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RN32 - Vintage railcar taking shape in the workshop
Some time ago Sandstone Heritage Trust was offered a strange looking chassis that had been found under a pile of scrap in a breakers yard.
The wheels are 2ft gauge and consist of a four wheel bogie with a two wheel axle at the other end. No engine, mechanicals or body unfortunately and no immediate clue as to its identity. Could it be the remains of the forty seater Wickham railcar built for Consolidated Gold mines in 1956 which had a similar layout, possible as that has disappeared, or is it something else perhaps that Dunns or one of the old rail industry companies acquired or even produced?
Whatever its origins it was obviously too good to scrap so was placed in safe undercover storage in the hope that more information would be forthcoming at a later date.
More recently Sandstone was offered the body and some other parts of a circa 1910 BSA car. This once grand vehicle was an open four seater tourer but as it was far from complete and looked to be another interesting item that would also be saved for posterity but with little chance of seeing the light of day in any meaningful way again.
However, following Desmond Clarke's restoration of the small narrow gauge Wickham trolley it was decided to see if the narrow gauge rail chassis and BSA tourer body could somehow be united into one unique inspection car, reminiscent of those old scenes of early days of African railways and tours of inspection by the management.
Desmond got busy and gathered all the parts together in the workshop to see if such a vehicles was possible and lo and behold, with a lot of work, the period radiator from the car, a modern engine, gearbox, drive train and accessories, and some high class mechanical work and panel beating, turn of the century upholstery and trim it will all fit together and look like it was made that way.
Another interesting feature will be a hydraulically driven turntable mounted underneath, similar to those under the modern Trackmaster inspection vehicles, to enable the vehicle to be turned at the end of the line rather than having to run for several kilometers in reverse with the risk of damage to engine or gearbox. In the days of yore the line's General Manager would have had his party of African bearers but that's probably not politically correct these days!
Fortunately the workshop staff have plenty of expertise with hydraulic equipment as there is a lot of it fitted to modern agricultural machinery.
In the process of turning two interesting artifacts into one interesting and useful piece of vintage rail equipment Desmond and the other staff concerned will gain an enormous amount of knowledge and skills not normally able to be gained by the younger generation which will stand them in good stead for the future – empowerment at its best and most interesting.
Work continues as the accompanying illustrations show and there will be regular updates on the website.

Further work has been done over the Christmas period which has included a trial fit of one of the BSA mudguards. Still in unrestored conditioned it gives an idea of what the finished article will look like when complete.
Desmond has also fitted a differential or reduction drive rear flat belt pulley mounted PTO (power take off).
from a Massey Ferguson 135. He took off the flat belt pulley, put a sprocket on it, which now makes this
sprocket on the back just visible on the left-hand-side. It is a very heavy duty reduction box which will do an excellent job.
That is one of the advantages of rail preservation alongside a big agricultural operation because you have access to lots of interesting parts that, provided you are prepared to use some lateral thinking, can serve a variety of different uses.
Sandstone Heritage Trust - News
An invaluable contribution from Folker Streitberger regarding the background to the Deutz logo.
An invaluable contribution from Folker Streitberger regarding the background to the Deutz logo.
Folker Streitberger, retired a few years ago as Technical Chief at Deutz Diesel Power.
| DEUTZ was founded in 1864 by Nicolaus August Otto, the inventor of the 4-stroke principle engine, the Otto-Motor, under the name of "N. A. Otto & Cie". The company's name has changed several times since the founding due to mergers and changes in company structures in its 142 years of existence. In 1872 a joint stock company was founded with the name "Gas Motoren Fabrik Deutz AG", which included the name of the Koeln suburb Deutz, to which the company had moved to a larger property, for the first time. There was still an old yellow face-brick building on the factory grounds, with that name depicted in red bricks, when I last visited the factory. |
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In 1936 the then "Humboldt-Deutz-Motoren AG" took over the vehicle production plant "Fahrzeugfabrik C.D. Magirus AG" in Ulm, manufacturers especially of fire truck vehicles. A new logo appeared, showing the "cathedral" and below that the names in 2 lines "Magirus" "Deutz". This was also the name for the Deutz truck as you may recall. But the cathedral is not the Cologne Dom, it is the Munster of Ulm, with 1 tall spire and 2 smaller ones, whereas the Koelner Dom has 2 tall spires and 1 small one as your picture shows so nicely.
I think that at that time the "cathedral logo" was only used for the truck section of the company. Before that the name "DEUTZ" was used in a diamond- or rhombus- or lozenge-shaped field (view Deutsche Stationaer Motoren page 62 for an example).
The cathedral symbol became the official company logo only in 1964, when Deutz celebrated its centenary.
In 1938 Kloeckner Works from Duisburg came into the company and the name changed to "Kloeckner- Humboldt-Deutz AG, or KHD for short. (That's the name that I grew up with and lived with for most of my working life).
The last name change came in 1997 to "Deutz AG" and the logo was the cathedral in red, DEUTZ underneath in black , red underlined.
I still remember the "DEUTZ" in the diamond-shaped field on sheet metal plates, nailed to the engine boxes as they arrived by us from Cologne. But also painted on, with the name DEUTZ in a symbolized globe and written underneath "for the world".
The above is naturally my private interpretation of the subject and not the official DEUTZ company explanation.

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