown 5 Tons 11 cwt. Gross of 10 Tons,
wagon fitted with 7” x 3” journals.
ZGR runner
wagon with open low sides.
ZXGR platform runner
wagon
ZGR wagon being
used as a shunt runner. Scrap added for extra weight.
ZGR Ipswich Workshop shunt runner.
Most of the
runners don’t have truss rods.
QG 9706 wagon
with swivel bolster.
Drawing 2519 Wagon Plan P 186 shows some QG wagons were only 14 ft. long with 9 ft bogies centres. Drawing 720 Wagon Plan P 185 shows a 20 ft. wagon with 13 ft. bogie centres.
FGP wagon.
SG wagon.
Overview of
Grover’s Bogies in service.
Type |
1935 |
1945 |
1955 |
1965 |
1970 |
1973 |
Box
wagons |
1113 |
1058 |
1002 |
837 |
411 |
194 |
Open
wagons |
2847 |
2662 |
2130 |
1255 |
434 |
173 |
Livestock Wagons
|
192 |
137 |
134 |
131 |
107 |
100 |
Timber
Wagons |
44 |
31 |
31 |
15 |
7 |
4 |
Water
Wagons |
177 |
236 |
229 |
169 |
157 |
146 |
Total |
4373 |
4124 |
3526 |
2397 |
1116 |
617 |
%
of wagon stock |
23 |
20 |
13 |
9 |
5 |
3 |
30th of June 1960, the following wagon numbers were shown in the Annual Report.
ABG |
ABGX |
ABGF |
AG |
ALG |
FG |
FGM |
FGP |
ICG |
MG |
90 |
7 |
4 |
154 |
691 |
1624 |
161 |
27 |
5 |
127 |
QG |
SG |
ZR/ZXR |
FGW |
FGWP |
11 |
12 |
36 |
178 |
2 |
Shown in the service vehicle section of the report is 38 Runners consisting the following classes, ZR, ZXR, ZGR, and ZXGR wagons. The line below shows another 15 - 4 wheeled runner. The ZR/ZXR wagons in the table above are shown as Goods vehicles.
BG Explosive wagons were included with A, AG classes, 15 wagons across the three classes in service.
The report showed there was 23,167 Goods wagons, 2,204 Livestock wagons and 2,036 Service wagons, all up 27,407 wagons in service at that time.
Some remained is service until the withdrawal of wooden wagons in the mid 1980’s. Many were service (camp/material wagons) vehicles by this time.
At first the bogies were constructed
from wood and the wheelsets had 7” x 3” journals, giving a 5 ton axle load.
Later the bogies were made of steel and the wheelsets has 8” x 4” journals
lifting the axle load to 8 tons.
The wagons were
restricted to 35 MPH or 60 Km/h and could be found on Goods and Mixed trains.
In derailments,
the bogie was very acceptable to damage.
At speed the wagons had a tenancy to hunt, side buffers and a tight screw coupling kept this in check.
Wagons fitted with these bogies can be
identified with a “G” in their classification as above. In later years the
letter also identified a wagon modified for grain, i.e. VJMG, HSAG, VAOG. In
the early 1970’s “G” wagons were gondolas type wagon built for mineral traffic,
G, GH, GO.
Models.
The following wagons are Chiver’s Fine Scale Kits that were available a few years back (Mid 1990's).
AG wagon.
AG Kit modified into a Camp Wagon.
Wagon was fitted with working bogies
ALG wagon Kit. Single sliding door type.
ALG wagon Kit. Double door type. The kit roof was changed to a canvas
type.
FG wagon kit with a load of empty drums. Full drums are loaded upright on
the floor.
Tichy Train Group drums have been used for the load. If you have an oil
company on the layout, check out the colour of their drums.
FGM wagon kit with a Kerroby Models Kit Massey Ferguson tractor load.
FGM wagon with Land Rover load. Dunnage has been left on the floor.
FG wagon with gang material load for plant operator. Portable shower and toilet, water tank, grader
blades, ripper were scratch built. Some drums of fuel and oil have been added. The
wagon usually runs on the layout with the AG camp wagon above.
FGW drinking water wagon. The wagon was scratch built onto a Chiver’s Fine Scale platform wagon kit.
When these wagons were built, I fitted Kadee H0n3 couplings. The method in my madness was the prototype were fitted with D4 drawgear, bottom of the drawgear classification list. Wagon with this classification were marshalled towards the rear of the train. The smaller coupling would give me the same restrictions in my operations. It didn’t really work, the small coupling did what should occur, they kept coming apart when shunting strings of wagons. Most were converted to Kadee # 158 scale whisker coupling.
For some years I have had a few kits in the drawer for a rainy day, along came Covid with lockdowns etc. Time to go looking to see what’s in the drawer.
Since
I built the first batch of wagons, I joined NMRA to attend conventions to learn
new skills. The Achievement Program was undertaken which gave me the
opportunity to look and valuate other modellers work, this has caused me to
look at my modelling and adopting new standards for the layout to improve
operations and modelling in general. Additional detail has been added to this
batch of wagons. If Covid continues for much longer and I will run out of kits
to do, I can revisit some of the first batch of wagons I build and add more
detail to further enhance them a bit more.
The plan was to run the wagon empty, as above the total mass is 8 grams. Lead sheet was packed into all available spots to lift the total mass to 32 grams.
Cheiver’s fine scale underframe kit was used for the running gear, frame and tank were scratch built using styrene. Queensland Railway Miniatures detailing parts were used to detail the wagon. The water filler was turned up in the lathe. Caintode Flat buffers, brake cylinder and Kadee # 158 were used on the business end of the wagon. Lead sheet was added during construction of the tank, the wagon mass is 32 grams. The canvas side delivery hose is a washed used tea bag cut to size and painted with Vallejo acrylic.
Queensland
Railway Miniatures has a very nice kit of this wagon.
ZXGR wagon with raised sides.
Same materials were used for the two ZXGR wagons.
This BG wagon was scratch built using the underfame kit.
The
kit allows you assemble the underframe with or without truss rods.
Delrin wheel bearing are included in the parts resulting in a free running wheel with no sideways movements in the wheelset.
Caintode Flats etch brass MG wagon kit.
January 2018 blog has more information on
this wagon.
Caintode Flats ABG wagon kit. The kit is also available with roof ice
hatches.
Caintode
Flats Grover’s bogie is available as a separate item. The bogie has been
manufactured to allow the fitting of couplings when the bogie is mounted near
the end of the wagon as like the ABG. With these bogies being available many of
the Grover’s bogies wagon can be scratch built today. I have some on order with
a small project in mind, maybe a later post.
In the October 1997 Australian Model Railway Magazine, Paul Blake illustrates how he made “Compensation Grover’s Bogies”. One end is fixed and the other end rocks side to side. Paul indicated the modification allowed the empty wagon to operate satisfactory on the layout.
This was something I wanted to try out, I’m not a big fan of four wheeled wagons when it comes to operations. At the best of time you are limited with small strings when pushing and pulling in shunt moves. All wheels need to be square on the track to stand a chance for a derailment free session. Then troublesome trucks said the Fat Controller, and he is right. I place the wagon on a flat sheet of glass to see if there is any imbalance of rocking.
I didn’t have the same material on hand as Paul, but I found something similar in the cupboard. A shim brass sheet 10 mm x 6 mm was used for the base plate for the floor of the wagon. A 6 mm long piece of 1.6 mm (OD) was soldered to the centre of the brass base plate. A length of •040 brass rod was used for the rocker. On one end, 5 mm of the rod was bent at 90°, the rod was passed through the tube and cut to length allowing for another 5 mm to be bent at 90°. The rocker assembly was fixed to the floor of the wagon with super glue along the centre line, Make sure the centre of the tube is the required distance for the correct wheelbase length. Holes to line up with the two protruding rocker arms with drilled on the bogie. The bogie was fitted and secured to the rocker was a small drop of super glue to hold the bogie into place for when the wagon was being lifted off the tracks. The mechanism gives the bogie just over 2 mm of rocking across the wagon floor. I guess time will tell if that is to much rock and side bearers (blocks) are required to reduce the amount of rock, maybe my track condition will play a part. The wagon was weighted to 32 grams and completed.
On the layout at first
the fixed end was giving some trouble on one or two sets of points. A check and
adjustment to the back to back on the wheelset and all was good. After a couple
of running session the wagon performance has been good without any issues.
At the start I was talking about six wheeled wagons, there others on the network in a different format. In 1927 some rail motor trailers were six wheelers, these had a bogie at one end and a fix axle at the other. The 20 ft. Northern Division Dental Car had this arrangement and remained in service until the mid-1980’s.
My bits have arrived from Caintode
Flats, excellent service from Gary, maybe some more four wheeler next time.
Happy modelling, stay safe. Trust you found the information usefully for your projects for your railway.
Arthur H
Acknowledgements.
QR Plans
QR Annual Report 1960.
Australian Model Railway
Association Queensland Library.
AHRS Bulletin “Radial Wheeled
Rollingstock on the Queensland Railways” “Radial Wheeled Rollingstock on the
Queensland Railways” J. W. Knowles.
Wooden Wagons of the Queensland Railways
1880 – 1980 John Armstrong.
Australian Model Railway Magazine -
October 1997.
Thanks again Arthur.
ReplyDeleteThanks Noel, much appreciated. You are most welcome, great hear from you. Arthur.
ReplyDelete