New Zealand Geared Locomotives





This site is dedicated to preserving the history of the geared locomotives that were designed and built

in New Zealand for its bush tramways.

This site is constructed and maintained by John Garner Your comments, contributions, suggestions or corrections are welcome

Mail to jjgarner@xtra.co.nz

During the late 1800s, the loggers in the New Zealand bush turned from horse power to steam power and procured locomotives from England and ran these on their relatively primitive and mostly wooden railed tramways. There were obvious shortcomings with these lokeys, as they were never really designed to run on such light and uneven trackwork. So, being of an inventive nature the New Zealand woodsman concocted his own designs for steam locomotion and in so doing started an industry that saw something like 98 geared steam locomotives built in the period from 1885 until the last was constructed in 1943. In addition to these, there were also some rod engines built as well as the use of �cast-off� engines from the national carrier. Bush tramways also saw seven Climax and seven Heisler lokeys in use.

That the New Zealand designed and built lokeys were successful is undoubted as most of them achieved long lives, albeit with a few new boilers and some subtle changes that modified the appearance considerably from original. By the standards of the day they were well engineered and proved their worth with light wheel loadings and the ability to negotiate some atrocious trackwork.

Today, few of these remain, but of those that do, some are being restored to working order while others will be preserved as static exhibits reflecting the times of long ago. In addition to these locally built geared engines, the New Zealand bush tramways used other geared engines such as the American Heisler and Climax, and English engines such as Robey, Thomas Robinson, and Aveling & Porter. Many rod locomotives were also used, either especially imported for the tramways or, more often, as cast-offs from the national carrier.





Dimensions