in 1972 In 1954 the first prototype Hi-Dyne was installed in
Enterprise, a 48-ton
Hudswell Clarke industrial locomotive. This was tested for a range of industrial uses, particularly for colliery traffic on the
Stockton to Darlington line. Unusually for the testing of a small locomotive, the test trains also included a
dynamometer car. The transmission fitted was a three-speed Dual Fluidrive gearbox (a form of
dual clutch transmission) with a pair of
fluid couplings. This gearbox had the advantage that it avoided the momentary loss of power when changing gear. This was a valuable feature when light locomotives were starting heavy trains on inclines, as it helped to avoid the train running away from control. One of the more lasting, although obscure, legacies of this locomotive was due to its name. This locomotive first appeared in 1954, during the construction of
DP1, the prototype
Class 55 Deltic. DP1 already had the internal project name
Enterprise and it had been intended to name the locomotive similarly on its delivery. To avoid confusion with the Hudswell Clarke, and association of this prestige project with such a small and minor locomotive, DP1 instead acquired the name
DELTIC, after its
Deltic prime mover. Paxman subsequently supplied sixteen Hi-Dyne engines, based on the 6-cylinder RPHXL (contracts 55096-103 and 55721-8) to Hudswell Clarke for locomotives for
Sierra Leone Government Railways. ==Similar engines==