South African Class 31-000


The South African Railways Class 31-000 of 1958 was a diesel-electric locomotive.
In June and July 1958, the South African Railways placed forty-five Class General Electric type U12B diesel-electric locomotives in service. They were later reclassified to Class and renumbered.

Manufacturer

The South African Class 31-000 type GE U12B diesel-electric locomotive was designed for the South African Railways and built by General Electric in 1958. They were the first diesel-electric road locomotives to enter SAR service in quantity.

Reclassification and renumbering

Upon delivery, they were designated Class 1-DE and numbered in the range from D700 to D744 in the non-steam locomotive number range which had hitherto been used almost exclusively for electric locomotives, the exceptions being the pre-war experimental Class DS and Class DS1 diesel-electric locomotives. After the SAR adopted a new classification and numbering system for diesel-powered locomotives upon the arrival of the Class 32-000 in 1959, they were reclassified to Class and renumbered in the range from to.

Orientation

The Class 31-000 was a high short hood locomotive. While the short hood end was usually considered as the front end, the cab was equipped with dual station controls to make it fully bidirectional.

Service

They were placed in service at Germiston. One of their first duties was to take over the shunt duties at Milner Park from where complaints had been received from the tennis players at the club about the cinders being deposited on the all-weather courts. When originally ordered, it had been the intention to use them on shunting and block-load transfers on the Reef and as part of the program to eliminate steam traction from the new Johannesburg station, but their success in this service prompted a change in utilisation policy. In 1959 they were placed in mainline service working out of Johannesburg to Kroonstad and Bloemfontein in the Free State and to Volksrust on the mainline to Natal. They were very successful on mainline work and showed their ability to handle anything from goods workings to fast passenger trains like the Trans-Natal. They usually worked in pairs and longer lash-ups of up to four units were rarely seen.
The Class 31-000 had a huge impact on SAR motive power. In terms of speed and acceleration, they were superb and it didn't take long for the diesels to become a common sight on mainline working. Their unqualified success played a large part in the eventual demise of SAR steam traction.
By 1969 they were also used in goods working on the line from Krugersdorp via Magaliesburg and Swartruggens to Zeerust. By the 1980s they were finally relegated to the shunting and pickup service that they were originally intended for when new, working on the Reef and at some other major centres.

Withdrawal

Of the original forty-five locomotives, forty survived into the Spoornet era in the 1990s. Now retired from Spoornet service, some still see service in private hands. Three of them, numbers 31-001, 31-005 and 31-038, were acquired by Sheltam for use at Rand Uranium near Randfontein and at Welkom. The first two were converted to low short hood locomotives and were still in service in 2014, while the third was used for spare parts.
Another private rail operator, RRL Grindrod, owns no. 31-009 as its no., which was still employed at Welkom in 2014.

Preservation

As of 2015, no. D706 has been staged at Bloemfontein Locomotive Depot where a Locomotive Museum is being created to restore it and some other historically significant units, while no. D727 is preserved at Bellville Loco Depot.

Liveries

The locomotives were delivered in a livery that displayed the colours of the South African flag, white on the upper half and blue on the lower half, separated by an orange stripe on the sides and orange whiskers on the ends. They had black running boards, red buffer beams and black cowcatchers. From 1960 this livery gradually began to be replaced by Gulf Red with yellow stripes.

Works numbers

The Class 31-000 builder's works numbers, renumbering and known disposition are listed in the table.

1-DE no.
GE
works no.
31-000
no.
Post-SAR
owner
Post-SAR
no.
Sheltam
new no.
D7003350731-001Sheltam221202
D7013350831-002
D7023350931-003
D7033351031-004
D7043351131-005Sheltam211201
D7053351231-006
D7063351331-007Staged
D7073351431-008
D7083351531-009RRLRB-201
D7093351631-010
D7103351731-011
D7113351831-012
D7123351931-013
D7133352031-014
D7143352131-015
D7153352231-016
D7163352331-017
D7173352431-018
D7183352531-019
D7193352631-020
D7203352731-021
D7213352831-022
D7223352931-023
D7233353031-024
D7243353131-025
D7253353231-026
D7263353331-027
D7273353431-028Staged
D7283353531-029
D7293353631-030
D7303353731-031
D7313353831-032
D7323353931-033
D7333354031-034
D7343354131-035
D7353354231-036
D7363354331-037
D7373354431-038Sheltam232103
D7383354531-039
D7393354631-040
D7403354731-041
D7413354831-042
D7423354931-043
D7433355031-044
D7443355131-045

Illustration