Suvarna Garge (Editor)

PKP class SM15

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Power type
  
Diesel

Model
  
ТГМ3

Total produced
  
56

Builder
  
Lyudinovo Fablok

Build date
  
1963-1966

AAR wheel arr.
  
Bo-Bo

PKP class SM15

The SM15 (factory designation 12D) is a Polish diesel shunter used by PKP and industry — where it carried the designation Ls750H. It is based on the Soviet ТГМ3 (TGM3) locomotive.

Contents

History

Between the years 1963-1966, a total of 56 locomotives had been produced — 27 of which were used by PKP. Of the latter 27, the first two units (SM15-01 and SM15-02) were built at the Людиновский тепловозостроительный завод (en: Lyudinovo Diesel Locomotive Factory) and exported to Poland. Production then resumed at the Fablok factory in Chrzanów where the remaining 25 units, earmarked for PKP, were built.

The newly built SM15s were assigned to the depot in Kraków Płaszów, before being withdrawn from service in the late 1960s and early 1970s, when the SM42 series replaced them. Despite their relatively short operational history, the engineers who drove the locomotives remember them as being very powerful machines.

Technical data

The SM15 is equipped with a Soviet 550 kW diesel engine (a number of SM15s had Polish V12CD9 engines installed, rather than the Soviet variant) with hydromechanical transmission. Certain models destined for use in industry had hydraulic transmission, and these carried the designation Ls750Hu. The SM15 is a Bo-Bo locomotive, which means that the unit runs on two bogies. Each bogie has two separately propelled axles.

The main reason behind the SM15's short operational lifespan was the unreliability of its transmission and power units.

Preserved Units

Currently, there are three known examples of the SM15 in preservation:

  • SM15-17 is an exhibit at the Warsaw Railway Museum
  • SM15-22 has been kept back as a monument at the Technical Rail College in Tarnowskie Góry
  • References

    PKP class SM15 Wikipedia