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  2. Category:Vulcan Foundry locomotives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Vulcan_Foundry...

    Locomotives built by the Vulcan Foundry of Newton-le-Willows, latterly part of the English Electric group. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vulcan Foundry locomotives . Pages in category "Vulcan Foundry locomotives"

  3. Vulcan Foundry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulcan_Foundry

    Chinese KF7, built by Vulcan, in the National Railway Museum in York Vulcan Foundry works plate No. 3977 of 1926 on LMS Fowler Class 3F No. 47406 in 2012. Details of the earliest locomotives are not precisely known despite an "official" list apparently concocted in the 1890s which contains a lot of guesswork and invention, with many quite fictitious locomotives, for the period before 1845.

  4. List of rolling stock items in the UK National Collection

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rolling_stock...

    EE/Vulcan EE 2863 VF D579 1961 Co-Co Loughborough [130] 2001–7861 [131] BR D9002 Kings Own Yorkshire Light Infantry [Note 74] Class 55: EE/Vulcan EE 2907 VF D559 1961 Co-Co York [132] 1987–7002 BR 09017 Class 09: Horwich Works — 1961 0-6-0 York [9] Plant BR D1023 Western Fusilier: Class 52: BR Swindon — 1963 C-C: Didcot [133] 1978 ...

  5. British Railways D0226 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Railways_D0226

    D0226 and D0227 were two prototype diesel shunting locomotives built in 1956 by English Electric at its Vulcan Foundry in Newton-le-Willows to demonstrate its wares to British Railways. They originally carried numbers D226 and D227, their Vulcan Foundry works numbers, but these were amended in August 1959 to avoid clashing with the numbers of ...

  6. L&YR Class 21 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L&YR_Class_21

    The class originates in the purchase of three saddle tank locomotives ordered from Vulcan Foundry in 1886. They were fitted with an 8-foot-10-inch (2.69 m) long, 3-foot-0-inch (914 mm) diameter boiler with a pressure of 140 lbf/in 2 (965 kPa) powering two outside 13-by-18-inch (330 mm × 457 mm) cylinders connected to 3-foot-0-inch (914 mm) driving wheels.

  7. WD Austerity 2-8-0 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WD_Austerity_2-8-0

    With the formation of British Railways, the 733 locomotives were renumbered into the 90000–90732 series. Only one of those, No. 90732, was named, becoming Vulcan, after the Vulcan Foundry where many of the locomotives were built. In 1946, 12 were exported to the British colony of Hong Kong to work the Kowloon–Canton Railway. Six were ...

  8. Barry Railway Class G - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barry_Railway_Class_G

    Barry Railway Class G were 0-4-4 T steam tank locomotives of the Barry Railway in South Wales. They were designed by J. F. Hosgood, built by both Vulcan Foundry and Sharp Stewart and were introduced in 1892. Initially used for the Barry to Cardiff suburban service, they were transferred to passenger duties on the main line between Barry and ...

  9. Indian locomotive class WCG-1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_locomotive_class_WCG-1

    The Indian locomotive class WCG-1 (originally classified as EF/1) is a class of 1.5 kV DC freight-hauling electric locomotives that were developed in the late 1920s by Vulcan Foundry and Swiss Locomotive and Machine Works (SLM) for the Great Indian Peninsula Railway. A total of 41 WCG-1 locomotives were built in England between 1928 and 1929.

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