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In Whyte notation, a 0-6-4 is a railroad steam locomotive that has six coupled driving wheels followed by four trailing wheels, with no leading wheels. Other equivalent classifications are:
[edit] United StatesLargely in the United States the 0-6-4 locomotive was built only for usage in railyards as essentially an 0-6-0 switch engine with an extended firebox or a reconstruction of a 4-6-0 with a larger firebox, and thereby a necessity for the movement of the leading wheels. [edit] United KingdomIn the United Kingdom 0-6-4 tank locomotives were used for passenger and freight haulage and could be regarded as the ancestors of the popular 2-6-4 tank locomotive. [edit] UK examples[edit] New ZealandThe New Zealand Railways Department operated two classes of 0-6-4T single Fairlies. These were the R class and S class, built by the Avonside Engine Company of England between 1878 and 1881. They were popular with crews and capable of all duties, from express passenger trains to shunting tasks. The S class were limited to the Wellington Region when they were introduced, but the R class were distributed throughout the country. All were withdrawn by 1936, but R 28 is preserved as a static exhibit in a Reefton park.[1] [edit] AustraliaThree members of New Zealand's S class were sold to the Western Australian Government Railways in 1891.[1] [edit] References
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