South Africa electric The 3 kV DC
Class 4E electric locomotive was designed for the SAR by the
General Electric Company (GEC) and was built by the
North British Locomotive Company (NBL) between 1952 and 1953. The Class 4E was amongst the most powerful narrow gauge electric locomotives in the world at that time and at , it was a heavy locomotive for . The reasons for the leading pony truck were both to improve stability at speed and to reduce the axle load. diesel-electric Between 1959 and 1961, the SAR placed 115 high-nosed
Class 32-000 GE type U18C1 diesel-electric locomotives in service in
South West Africa, where very light rail conditions necessitated lighter axle loadings which could not be achieved with conventional three-axle bogies under a heavy locomotive. In June and July 1966, ten low-nosed
Class 32-200 GE type U20C1 diesel-electric locomotives entered service on the SAR. The Class 32-200 was actually a
Class 33-000 locomotive on the 1Co bogies of the Class 32-000, which reduced its axle load from the of the Class 33-000 to . Apart from the bogies, which necessitated a smaller fuel tank, its physical dimensions and exterior appearance were identical to that of the Co+Co Class 33-000 and it used the same V12 prime mover.
Japan in 1938 A number of Japanese electrics from the 1930s, also on Cape gauge, such as the
EF10 also used this arrangement. ==References==