The small locomotives were built by all five Austrian locomotive factories between 1878 and 1911 for a total of 228 examples. In detail, the 97.01–03 belonged to the Dalmatian State Railway, the 97.04–06 to the
Arlbergbahn (
Arlberg Railway), the 97.07–08 to the
Galizischen Transversalbahn (
Galician Transversal Railway), the 97.16–19 to the
Mährisch-Schlesischen Centralbahn (
Moravian-Silesian Central Railway), the 97.20–23 to the
Staatsbahn Unter Drauburg–Wolfsberg (Unter Drauburg – Wolfsberg State Railway), the 97.24–25 to the
Staatsbahn Mürzzuschlag–Neuberg (Mürzzuschlag-Neuberg State Railway); the 97.09–97.15, 97.51–97.255 were ordered directly by the kkStB while the numbers 97.26–97.50, 97.100 and 97.200 were never used. The
Neutitscheiner Lokalbahn (Neutitscheiner Local Railway) acquired three more locomotives with the names ZAUCHTEL, NEUTITSCHEIN and KUNEWALD. The
Lokalbahn Littau–Groß Senitz also procured two corresponding locomotives. They were numbered as No. 1 LITOVEL and No. 2 CHOLINA. The
Austrian Southern Railway Company (
Südbahngesellschaft, SB), which operated on the Unter Drauburg – Wolfsberg State Railway, classified the 97.20–23 used there as series 100 with the operating numbers 11–14. The locomotives of the Mürzzuschlag – Neuberg State Railway, on which the SB also ran, were also classified in the 100 series and given the operating numbers 20–21. As a result of the long delivery times, there were also design differences between the individual delivery series. This applies in particular to the driver's cab, the valve types and the shape of the sandbox. What they all had in common, however, was the low boiler position and the side tanks that extended to the front of the boiler, which gave the machines their angular appearance and thus their nickname "coffee grinder". After the First World War, a large part of the class remained in Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Italy, Poland and Romania. 133 locomotives came to the
Czechoslovak State Railways (ČSD), which they classified as 310.0. The
Polish State Railways (PKP) classified them as series TKh12, the
Yugoslav Railways JDŽ as series 150 and the Italian
Ferrovie dello Stato (FS) as series 822. The
Romanian State Railways (CFR) also received locomotives of this class, but did not give them their own series designation. The three locomotives of the Neutitscheiner local railway were used by ČSD as 310.908–910. Only 31 locomotives passed to the BBÖ. The
Deutsche Reichsbahn took over 19 of them as 98 7011 – 98 7028 after the annexation of Austria in 1938. In the course of the Second World War, other locomotives of this series came to the Reichsbahn, which they designated 98 7029 – 98 7033. After 1945 three machines were handed over to the
Hungarian State Railways (MÁV) and the JDŽ, so only 16 came to the
ÖBB as the 89 series. The 89.240 was even equipped with a
Giesl ejector in order to test the effects of this system on locomotives with lower power. The last 89 class locomotive was retired in 1958. On the ČSD, the locomotives remained in operation until the end of the 1960s. The last coffee grinder ("Kafemlejnek"), 310.097, was retired in 1968 from the Bratislava locomotive depot. ==Preserved locomotives==