The F class had originally been conceived as a mainline mixed-traffic tank locomotive, and their capabilities exceeded the expectation of even
Charles Rous-Marten, who wrote of having observed them in all manner of duties while in New Zealand. As time went on and lines were extended, it became clear that the F class could no longer keep running as it did on the mainline, and so larger engines were introduced, thus pushing the F class to branch line and shunting duties. The class is unique in that it has been used on every line in New Zealand to be operated by New Zealand Railways, some were operated by the
Public Works Department. Several were also owned by the Westport Harbour Board, whose assets were later acquired by the NZR. In all, a total of 88 were acquired by the government and by various private railways, notably the Westport Harbour Board and the Thames Valley & Rotorua Railway (TVRR). Not all of the 88 locomotives were in NZR service at one time. One locomotive, Neilson 1842, was sold to the Public Works Department before the nationwide numbering scheme of 1890 was implemented. Another twelve locomotives were rebuilt as
FA class locomotives. This ensured that only 75 engines of the type were in service with the NZR at any one time, given the length of the period over which NZR acquired these engines. By the 1940s, the F class were in retreat with the largest concentrations being in Christchurch, Invercargill, and Greymouth, where they were still used for shunting duties. The Christchurch locomotives were retained to shunt the Lyttelton wharves (their short wheelbase gave them greater operational flexibility), while the Invercargill locomotives were retained as shunters and also to shunt a dairy factory siding at Edendale; here, verandah beside the siding limited clearances and the F class were the only locomotives able to negotiate this siding without any trouble. From this period onwards, many of the locomotives were replaced with the arrival of the
DS class 0-6-0DM diesel locomotives. The Invercargill locomotives were withdrawn by the end of the 1950s, as were the two Greymouth examples, F 5 and F 277, which were dumped at Omoto, 2 km from Greymouth, along with other withdrawn locomotives and wagons in an attempt to control erosion of the railway embankment at Omoto by the Grey River. The last allocation for the F class was at Lyttelton, where their short wheelbase allowed them to run over the sharp curves on the wharves. The last two in service, F 13 and F 163, were withdrawn in 1963. Before this, both locomotives were overhauled and repainted in an approximation of the green livery used in the 1870s and named
Peveril (F 13) and
Ivanhoe (F 163) respectively. After taking part in the NZR centenary celebrations at the
Christchurch Railway Station in 1963, both were placed in the Arthur's Pass locomotive shed with
W 192 for safekeeping. In 1968, NZR donated F 13 to the
New Zealand Railway and Locomotive Society Canterbury Branch for their Ferrymead Railway, and it was steamed from Arthur's Pass to Christchurch with a special excursion train. ==Industrial service==