Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license.
Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat.
We can research this topic together.
BESA class AP
EIR locomotive No. 120, built by North British Locomotive Company
The Class AP was a broad gauge tender steam locomotive introduced around 1907 for passenger trains on the railways in British India. Its class designation, AP, stands for Atlantic Passenger Locomotive, where Atlantic refers to the wheel arrangement of the same name. It was one of the BESA locomotives developed by the British Engineering Standards Committee, later called the British Engineering Standards Association (BESA).
History
The AP class, designed to haul passenger trains, was first catalogued in the second edition of the BESA standard from 1907. It could be equipped with three different large tenders - the small one held 3,000, the medium 4,000 and the large 4,500 gallons of water.
Vulcan Foundry delivered a batch of 28 to the East Indian Railway (EIR), whose route network expanded from Calcutta towards the West. These locomotives, built according to British design practice, were used to pull express trains; they were numbered 1300 to 1327, and their works numbers were 2330 to 2357 of 1908.
The locomotives were designed with two cylinders, a Belpaire firebox, and used saturated steam. The grate was arranged between the coupled wheel sets. Placed outside of the frames were the cylinders, and placed between the frames were the Walschaerts valve gear. A small pilot was fitted to the locomotive's buffer beam. The BESA standard suggested an enclosed cab, with the rear wall of the cab being formed by the tender. However, the locomotives built for the East Indian Railway had tenders without a cab rear wall. The running board was positioned low, so splashers covered the two driving axles. The 3000 and 4000 gallon tenders each had three axles, while the larger 4500 gallon tenders had a pair of two-axle bogies. The two three-axle tender variants had running boards and handrails along the side walls, which made it possible to access the train from the locomotive while it was running. Another peculiarity of the design was the riser arranged in the middle of the dome axes. At 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) in diameter, the AP class had the largest driving wheels of any steam locomotive used in India.
Similar classes
Locomotive 992 of the EM class, which is on display at the National Rail Museum of India in New Delhi, bears very similar main dimensions to the AP class locomotive; however, it was converted from an E1 class 4-6-0 locomotive of the Great Indian Peninsula Railway (GIPR), to which a trailing axle with an external frame was added. With a diameter of 6 ft 6 in, the driving wheels have the same dimensions as those of the AP class and have a short wheelbase, characteristic of the APs.