South African Class 35-200


The South African Railways Class of 1974 is a diesel-electric locomotive.
Between November 1974 and August 1976, the South African Railways placed 150 Class General Motors Electro-Motive Division type GT18MC diesel-electric locomotives in service. In 1975, one more Class locomotive was built for AECI in Modderfontein, Johannesburg.

Manufacturer

The Class type GT18MC diesel-electric locomotive was designed for the South African Railways by General Motors Electro-Motive Division. The first 25 units were built by GM-EMD and imported, delivered by November 1974 and numbered in the range from to. The remainder were built in two batches by General Motors South Africa in Port Elizabeth, with 75 units being delivered between 1974 and 1975, numbered in the range from to, and another fifty between 1975 and August 1976, numbered in the range from to.
While the first GMSA batch was being built, an order for one Class GT18MC locomotive was received from AECI in Modderfontein, Johannesburg. Since it required urgent delivery, no. from the SAR order was delivered to AECI and became their no. 2, named "A.J. de Beer". The AECI locomotive, works no., then went to the SAR as no..

Class 35 series

GE and GM-EMD designs

The Class 35 locomotive family consists of five sub-classes, the General Electric Classes and South African Class 35-400| and the GM-EMD Classes, South African Class 35-600| and Queensland Railways 2170 class|. Both manufacturers also produced locomotives for the South African Classes 33, 34 and 36.

Distinguishing features

The GM-EMD Class and are visually indistinguishable from each other.

Service

South African Railways

The Class 35 family is South Africa’s standard branchline diesel-electric locomotive. GM-EMD Class were designed for light rail conditions across difficult terrain and they work on most branch lines in the central, eastern, northern and north-eastern parts of the country.

Zambia

Between October 1978 and May 1993, Zambia Railways hired locomotives to solve its 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.
The first period of hire lasted from October 1978 until about April 1981. Locomotives were selected from a pool of engines in the Classes 33-400, South African Class 35-000| and which were allocated by the Railways for hire to Zambia. The South African fleet in Zambia was never constant, since locomotives were continually exchanged when they became due back in South Africa for their three-monthly services.
In November 1979, six Class locomotives were on hire, but they are believed to have left Zambia in early 1980. A full list of the locomotives which were used in Zambia is not available, but no. is known to have been used there during this period.

CamRail and Sudan Railways

Nine Class locomotives were leased to CamRail, a company which had a twenty-year concession to operate the Cameroon National Railway. These units were regauged to. Six of these later went on a second lease until June 2007 to Sudan Railways, where they were numbered in the range from 3601 to 3606.

FCA and FSA, Brazil

Fifteen Class locomotives went to Ferrovia Centro Atlântico and Ferrovia Sul Atlântico in Brazil, where they were also regauged to run on metre gauge. Both these railroads are now part of América Latina Logística, which operates in Brazil and Argentina.
Ten of these units went to FCA at Divinipolis in Brazil. While they were initially part of Spoornet Traction’s leasing scheme, they were later renumbered onto the FCA roster in the range from 8200 to 8209. The other five locomotives went to FSA at Curitiba in Brazil. Also initially part of Spoornet Traction’s leasing scheme, they were later renumbered onto the FSA roster in the range from 8210 to 8214.

Works numbers

The Class builders, works numbers, lease details and renumberings are listed in the table.

Loco no.
Builder
Works
no.
1st
lease
2nd
lease
New
no.
35-201GM-EMD712981
35-202GM-EMD712982
35-203GM-EMD712983
35-204GM-EMD712984
35-205GM-EMD712985
35-206GM-EMD712986
35-207GM-EMD712987
35-208GM-EMD712988
35-209GM-EMD712989
35-210GM-EMD712990
35-211GM-EMD712991
35-212GM-EMD712992
35-213GM-EMD712993
35-214GM-EMD712994
35-215GM-EMD712995
35-216GM-EMD712996
35-217GM-EMD712997
35-218GM-EMD712998
35-219GM-EMD712999
35-220GM-EMD713000
35-221GM-EMD713001
35-222GM-EMD713002
35-223GM-EMD713003
35-224GM-EMD713004CamrailSudan3601
35-225GM-EMD713005CamrailSudan3602
35-226GMSA100-1Camrail
35-227GMSA100-2CamrailSudan3603
35-228GMSA100-3Camrail
35-229GMSA100-4CamrailSudan3604
35-230GMSA100-5
35-231GMSA100-6
35-232GMSA100-7
35-233GMSA100-8FCA8202
35-234GMSA100-9
35-235GMSA100-10FCA8203
35-236GMSA100-11
35-237GMSA100-12
35-238GMSA100-13
35-239GMSA100-14
35-240GMSA100-15
35-241GMSA100-16
35-242GMSA100-17
35-243GMSA100-18CamrailSudan3605
AECI 2GMSA100-19
35-244GMSA107-01CamrailSudan3606
35-245GMSA100-20Camrail
35-246GMSA100-21Zambia
35-247GMSA100-22
35-248GMSA100-23
35-249GMSA100-24
35-250GMSA100-25
35-251GMSA100-26
35-252GMSA100-27
35-253GMSA100-28
35-254GMSA100-29
35-255GMSA100-30FSA8210
35-256GMSA100-31
35-257GMSA100-32
35-258GMSA100-33
35-259GMSA100-34
35-260GMSA100-35
35-261GMSA100-36
35-262GMSA100-37
35-263GMSA100-38
35-264GMSA100-39
35-265GMSA100-40
35-266GMSA100-41
35-267GMSA100-42
35-268GMSA100-43
35-269GMSA100-44
35-270GMSA100-45
35-271GMSA100-46
35-272GMSA100-47
35-273GMSA100-48
35-274GMSA100-49
35-275GMSA100-50
35-276GMSA100-51
35-277GMSA100-52
35-278GMSA100-53
35-279GMSA100-54
35-280GMSA100-55
35-281GMSA100-56
35-282GMSA100-57
35-283GMSA100-58
35-284GMSA100-59
35-285GMSA100-60
35-286GMSA100-61
35-287GMSA100-62
35-288GMSA100-63
35-289GMSA100-64
35-290GMSA100-65
35-291GMSA100-66
35-292GMSA100-67
35-293GMSA100-68
35-294GMSA100-69
35-295GMSA100-70
35-296GMSA100-71
35-297GMSA100-72
35-298GMSA100-73
35-299GMSA100-74
35-300GMSA100-75
35-301GMSA102-1
35-302GMSA102-2
35-303GMSA102-3
35-304GMSA102-4
35-305GMSA102-5FSA8211
35-306GMSA102-6FCA8200
35-307GMSA102-7FCA8201
35-308GMSA102-8FCA8204
35-309GMSA102-9
35-310GMSA102-10
35-311GMSA102-11
35-312GMSA102-12FSA8212
35-313GMSA102-13FCA8205
35-314GMSA102-14FCA8206
35-315GMSA102-15FCA8207
35-316GMSA102-16
35-317GMSA102-17
35-318GMSA102-18
35-319GMSA102-19
35-320GMSA102-20FCA8208
35-321GMSA102-21
35-322GMSA102-22
35-323GMSA102-23
35-324GMSA102-24FSA8213
35-325GMSA102-25
35-326GMSA102-26
35-327GMSA102-27
35-328GMSA102-28
35-329GMSA102-29
35-330GMSA102-30
35-331GMSA102-31
35-332GMSA102-32
35-333GMSA102-33FSA8214
35-334GMSA102-34
35-335GMSA102-35
35-336GMSA102-36
35-337GMSA102-37
35-338GMSA102-38
35-339GMSA102-39
35-340GMSA102-40
35-341GMSA102-41
35-342GMSA102-42FCA8209
35-343GMSA102-43
35-344GMSA102-44
35-345GMSA102-45
35-346GMSA102-46
35-347GMSA102-47
35-348GMSA102-48
35-349GMSA102-49
35-350GMSA102-50

Liveries

The Class 35-200 were all delivered in the SAR Gulf Red livery with signal red buffer beams, yellow side stripes on the long hood sides and a yellow V on each end. In the 1990s many of the Class units began to be repainted in the Spoornet orange livery with a yellow and blue chevron pattern on the buffer beams. Several later received the Spoornet maroon livery. In the late 1990s many were repainted in the Spoornet blue livery with outline numbers on the long hood sides. After 2008 in the Transnet Freight Rail and Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa era, many were repainted in the TFR red, green and yellow livery and at least two were repainted in the PRASA purple Shosholoza Meyl livery.

Illustration