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・ LSWR B4 class
・ LSWR C14 class
・ LSWR C8 class
・ LSWR D15 class
・ LSWR E14 class
・ LSWR F13 class
・ LSWR G14 class
・ LSWR G16 class
・ LSWR G6 class
・ LSWR H15 class
・ LSWR H16 class
・ LSWR K10 class
・ LSWR L11 class
・ LSWR L12 class
・ LSWR M7 class
LSWR N15 class
・ LSWR O2 class
・ LSWR O2 Class W24 Calbourne
・ LSWR P14 class
・ LSWR S11 class
・ LSWR S15 class
・ LSWR suburban lines
・ LSWR T1 class
・ LSWR T14 class
・ LSWR T3 class
・ LSWR T6 class
・ LSWR T7 class
・ LSWR T9 class
・ LSWR X2 class
・ LSWR X6 class


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LSWR N15 class : ウィキペディア英語版
LSWR N15 class

|fueltype = Coal
|fuelcap = ''  (Urie outside-frame bogie tender)''
|watercap =
|cylindercount = Two, outside
|cylindersize =
|boilerpressure =
|tractiveeffort =
   ''(Maunsell batch)''
|operator = London & South Western Railway,
Southern Railway,
British Railways (Southern Region)
|operatorclass =
|powerclass =
|withdrawndate = 1953–1962
|locale = Great Britain
|preservedunits = SR No. 777
|disposition = One preserved, remainder scrapped
}}
The LSWR N15 class was a British 2–cylinder 4-6-0 express passenger steam locomotive designed by Robert W. Urie. The class has a complex build history spanning three sub-classes and eight years of construction from 1919 to 1926. The first batch of the class was constructed for the London and South Western Railway (LSWR), where they hauled heavy express trains to the south coast ports and further west to Exeter. After the Lord Nelsons they were the second biggest express passenger locomotives in the Southern Railway.
Following the grouping of railway companies in 1923, the LSWR became part of the Southern Railway (SR) and its publicity department gave the N15 locomotives names associated with Arthurian legend; the class hence becoming known as King Arthurs.〔Nock (''British Steam Locomotives'': 1983), p. 172〕 The Chief Mechanical Engineer (CME) of the newly formed company, Richard Maunsell, modified the Urie locomotives in the light of operational experience and increased the class strength to 74 locomotives. Maunsell and his Chief Draughtsman James Clayton incorporated several improvements, notably to the steam circuit and valve gear.
The new locomotives were built over several batches at Eastleigh and Glasgow, leading to the nicknames of "Eastleigh Arthurs" and "Scotch Arthurs" in service. The class was subjected to smoke deflection experiments in 1926, becoming the first British class of steam locomotive to be fitted with smoke deflectors. Maunsell's successor, Oliver Bulleid, attempted to improve performance by altering exhaust arrangements. The locomotives continued operating with British Railways (BR) until the end of 1962. One example, 30777 ''Sir Lamiel'', is preserved as part of the National Collection and can be seen on mainline railtours.
==Background==
Robert Urie completed his H15 class mixed-traffic 4-6-0 design in 1913 and the prototype was built in August 1914. It showed a marked improvement in performance over Dugald Drummond’s LSWR T14 class 4-6-0 when tested on local and express passenger trains. The introduction of ten H15 engines into service coincided with the outbreak of the First World War, which prevented construction of further class members. Despite the interruption caused by the conflict, Urie anticipated that peacetime increases in passenger traffic would necessitate longer trains from London to the south-west of England. Passenger loadings on the heavy boat trains to the London and South Western Railway’s (LSWR) ports of Portsmouth, Weymouth and Southampton had been increasing prior to the war, and was beginning to overcome the capabilities of the LSWR’s passenger locomotive fleet.〔Swift, p. 9〕 His response was to produce a modern, standard express passenger design similar to the H15.〔Bradley (1987), p. 41〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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