Even as production started on the S 10,
Henschel were given an order for the manufacture of a
compound locomotive, which promised to deliver lower coal consumption. This locomotive, classified as the S 10.1, was not based on the S 10, but was a new design. The four-
cylinder compound engine was of the
de Glehn type, which meant that the outside cylinders, set well to the rear, drove the second
coupled axle and the inside cylinder drove the first. The engines were larger and more powerful than the S 10 and, thanks to their compound engines, also more economical. Between 1911 and 1914, no less than 135 examples were built for
Prussia and 17 for
Alsace-Lorraine. Following initial dissatisfaction with the vehicles, several modifications to the locomotives finally led to the desired success. For example, no
feedwater preheater was fitted to start with for weight-saving reasons, but one was later installed. The remaining disadvantages, such as the poor accessibility of the inside drive, led to the development of a new version in the shape of the 1914 variant. After three locomotives were sent abroad as
reparations, the
Deutsche Reichsbahn took over the remaining 132 vehicles as
Class 17.10–11 with numbers 17 1001–1123 and 17 1145–1153. The three locomotives left in 1945 with the
Austrian Federal Railway were renumbered to 617.1004, 617.1089 and 617.1099 and retired in 1957. The
Deutsche Bundesbahn withdrew their last S 10.1 engines in 1952. The
Deutsche Reichsbahn in
East Germany held onto these locomotives for longer and converted 13 examples to coal-dust firing. Locomotive number 17 1119 was given a condensing tender. In 1963 the last machines were taken out of service by the DR. Number 17 1055 (formerly "Posen 1107", running as "Osten 1135") was partly returned to its original configuration and belongs today to the
Dresden Transport Museum. The S 10.1s were equipped with
tenders of Prussian classes pr 2'2' T 21.5 and pr 2'2' T 31.5. ==Prussian S 10.1 (1914 variant)==