Steam Locomotive BR 14 DRG
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Era designation II

Road no.: 14 031

Available

Item no. 40274

Direct currentPrepared for locomotive soundLocomotive is prepared for the installation of a smoke generator

Item no. 40275

Alternating current Digital PremiumPrepared for locomotive soundLocomotive is prepared for the installation of a smoke generator

Item no. 40276

Direct current Digital PremiumIntegrated locomotive soundLocomotive has a smoke generator

Item no. 40277

Alternating current Digital PremiumIntegrated locomotive soundLocomotive has a smoke generator
The model has spring buffers2 wheels with fiction tyresWith interior lightingThe model has a coupler pocket and short coupling cinematicLength over buffer in mmVehicle predominatly in metalNavigable minimum radius 360 mm21-pole electrical interfaceLocomotive has flywheel driveDouble headlights alternating with the direction of travel
  • Boiler, locomotive chassis, walkway and tender in die-cast zinc
  • Open view between the frame and boiler
  • Engine and drive system are in the locomotive
  • Finest metal spoked wheels in die-cast zinc
  • Two traction tyres
  • Suitable for a minimum radius of 360 mm
  • 21-pole and 8-pole interface in the tender
  • Accurate and perfectly replicated paintwork
  • Apring buffers
  • Current supply points on 6 axles
  • Perfectly replicated back boilerplate
  • Driver and stoker in the driver´s cab
  • Driver´s cab lightning
  • Doors open and close
  • True-to-epoch lightning
  • Multipart lamp housing
  • Integrated sound and smoke generator or available as a retrofit option close

Year of construction: 1908

Lenght: 21,86 m

Velocity: 110 km/h

Service weight: 75,5 t

PS: 1100

kW: 809

The two new models that Brawa is launching are beautiful, fast and enduring. The S 9 Länderbahn in green and the DRG’s BR 14 in black are genuinely beautiful steam locomotives. Brawa’s models are just as appealing as the originals, and they incorporate a whole host of precision details such as accurately replicated paintwork and true-to-epoch lighting. The boiler, chassis, gangplank, tender box and spoked wheels are also precision made in die-cast zinc, and the locomotives have doors that open and close.


Locomotives with a 4-4-0 or 2B wheel arrangement (i.e. with a two-axle bogie and two driving axles) dominated the European express train and passenger train scene for around 20 years. The Prussian State Railway alone purchased 3472 locomotives with this wheel arrangement; the last ones as late as 1913.


At the turn of the 20th century, trains started getting heavier and heavier, and many of the 2B locomotives were reaching their performance limits. Another carrying axle had to be added so that the locomotives could be -fitted with more efficient boilers. This gave birth to the 4-4-2 or 2B1 wheel arrangement, which was also called the “Atlantic” type. The Atlantic Coast Line in the USA first used this locomotive type, which is where it got its name from. Locomotive experts know that the Atlantics were the most -elegant and aesthetic steam locomotives ever built. They were also a great deal more powerful and ran a lot more quietly than their predecessors. Atlantic locomotives could travel at speeds of up to 200 km/h.


The K.P.E.V. (Königlich Preußische Eisenbahn Verwaltungen) was the first railway company to purchase S7 Atlantics starting in 1902 in two types – the Hanoverian type and the Graffenstaden type, each named after its -supplier. The locomotives ran extremely quietly and they were much more powerful than the 2B predecessors. Soon, however, they weren’t able to meet the increasingly demanding requirements and the Hanoverian S 7 was upgraded into a kind of “Super Atlantic”, creating the S 9. Designed and built at Hanomag in Hanover, 99 S 9s were delivered from 1908 onwards.


The S 9’s excellent running properties and its powerful boiler made it perfect for the flat terrain of northern Germany. Its maximum permissible speed was 110 km/h, though the large tender made long-distance journeys of over 250 km possible. It was also visually appealing and is considered to be one of the most beautiful Prussian locomotives of all time. It is strange, however, that these locomotives did not incorporate the efficient superheated steam process which was already in use at the time. This was corrected in 1914 when the process of retrofitting the locomotives with superheated steam capability began. Unfortunately, though, it was interrupted by the outbreak of the first world war and only two locomotives were retrofitted. The retrofitted models did, however, perform better. After the war, 17 locomotives had to be transferred to Belgium and four to French railway companies. The Deutsche Reichsbahn only took over three of the remaining.