O-class Melbourne Tram
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The O-class Melbourne tram were a group of four trams built in 1912 by
Duncan & Fraser Duncan & Fraser Limited was a vehicle manufacturing company founded in 1865 in Adelaide, South Australia that built horse-drawn carriages and horse trams, and subsequently bodies for trains, electric trams and motor cars, becoming one of the larg ...
(
Adelaide Adelaide ( , ; ) is the list of Australian capital cities, capital and most populous city of South Australia, as well as the list of cities in Australia by population, fifth-most populous city in Australia. The name "Adelaide" may refer to ei ...
) for the
Prahran & Malvern Tramways Trust The Prahran and Malvern Tramways Trust (PMTT) was a former tram operator in Melbourne, Australia. The trust was formed in 1907, with its first line operating in 1910. Its functions were taken over by the Melbourne & Metropolitan Tramways Board in ...
(P&MTT) upon the recommendation of
W. G. T. Goodman Sir William George Toop Goodman Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire, KBE Institution of Civil Engineers, MICE Institution of Electrical Engineers, MIEE MIEAust (14 March 1872 – 4 February 1961), was an engineer and administrato ...
, Chief Engineer and General manager of the Adelaide tramways. They were allocated P&MTT fleet numbers 21 to 24. At the time of their introduction, they were by far the largest street-vehicles in Melbourne, and earned the nicknames ''Zeppelins'' and '' Dreadnoughts''. Proving to be less than satisfactory in service, they were later sold to the Hawthorn Tramways Trust (HTT) in August 1916 as "surplus to requirements", however P&MTT soon ordered replacement tramcars. Coincidentally they retained their fleet numbers (21 to 24) whilst at Hawthorn. All passed to the
Melbourne & Metropolitan Tramways Board The Melbourne & Metropolitan Tramways Board (MMTB) was a government-owned authority that was responsible for the tram network in Melbourne, Australia between 1919 and 1983, when it was merged into the Metropolitan Transit Authority. It had be ...
(M&MTB) on 2 February 1920, when that body took-over the HTT. Originally known as 'Metropolitan Cars', they were classified as O-class and renumbered 127 to 130 circa 1922. The O-class were the last of Melbourne's Maximum Traction trams to be up-graded from motors to , which required their Westinghouse T1F controllers being replaced by
General Electric General Electric Company (GE) was an American Multinational corporation, multinational Conglomerate (company), conglomerate founded in 1892, incorporated in the New York (state), state of New York and headquartered in Boston. Over the year ...
(GE) K 36 JR or GE B 23 D controllers at the same time, each tram being so treated between mid 1922 and mid 1923. Initially they were used on the Wattle Park and Burwood routes; the M&MTB transferred them to Glenhuntly depot after it was opened in 1923, and they were known to have been used on the East Brighton line. Due to safety concerns about conductors collecting fares whilst balancing on the footboards, a centre aisle was cut through five of the six cross-bench seats, thus reducing the seating capacity. For reasons not fully understood, these tramcars were more expensive to maintain than other similar types; together with their unpopularity with passengers (unconfirmed reports of doors opening or closing unexpectedly) the O-class were amongst the first electric trams to be disposed of by the M&MTB once sufficient standard W-class trams had been constructed to render smaller groups of older non-standard cars surplus. They were never painted in the M&MTB green livery. Fifty similar trams had been built between 1910 and 1912 by A. Pengelley & Co for Adelaide's Municipal Tramways Trust as its type D; there were only slight differences in detail between trams of the two manufacturers, such as the Adelaide cars having concave rocker panels rather than convex. Due to this close similarity and compatibility of electrical equipment, the MTT willingly purchased all four O-class trams in late 1926; it is quite likely that the original electrical equipment was re-installed before the four cars were despatched to South Australia. On joining the MTT operational fleet in early 1927, they were renumbered 191 to 194 (from 128, 130, 127, and 129 respectively). The last of this group of four was withdrawn from regular service in 1957."Adelaide's Bogie Combination Trams" ''
Trolley Wire The Sydney Tramway Museum, operated by the South Pacific Electric Railway Co-operative Society, is Australia's oldest tramway museum and the largest in the southern hemisphere. It is located at Loftus in the southern suburbs of Sydney. History ...
'' issue 323 November 2010 pages 3-11


Preservation

One has been preserved: *P&MTT/HTT no. 24 / M&MTB no. 130 by the Tramway Museum, St Kilda SA, as Adelaide Municipal Tramways Trust type D no. 192.D type tram 192
Tramway Museum, St Kilda


References

{{MelbourneTramNavbox, state=collapsed Melbourne tram vehicles 600 V DC multiple units