The engines were not just used for shunting, but also for light goods and passenger train services. They were even employed hauling
departmental trains. After the V 60 had been in service for about 25 years, in 1982 the DB tested a variety of shunting engines under the
Class 259, which were to be the successors of the V 60. They were unable to decide on one, however, so that in the following years several measures were carried out in order to improve the economy of the V 60. In 1987 the engine was classified as a minor locomotive (
Kleinlok) and reclassified. Class 260 became Class 360 and the 261s became 361s. Its categorisation as a
Kleinlok saved staff costs, because the railway no longer had to employ "engine drivers", only "Kleinlok operators", whose training was cheaper. The installation of radio control enabled one-man shunting movements using remote control; the fully radio controlled models were called the
Class 364 (light class) or
365 (heavy class), however the only loco in Class 364 was soon renumbered to 365 700. Since 1997 the Maybach motors have been replaced during refurbishment by Caterpillar 12-cylinder engines generating 465 kW (632 PS), this conversion only being done on engines with radio control. These locos are designated as
Class 362 (light variant) and
363 (heavy variant). In 2001 one engine was equipped with a Caterpillar V8 engine run on natural gas and tested in the Munich area; it was designated as
Class 760. It has since been scrapped. at Thessaloniki New Passenger Station, Greece. Of the 942 locomotives originally supplied to the DB, many are still active. Those without radio control were gradually retired by early 2003; of the radio controlled locos around 400 were still working for the DB in 2004, several of which have ended up in private or industrial railways in Germany and elsewhere, as well as the state railways in
Turkey, the former
Yugoslavia (e.g. the Croatian Railways HŽ series 2133) and
Norway (17 engines as
NSB Di 5). In 2008 over 70 were owned by German private and industrial lines, of which the majority were working in construction logistics and in local goods services. Locomotive number 362 362 is the first V 60, that has clocked up 50 years of services in the DB/DBAG - it entered service on 12 April 1957 and is currently (2008) the third oldest locomotive in DB AG service. Identical or similar locos were and are also used by other state railways. As early as the 1960s they were delivered to places like
Greece (
Hellenic State Railways, class A-101) or Turkey, or built under licence as in
Belgium. Even
Israel ran very similar engines. The museum locomotive V 60 150 was burnt up in the great fire at the
Nuremberg Transport Museum's locomotive shed. ==Sources==