The
Gt 2x4/4 Mallet locomotive was equipped with two sets of
compound-configured running gear, the front one, pivoted on a 15 cm thick coupling pin, had large low-pressure
cylinders, and the rear one, which was fixed, had smaller high-pressure cylinders. Both had one driven and three
coupled axles. The designer of this heavy locomotive was the then senior engineer and director at
Maffei, Anton Hammel, (1857-1925), who had also developed the famous
S 3/6. Between 1913 and 1914 the first series of 15 vehicles was procured and they entered service in 1914. The locomotives caused quite a stir at that time and could be seen at the railway exhibitions frequently held in those days (e.g. the 1922 transport exhibition in
Munich) - and, like the S 3/6, they were often painted with a blue or ochre yellow photographic livery and adorned with a crowned chimney. As the first of the second series, no. 5766 (96 016) was even given brass bands on the crowned chimney and
boiler as well as brass decorations on its front cylinders. A similar event happened with the same locomotive after the rebuilding of the second series in 1926. Otherwise, the first series had a narrow chimney with a cap similar to the
Prussian P 8. The operational livery of the K.Bay.Sts.B. locomotives was green with yellow lettering and a black chassis. Due to the advent of the
Prussian T 20 (DRG Class 95) in 1922 with its 1'E1' axle arrangement and better qualities than the initial Gt 2x4/4 series, a second series was built and deployed between 1922 (no. 5766) and 1923 (nos. 5767–5775). They were improved in comparison with their predecessors: greater evaporative heating area, capable of holding half a ton of coal more, greater
axle load and service weight, short chimney (without a cap). Both series were later modified in different ways after being taken over by the
Deutsche Reichsbahn, and incorporated into its
classification scheme as
Class 960. All locomotives were equipped with a Westinghouse
compressed-air double brake, operating on all wheelsets from the front, the
sand pipes initially served the second and fourth wheelsets of the front drive. After the modification of the second series in 1926, they were additionally fitted with a
Riggenbach counter-pressure brake, and seven axles sanded to increase adhesion. To begin with the locos ran with three headlights at the front, but just two after 1926. ==Rebuild==