With its diameter
driving wheels, the locomotive itself achieved the planned speed of without any difficulty, but when hauling its
streamlined train it could only reach . Nevertheless, the scheduled service between
Dresden and
Berlin was successfully delivered, the long route being completed in just 102 minutes, a time that has not been beaten on this route even in the 21st century with the use of faster electric locomotives. However, it was pushed to complete the short turnaround allowed in Dresden because the locomotive had to turn around and fill up on coal and water. When 61 001 was not available or having maintenance work carried out, a
DRG Class 01 or
DRG Class 03 headed the train. However, they could only reach top speeds of . Not long after construction had begun on 61 001, its variant 61 002 was planned and built at the start of 1939. In May of that year, the first factory trial runs were carried out and the locomotive was transferred on 12 June 1939 to the
locomotive depot (
Bahnbetriebswerk or
Bw) at
Grunewald. It was taken into service at the beginning of 1939/40, so it likely would not have hauled the streamlined train in regular passenger service due to the war and the
Henschel-Wegmann train being reserved for
Wehrmacht purposes. After the train's operations ceased at the start of 1939, 61 001 was used for heating duties at
Bw Berlin-Grunewald. From December 1940, it found itself once again in Dresden-Altstadt on express train services and was given conventional train and buffer equipment in November 1942. Its operations log shows that it was only sparingly used. From 1943 to the war's end, the Reichsbahn repair shop (
Reichsbahnsausbesserungswerk or
RAW) at Braunschweig was responsible for the engine. Between July 1945 and March 1946, it travelled about hauling passenger trains. == Survival post-1945 ==