Showing items 141 - 150 of 160

BR 98.10 H0 N XL L M4

Deutsche Bundesbahn

All 45 98.10 locomotives were recovered after 1945 by the Deutsche Bundesbahn, and continued to be used exclusively in their native Bavaria. Though the locomotives were initially indispensable, they were put out to pasture after the advent of the "Roter Brummer" rail bus, especially those used in passenger train service. Many of the locomotives were still used after this time, in freight service especially. DB did not make any more major changes or improvements; in the late more…

ET89 "Rübezahl" H0 N XL L M4

In 1941, the four-axle railcars received their last new number and were now called ET 89 01 – 11. Apart from ET 89 11, which had to be decommissioned in 1943 due to an accident, all saw the end of the war and the end of electric rail transport in Silesia. Four railcars went to the PKP. The whereabouts of three others is unknown. They presumably entered the central German network when Silesia was evacuated and were taken to the USSR as part of war reparations. ET 89 01, 04 and 07 got as far as more…

BR54.8 H0 N XL L M4

In the 54.8-11 class, several operable units survived the Second World War, and they continued to see use after the war because of the extreme shortage of locomotives. This included all the 54.8 units that had been converted to superheated steam, even though this was one of the most economical DR classes. The 54.8 units that counted as Polish property were not affected by this order. They remained in DB operation until 1951, and were only decommissioned when it became clear that the political more…

PKP Pt31 H0 N XL L M4

BR74-T11 H0 N XL L M4

Although numerous T 11 remained after 1945 in the western occupation zones and were still in operational service, the stock was quickly decimated. Almost all existing locomotives were decommissioned by 1950. The large stock of traction vehicles which were added from Eastern and Central Germany at the end of the war made it possible. One of the three engines still in the rolling stock in 1951 was 74 313, which did service at the Hildesheim depot of the Hanover division.

ET 426 H0 N XL L M4

The regional railcars in the 426 series are used throughout the DB AG network. The 426 railcar has two units and achieves a maximum speed of 160 km/h. The two final bogies are driven, and the central Jacobs-type bogie is not driven. The total installed power is 1,175 kW. When the railcar is braked, electrical energy can be fed into the mains and the released heat can be used for heating purposes.

V160 H0 N XL L M4

diesel hydraulic Diesel loco, B'B' type

Brawa BR119 H0 N XL L M4

Diesel-hydraulic locomotive DR BR 119 (DBAG BR 219, 229)

Brawa BR 232 H0 N XL L M4

In the late 1960s the railway of the German Democratic Republic (DR) ordered successors for their V200 class. The new class should have an electric heating to pull also passenger trains. The first two series (class 130 and 131) did not have a heating equipment yet. In 1973 the first of 709 samples of the electric heater equipped 132 class had been delivered to the DR. The externally quite similar 130/131/132 had a diesel electric drive and a 3000 HP 16 cylinder 4 stroke prime mover 16 Tsch more…

BR 94 (Tn) H0 N XL L M4

For service on secondary lines with a light superstructure, the Württembergische Staatsbahn bought ten-coupled tender locomotives of Class Tn with 11 tonnes axle pressure, which were built by the locomotive factory Esslingen between 1911 and 1914. The Württemberg T5 (also available from BRAWA) was the model for this development, many parts of which were the same as the Tn. All 30 Tns were taken over by the Deutsche Reichsbahn Gesellschaft as 94 101 to 94 130 and provided very good service in more…