SNCF 232.P.1
SNCF 232.P.1 was an experimental prototype high-pressure steam locomotive ordered by the Chemins de fer du Nord, but delivered to the SNCF after the major French railway companies merged. It was the first and only member of SNCF's first class of 4-6-4 or Hudson type of locomotives.
Origins
The locomotive was ordered by on 9 March 1936 by the Chemins de fer du Nord in an attempt to improve on the power output and fuel consumption of the conventional steam locomotive.The project involved three of the French big-four locomotive manufacturers: Société alsacienne de constructions méchaniques ; Fives-Lille; and Schneider et Cie. It also received assistance from the Swiss Locomotive and Machine Works of Winterthur, which made the design and delivered the boiler and the steam motors.
Description
It was decided to fit the locomotive with a high-pressure boiler and multiple small steam motors to drive each axleThe boiler was in two parts: the main, rear part, was a water tube boiler pressed to . The forward part was a conventional fire-tube boiler pressed to and served as a feed-water heater.
There were six, three-cylinder, steam motors, which were attached, two per axle, to the driving axles by gearing. They had a maximum rotational speed of 1000 rpm, which would give the locomotive a theoretical maximum speed of. The small motors were less bulky, had a higher power-weight ratio and were more efficient. Their use eliminated the need for a crank axle, and enable the use of small diameter driving wheels of, and shortened the length of the locomotive
The Direction du Matériel et de la Traction believed that the small motors could easily be disconnected and would not immobilise the locomotive.
Due to the absence of connecting rods, the locomotive had outside frames and an integral fairing.