Various styles of smoke deflectors have been used by different railway operators. However, many are essentially a variation of one of two designs of
Windleitbleche (wind deflecting plates) developed by the
Deutsche Reichsbahn-Gesellschaft (the German State Railway Company) between the World Wars: the earlier, larger
Wagner-type deflector, and the later, smaller
Witte-type deflector, such as those found on the preserved
LNER Gresley A3 class 4472 Flying Scotsman. The
Southern Railway in the UK was one of the first adopters and standardised on its own distinctive style where the deflectors only reached to halfway up the smokebox from the running plate. Wind tunnel testing showed that these less tall deflectors would adequately lift the smoke on the locomotives for which they were designed, without unduly detracting from the appearance. with short SR standard deflectors ==References==