Indian WP & WG Pacifics
The Locomotives That Kept a Continent Moving
1947–2020
International Giants of Steam — Part 4
1. The Post-Colonial Workhorses
At independence in 1947, Indian Railways needed fast, powerful, simple locomotives that could be built and maintained locally. The answer: two legendary broad-gauge Pacific classes.
2. Production
- WP 4-6-2 (Passenger): 755 built 1947–1967 (Chittaranjan + DLW)
- WG 2-8-2 (Goods): 2,450 built 1950–1970 (Chittaranjan only)
- Total: 3,205 — the backbone of IR for half a century
3. Specifications
| Class | WP | WG |
|---|---|---|
| Built | 1947–67 | 1950–70 |
| Tractive effort | 34,500 lbf | 47,250 lbf |
| Top speed | 110–120 km/h | 80–90 km/h |
| Typical train | 18–22 coaches | 60+ wagons |
| Last revenue run | 2019 | 2020 |
4. The End
- Last WP passenger run: 2019 (Delhi–Agra)
- Last WG freight run: 2020 (Mughalsarai coal drag)
- Final steam on Indian broad gauge: 2020
5. Survivors 2025
About 30 preserved (Rewari Shed, National Rail Museum Delhi, etc.). Two WPs still certified for heritage charters.
6. Final Thought
For 73 years, every Indian who ever rode a train probably rode behind a WP or a WG. They were the sound of India moving — until the horns went silent.
Next: Germany’s Kriegslok BR 52 — 7,794 built for total war.
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