The DR Class 01.5 was the designation given by the
Deutsche Reichsbahn in
East Germany to
express train locomotives that were 'reconstructed' from those of the pre-war
DRG Class 01.
History

In 1962 the repair shop (''Reichsbahnausbesserungswerk'') of
RAW Meiningen The Meiningen Steam Locomotive Works (german: Dampflokwerk Meiningen) is a railway repair shop in Meiningen, Germany. It is owned by Deutsche Bahn and has specialised in the maintenance of museum steam locomotives since 1990, having extensive exp ...
rebuilt 35
Class 01 engines. At that time the locomotives were still vital for heavy
passenger train
A passenger train is a train used to transport people along a railroad line. These trains may consist of unpowered passenger railroad cars (also known as coaches or carriages) hauled by one or more locomotives, or may be self-propelled; self pr ...
duties, but the
locomotive frame and
boiler were so worn that it was essential to replace them. Like the
DB rebuilds in
West Germany after the
Second World War, only those locomotives with more powerful brakes (i.e. those from no. 01 102 onwards) and 1000 mm
carrying wheels were converted.
The rebuild did not just involve the installation of a new boiler; the entire locomotive underwent modification. The most obvious external change was the steam space cover running the length of the boiler barrel and copied from the
ÄŒSD Class 477.0
ČSD Class 477.0 is the last type of steam locomotive made by ČKD for Czechoslovak State Railways. In total 60 tank locomotives with axle arrangement 2′D′ 2′ (4-8-4) were produced in 1951-1952 and 1955. It was a tank locomotive development ...
, which lent the locomotives a sleek, modern appearance. The large
smoke deflectors too were replaced by smaller ones with the upper front corners clipped off at an angle.
The new boiler made the so-called ''Reko-01'' (''Reko'' is short for ''
Rekolokomotive {{unreferenced, date=December 2014
The German term Rekonstruktionslokomotive (abbreviated to: Rekolokomotive or Rekolok) meant 'reconstruction locomotive' and was introduced in 1957 by the Deutsche Reichsbahn in the GDR.
The term was used for clas ...
'') into the most powerful German express train steam locomotive. In addition to a
combustion chamber and the well-known IfS mixer-preheater, the 01.5's boiler was fitted with three full bore boiler safety valves (Ackermann valves, nominal width 60). The engines were given
Trofimoff valves and, apart from 01 501 and 01 520, new welded
cylinders. The new boiler came with a new, welded driver's cab with upholstered seats, side-pull regulator and other improvements to the working conditions of the locomotive crew, as well as an
Indusi system. The latter was required for the border-crossing traffic to
Bebra and
Hamburg-Altona and services on the
Dresden-
Berlin line. Because the
coupled wheel
On a steam locomotive, a driving wheel is a powered wheel which is driven by the locomotive's pistons (or turbine, in the case of a steam turbine locomotive). On a conventional, non-articulated locomotive, the driving wheels are all coupled t ...
sets on many engines had to be replaced due to fractured spokes, eight examples (502, 504, 508, 509, 511, 513, 517, 518) were fitted with
Boxpok wheel
A Boxpok is a steam locomotive wheel that gains its strength through being made of a number of box sections rather than having traditional solid spokes (the name is a variation on "box-spoke"). Being hollow, they allow better counterbalancing and ...
s made of cast iron, like those already used in the
Soviet Union and the United States. These did not prove themselves, however, due to manufacturing defects and were later swapped out for spoked wheels from retired 01s. In order to hide the ugly wheelsets, the Boxpok locomotives and several other vehicles were fitted with full skirts.

From locomotive number 01 519, all the locomotives were given oil-firing systems when rebuilt, which enabled a further increase in performance. Apart from the seven engines at Berlin Ostbahnhof
locomotive depot, all the other engines were later converted to primary oil-firing. The tenders could carry 13.5 tonnes of
heavy fuel oil. During the course of the oil crisis in the early 1980s all the oil-fired locomotives were withdrawn. All of the locomotives were originally meant to remain in service for two maintenance periods (each of 6 years), however every locomotive exceeded this. After they were withdrawn from active duty, several engines were used as heating locomotives. Number 01 519 was refurbished in 1990-91 from being a heating engine, and was made fully operational by the DR. It was not taken out of service until 1991.
Accident
Number 01 516, at the time already sporting its computer number 01 1516-2, achieved regrettable notoriety, when on 7 November 1977 its boiler exploded at
Bitterfeld station due to a lack of water, killing not only the crew of 2, but another 7 bystanders, and injuring more than 50 people. This was the last boiler explosion in Germany. Such a mishap had been seen at the time as inconceivable because the technical condition of the boilers was checked thoroughly and it was believed that appropriately trained crews - not least for their own interests - would follow the proper safety procedures.
On a similar journey with experienced staff in spring 1978 an attempt was made to investigate the circumstances of the accident. The DR's investigation report, which was not made public, showed that the regular engine driver was being retrained as an electric locomotive driver and had been replaced by an engine driver who was more actively involved in everything. Because the stoker formed a close-knit team with his regular driver and was not used to this situation, a lack of communication led to a shortage of water on the approach to Bitterfeld station.
The accident had no knock-on effect on the employment of steam locomotives in the
GDR
East Germany, officially the German Democratic Republic (GDR; german: Deutsche Demokratische Republik, , DDR, ), was a country that existed from its creation on 7 October 1949 until its dissolution on 3 October 1990. In these years the state ...
.
Preserved locomotives
Five DR Class 01.5 steam locomotives have been preserved (as at 08/2008):
* 01 509 – ''
Preßnitztalbahn
The Pressnitz Valley Railway (German: ''Preßnitztalbahn'') was a narrow gauge railway line in Saxony, Germany. It used to climb from Wolkenstein on the standard gauge Annaberg-Buchholz–Flöha railway through the valley of river Preßnitz (Cze ...
'', oil-fired, currently being refurbished at the
Meiningen Steam Locomotive Works
* 01 514 –
Technik Museum Speyer
* 01 519 – ''
Zollernbahn'' Railway Friends
* 01 531 –
DB Museum; museum loco at
Arnstadt
Arnstadt () is a town in Ilm-Kreis, Thuringia, Germany, on the river Gera about south of Erfurt, the capital of Thuringia. Arnstadt is one of the oldest towns in Thuringia, and has a well-preserved historic centre with a partially preserved town ...
locomotive depot.
* 01 533 –
ÖGEG
The Austrian Society for Railway History (german: Österreichische Gesellschaft für Eisenbahngeschichte or ÖGEG) is an Austrian society that was formed from a group of railway fans, who got together around 1971 in order to look after working stea ...
/ Austria (operational)
Fleet list
See also
*
List of East German Deutsche Reichsbahn locomotives and railbuses
*
Rekolok
Literature
*
*
*
*
*
*
{{German steam locomotives
01.5 1.5 (one and one half, three halves, or sesquialterum) may refer to:
*1.5 °C is the preferred limit of global warming signed in the Paris Agreement
*''1.5'', an album by Big Data
*Superparticular ratio: 3/2 or 1
*Perfect fifth
In music t ...
4-6-2 locomotives
01.5 1.5 (one and one half, three halves, or sesquialterum) may refer to:
*1.5 °C is the preferred limit of global warming signed in the Paris Agreement
*''1.5'', an album by Big Data
*Superparticular ratio: 3/2 or 1
*Perfect fifth
In music t ...
Railway locomotives introduced in 1962
Passenger locomotives
Standard gauge locomotives of Germany
2′C1′ h2 locomotives