The railcar was designed to reach speeds of on level track, and while hauling a carriage up a 1 in 40 (2.5%)
grade. Trials were conducted to see if it could achieve these expectations, and in some ways it exceeded them. A trailer was hauled with ease along the 1 in 35 (2.86%) route between
Upper Hutt Railway Station and
Mangaroa Railway Station, and on the level it could haul two
bogie passenger carriages and a brake van at . The railcar was subsequently introduced to service, operating the steep route out of
Wellington to
Johnsonville along what was then the
North Island Main Trunk Railway and has, since the 1937 opening of the
Tawa Flat deviation, been the
Johnsonville Branch. This route was also operated by the Westinghouse railcar until 1917, when its repeated failures caused it to be permanently withdrawn from service. A similar but temporary fate befell the Thomas Transmission railcar; it gave good service for a few months but then had to be mothballed as a critical component of its transmission failed and
World War I restricted the ability of NZR to source a replacement. In 1920, the railcar was finally returned to service. It suffered further reliability problems and did not operate for long. It was written off in 1925 and NZR sold its body to private interests for use as a dwelling. == References ==