Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

South African Class 33 000

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Power type
  
Diesel-electric

Builder
  
General Electric

Model
  
GE U20C

Designer
  
General Electric

Serial number
  
35457-35521

Build date
  
1965-1966

South African Class 33-000

The South African Railways Class 33-000 of 1965 is a diesel-electric locomotive.

Contents

In 1965 and 1966, the South African Railways placed sixty-five Class 33-000 General Electric type U20C diesel-electric locomotives in service.

Manufacturer

The South African Class 33-000 type GE U20C diesel-electric locomotive was designed and built for the South African Railways (SAR) by General Electric (GE) and imported. Sixty-five of these locomotives were delivered between June 1965 and January 1966, numbered in the range from 33-001 to 33-065.

Class 33 series

The Class 33 consists of three series, the GE-built Classes 33-000 and 33-400 and the General Motors Electro-Motive Division-built Class 33-200. Both of these manufacturers also produced locomotives for the subsequent SAR Classes 34, 35 and 36.

The two GE-built Classes are virtually identical in appearance, but can be distinguished from each other by some ventilation openings on their bodywork.

  • The Class 33-000 has press-formed louvre openings in both short hood doors on the right side of the nose, while the Class 33-400 has no opening in either of these doors.
  • Just to the rear of the cab, on both sides of the long hood and more or less in line with the cab windows, both models have panels with three ventilation openings. These have two horizontal bars in each opening on the Class 33-000, and press-formed louvre openings on the 33-400.
  • These doors and panels can, and sometimes did, get swapped between models, either as replacement for damaged items or by chance during overhauls.

    In South Africa

    The Class 33-000 was initially used to dieselise the Cape Midland region. When the Class 34-000 entered service in 1971, many Class 33-000 locomotives were transferred to Transvaal, and some later to the Cape Western system.

    In the SAR era, the inner parts of cabside locomotive number plates were often unofficially painted in various colours to identify the depot to which the locomotive was allocated. Judging from the flaked paint on the plate in the picture alongside, no. 33-014 saw service in several regions over the years.

    Most of these locomotives survived in mainline and branchline service well into the twenty-first century, for example on the lines from De Aar to Upington, on the branchline from Worcester to Voorbaai and in suburban passenger service out of East London. Some were later employed as heavy shunting engines to assemble or unload iron ore trains at the Sishen-Saldanha iron ore route's terminals, until the arrival of the Class 43-000 on that line in 2011 made more Class 34 locomotives available for this task.

    Outside South Africa

    Between October 1978 and May 1993, Zambia Railways (ZR) hired locomotives to solve it's chronic shortages in motive power, mainly from South Africa but at times also from Zaire, Zimbabwe, the TAZARA Railway and even the Zambian copper mines. In Zambia, the South African locomotives were mainly used on goods trains between Livingstone and Kitwe, sometimes in tandem with a ZR locomotive and occasionally also on passenger trains.

    Locomotives were selected from a pool of engines, which were allocated by the Railways for hire to Zambia. The South African fleet in Zambia was never constant, since locomotives were continually exchanged as they became due back in South Africa for their three-monthly servicings.

    The locomotives were initially selected from the Classes 33-400, 35-000 and 35-200 but, by December 1989, some Class 33-000 locomotives also began to serve one or more tours of duty in Zambia. The pool of Class 33-000 locomotives which were allocated by the Railways for hire to ZR from time to time, included the locomotive numbers as shown in the table below.

    Until c. 2015, several still saw service with Spoornet Traction, whose locomotives operate in several Southern African countries. A few were leased to Sudan Railways, on a long-term contract as a result of the distance from South Africa, while others were sold to COMILOG in Gabon.

    Withdrawal

    Although some of the locomotives had been sold to other operators over the years, most of the Class remained in South African service for fifty years. During 2015, when sufficient numbers of new GE-designed Class 43-000 locomotives had entered service, several of the remaining Class 33-000 locomotives were sold to, amongst others, TransNamib in Namibia and the Congolese Company for Transportation and Ports (SCTP, formerly Onatra) in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Most of these locomotives were refurbished in South Africa, prior to being delivered to their new owners.

    Works numbers

    The Class 33-000 builder's works numbers, service in the Zambia Railways leasing pool and known eventual disposition are listed in the table.

    Illustration

    The main picture and those following, serve to illustrate the distinguishing features of the Class as well as some of the liveries which they served in.

    References

    South African Class 33-000 Wikipedia