Indian locomotive class AP
The Class AP was a broad gauge tender steam locomotive introduced around 1907 for passenger trains on the railways in British India. Its class designation, AP, stands for Atlantic Passenger Locomotive, where Atlantic refers to the wheel arrangement of the same name. It was one of the BESA locomotives developed by the British Engineering Standards Committee, later called the British Engineering Standards Association.
History
The AP class, designed to haul passenger trains, was first catalogued in the second edition of the BESA standard from 1907. It could be equipped with three different large tenders - the small one held 3,000, the medium 4,000 and the large 4,500 gallons of water.Vulcan Foundry delivered a batch of 28 to the East Indian Railway, whose route network expanded from Calcutta towards the West. These locomotives, built according to British design practice, were used to pull express trains; they were numbered 1300 to 1327, and their works numbers were 2330 to 2357 of 1908.
Ten locomotives were delivered to the EIR by North British Locomotive Company in 1908, and a further 8 in 1909.
The Eastern Bengal Railway received five from Kitson and Company in 1908, and another two in 1909. They were joined in 1930 by five locomotives that had been built by Kitson for the North Western Railway in 1908.
At partition, four of the EBR locomotives went to East Pakistan, and eight to India. Of the 14 remaining EIR locomotives, six went to the Eastern Railway Zone, and the other eight went to the Northern Railway Zone.