The locomotives of
Prussian Class T 5.2 (also known as the
Wannsee Variant) were built by the firms of
Henschel (30 examples) and
Grafenstaden (6 examples). They were intended for traffic between
Berlin and
Potsdam and were to replace the T 5.1s on the
Berlin Stadtbahn. A 4-4-0T wheel arrangement promised to result in better riding qualities than those of the T 5.1. However the T 5.2s were less suited to running cab first due to the lack of a
trailing axle and the large driving wheels, and so their employment was restricted to the Berlin ring. In 1923 the Reichsbahn had still intended to include 20 locomotives as numbers 71 019, 020, 029 - 031 and 72 001–015 in their
renumbering plan, but only took over two of them into their final numbering scheme in 1925, with numbers 72 001 and 72 002. They were retired by 1926. In 1941 two more engines from the
Eutin-Lübeck Railway Company, built by Henschel in 1911, came into the Reichsbahn fleet. They were given numbers 72 001 and 002. One of the two engines, which had both been converted to superheated working, remained in the ownership of the
Deutsche Reichsbahn in
East Germany until 1955. No examples of the Prussian Class T 5.2 locomotive have survived. == Prussian T 5.2 (Superheated) ==