Class of Australian diesel-electric locomotives
South Australian Railways 500 class Performance figures Maximum speed 40 miles per hour (64 km/h) Power output 550 hp (410 kW) gross, 500 hp (370 kW) net Tractive effort 30,000 lbf (133.4 kN) at 4 mph (10 km/h)
The 500 class is a class of South Australian Railways diesel shunter locomotives built at Islington Railway Workshops between 1964 and 1969.
Thirty-four 500 class locomotives were built, all incorporating English Electric traction and control equipment. The first 27 were built with broad gauge bogies , the last seven with standard gauge bogies. They operated in yards at Gladstone , Murray Bridge , Naracoorte , Peterborough , Port Pirie , Tailem Bend and Wallaroo , and were deployed extensively in Adelaide .[ 1]
In March 1978 all were included in the transfer of the South Australian Railways to Australian National . Some were transferred to Port Augusta . In 1986, a new computer system required the class leaders of the former South Australian Railways to be renumbered as the last member of the class, with 500 becoming 534.[ 2]
Most were scrapped in the mid-1990s, and the remaining locomotives were included in the sale of Australian National's South Australian operations to Australian Southern Railroad in October 1997.[ 3] [ 4] [ 5] [ 6]
Surviving locomotives [ edit ]
507 owned by SteamRanger , where it is commonly used on Cockle Train duties between Goolwa and Victor Harbor
508 owned by Aurizon , stored at Whyalla, South Australia[ 7]
515 preserved at the National Railway Museum, Port Adelaide as their standard gauge shunter [ 8]
517 was donated to the National Railway Museum, Port Adelaide by Genesee & Wyoming Australia, stored
518 is privately owned, stored at the Newport Railway Workshops, Victoria.
527 was donated to SteamRanger by Australian Railroad Group in October 2010[ 9]
532 was donated to Steamtown Heritage Rail Centre by Genesee & Wyoming Australia in June 2012[ 10] [ 11]
533 (renumbered 53) owned by Bluebird Rail Operations , Islington Railway Workshops , stored.
Steam locomotives – 1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in ) gauge Steam locomotives – 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in ) gauge Diesel locomotives Railcars Electric multiple units Passenger carriages by class Named or significant trains