Crossley Initially they were fitted with eight-cylinder
two-stroke, port-controlled
Crossley engines. These were a
loop scavenge type, which utilised a patented principle that recycled the normally wasted
exhaust-pressure pulse to boost charge air in the cylinder. They produced at 625
rpm and could do . The original
sandboxes, which were used to improve traction with the rail, were removed after a few years. Their Crossley engines proved to be notoriously unreliable from the start. Amongst a plethora of problems were: • Unbalanced engines resulting in vibration-induced fuel pipe and water pipe fractures • Cylinder defects • Excessive water temperature causing shutdowns There were also problems with generator and motor
flashovers. Similar problems were also encountered on the Crossley-engined
Western Australian Government Railways X Class and
British Rail Class 28 locomotives.
EMD These problems were tackled between 1968 and 1971 through the progressive re-engining of the entire class with a 12-cylinder
EMD 645E engine (a similar process was implemented for the original
201 Class). However, this power output stressed the ability of the original cooling and transmission systems and the engine output was reduced to for improved reliability. When built, these locomotives were originally numbered A1 to A60, and as locomotives were re-engined, they had the suffix 'R' added to their number. From 1972, the prefix letters were dropped and the locomotives were renumbered 001 to 060. ==Accidents and incidents==