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.
The NS 6100 was a series of tank engines with the 2'C2' (4-6-4) wheel arrangement of the Dutch Railways (NS). They were manufactured by Hohenzollern and Werkspoor.
In the 1920s, the Dutch Railways invested heavily in the reinforcement of the railway track, as a result of which the maximum permitted axle load on most main lines could be increased from 16 to 18 tons. This created for the first time the possibility of designing a 2'C2' tank engine, which was completely derived from the 1910-originating four-cylinder series NS 3700. Until then, lighter two-cylinder locomotives of the series NS 6000 with a maximum axle load of 15.4 tons represented the limited possibility for a Dutch tank engine.
The first five locomotives were built by Hohenzollern in 1929 and five more were built by Werkspoor later that year.
Builder
Lot No.
Entered service
NS number
Notes
Hohenzollern
4664
06-02-1929
6101
Found after the war in Emmerich
Hohenzollern
4665
23-02-1929
6102
Found after the war in Buchholz
Hohenzollern
4666
05-03-1929
6103
Destroyed by a direct hit during the war
Hohenzollern
4667
02-03-1929
6104
Found after the war in Oldenburg
Hohenzollern
4668
19-03-1929
6105
Missing after the war
Werkspoor
586 / 2438
28-09-1929
6106
Found after the war in Emmerich
Werkspoor
587 / 2439
04-10-1929
6107
Found in Uelzen after the war
Werkspoor
588 / 2440
15-10-1929
6108
Werkspoor
589 / 2441
25-10-1929
6109
Found in Barsinghausen after the war
Werkspoor
590 / 2442
12-11-1929
6110
Withdrawal and scrapping
No. 6103 also belonged to the first nineteen locomotives that had to be scrapped after the liberation as a result of war damage. On September 29, 1945, permission was obtained to scrap this heavily damaged locomotive, among other things. According to information from Mr. Van Wijck Jurriaanse, the scrapping (without boiler) took place in April 1946 on the site of the Wpc Tilburg, but given the inconvenient condition of 6103, it seems more likely that the locomotive has come to its final end in Arnhem. The second 6100 to be scrapped was locomotive 6109, which had returned from Barsinghausen, Germany, damaged.
In 1956 the systematic withdrawal of the remaining seven 6100s was initiated. First up were Nos. 6101 (March) and 6106 (May), of which No. 6106 was allocated to the Zutphen depot from 19 May to 30 September 1956 as a stationary boiler. During 1957 Nos. 6104 (February), 6107 and 6110 (both August) were withdrawn and put aside for scrap, and in February 1958 the last Tenderjumbos 6102 and 6108 were also withdrawn from service.
Withdrawal of locomotives
Ns number
Boiler No. from locomotive
Date permission for scrapping
Date sold
Name of company and place
3791
6104
29-04-1957
18-07-1957
Siemens, Rotterdam (However, scrapped at Van Dijk, Veenendaal)
6101
6109
23-03-1956
21-06-1956
Sideron, Berkel
6102
6105
27-02-1958
07-03-1958
Hollandia, Amsterdam
6103
-
29-09-1945
04-1946
Wpc Tilburg
6104
3730
18-02-1957
30-09-1957
Dotermont, Maastricht
6105
4611
03-02-1950
Missing DRB
Unknown
6106
6101
31-05-1956
29-11-1956
Rijsdijk, Hedrik Ido Ambacht
6107
6102
16-08-1957
30-09-1957
Dotremont, Maastracht
6108
6107
27-02-1958
07-03-1958
Siemens, Rotterdam (However, scrapped at Van Dijk, Veenendaal)
6109
-
01-05-1947
08-1947
Simons, Rotterdam
6110
6110
16-08-1957
30-09-1957
Ver. Utrechtse IJzerhandel
Scrapping of boilers
Boiler No. from locomotive
Date permission given for scrapping
Date of sale
Name of company and place
6103
29-05-1947
21-07-1947
De boer & Slooten, Purmerend
6106
26-03-1954
07-04-1954
Visch, Harderwijk
6108
24-03-1953
ca. 04-1953
Unknown
Gallery
NS 6108 at the water column
NS 6107 with a train near Hilversum. (July 1935)
NS 6104 with a passenger train at Baarn. (10-06-1938)
NS 6109 with a train at Hilversum station (July 1935)
NS 6110 on the factory site of Werkspoor N.V. in Amsterdam. (12-11-1929)
NS 6110 on the factory site of Werkspoor N.V. in Amsterdam. (12-11-1929)
NS 6103 with a train to Germany at the NS station The Hague S.S. (October 1935)