SE&CR O class 0-6-0 loco

825001 • by Rapido Trains UK
£179.00 £209.95

Pre-order scheme

This item is scheduled for future release with an estimated release of TBA. Dates are liable to change depending on production schedules.

Pay a £20.00 deposit (non-refundable) today, the balance will be charged when models are ready to ship.

In 1878, James Stirling was appointed as the Chief Locomotive Superintendent of the South Eastern Railway. He quickly determined an urgent need for new and more powerful goods and passenger locos.  

Bringing his experience from the Glasgow and South Western Railway, he proposed some new designs that were distinctly similar to those he had used for the Scottish Company. One such design was a 0-6-0 tender goods locomotive. Stirling's designs were disputed by Ashford Works Manager, Richard Mansell, who had suggested incorporating tried and tested SER features. Stirling insisted that his design be trusted, and his design was backed by the railway's Board of Directors.  

Tenders for the contract were received by several locomotive builders, and Sharp, Stewart and Co. were awarded the contract to build the first 20 of the class. This new loco would be designated as the O Class.  

The SER O Class had a domeless boiler with a Ramsbottom safety valve, a Stirling steam reverser, and a round-topped cab design, which was characteristic of other Stirling designs. It had a stylish tender with springs that protruded above the running plate and alongside the tender sides.  

A total of 122 of the class were built between 1878 and 1899, with versions being produced almost every year. Sharp, Stewart and Co built a total of 65, and the rest were built at the railway's Ashford Works. Upon the merger of the SER and LC&DR into the SECR, the final 5 examples were built under the new joint committee’s ownership.  

The earliest examples that were built by Sharp, Stewart and Co sadly suffered from poor steaming and weak frames, proving Richard Mansell’s fears were correct. This led to Ashford making modifications to the boiler and structure. The new standards were incorporated into future versions.  

Between 1900 and 1923, 28 examples of the O class were given replacement boilers. These had deeper fireboxes, meaning they were mounted higher on the loco’s frames. But they were otherwise of similar dimensions to the originals. 

The O Class were used for loose coupled heavy goods trains in their early years, until 1886 when some were fitted with vacuum brakes, and 2 received Westinghouse brakes. O Classes were known for hauling both passengers and goods, but were predominantly a goods engine. They could be seen on routes across the southeast, and even travelled as far west as Reading on regular services.  

Unfortunately, like many locos of this era, they were superseded by more powerful and efficient classes that were of a similar size. The SECR C Class was the O Class's replacement on the heavy freight and passenger services, relegating the O to lighter duties, shunting or branchline work.  

In 1904, Harry Wainwright, who was the new Locomotive, Carriage and Wagon Superintendent of the SECR, set about improving the performance of the O Class. He did this by refitting many of them with his latest domed boiler design and new cab. This rebuilt class would be designated as the O1. Conversions continued through to 1932, by which point 59 of the O Class had been rebuilt into O1s.  

During WW1, the O Class were often used in pairs or as a pilot for the O1 or C Class. Some were even fitted with slip couplings. The War Office requested the SECR provide 10 0-6-0 light goods locos, but the SECR refused to transfer them unless they received suitable replacements from northern companies. An increase in suburban services during the 1920s did see many of the O class return to passenger hauling services.  

When the railways were grouped into the Big 4 in 1923, 31 O classes entered Southern Railway ownership, and a handful of examples were also sold on to the East Kent Railway. 

A significant number of the class had already been scrapped during their SECR days, and with the C, H, R and refitted O1s taking duties previously hauled by the O Class, their days were numbered. The final O Class was withdrawn from service by the Southern Railway in 1932.  

The Rapido Trains UK OO Gauge rendition of the SER O Class 0-6-0 will be available in a variety of liveries, including several in its early SER condition.  

You can look forward to a smooth-running mechanism, enhanced with a MoPower stay-alive capacitor, plunger pickups fitted to the loco and wheel bearing pickups on the tender. 

Tooling differences throughout the range include different tender fronts, garden shed or coalboard toolboxes, and smooth or riveted smokeboxes. 

Other features include a factory-installed speaker, NEM 362 coupler pockets, sprung buffers, a 21-pin DCC decoder socket, and firebox flicker with a dynamic fire draw effect on DCC-fitted models. 

For modellers who prefer etched number plates, painted plates will be included in the detail bag for the SER and SECR versions. This is in addition to a selection of other optional details for you to personalise the model. 

Personalisation and Weathering

We can offer a weathering service on any pre-ordered models. Personalisation options are carried out in a batch process once the models are in stock, and will take around two weeks to process before dispatch. For more details of this service see our Personalisation and Weathering page.