Commonwealth Engineering

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Commonwealth Engineering
IndustryEngineering
Founded1921
Defunct1990
Headquarters
Number of locations
Dandenong
Rocklea
Bassendean
ProductsRailway rolling stock
ParentAustralian National Industries

Commonwealth Engineering was an Australian engineering company that designed and built railway locomotives, rolling stock and trams.

History[]

Smith and Waddington, the predecessor to Commonwealth Engineering, was founded in 1921, in the Sydney suburb of Camperdown, as a body builder for custom motor cars. It went bankrupt in the Depression, and was reformed as Waddingtons Body Works and the main factory was moved to Granville, after a fire in the main workshop. The Government of Australia took control of the company during World War II as the company was in serious financial difficulties but had many government orders in its books. The government purchased a controlling stake in the company in 1946 and changed the name to Commonwealth Engineering (often shortened to Com-Eng, later Comeng).[1]

In 1949 a factory was established in Rocklea, Queensland. This was followed in 1952 a plant in Bassendean, Western Australia and in 1954 by another in Dandenong, Victoria. In June 1957, the government sold its shares. In November 1982 Comeng was taken over by Australian National Industries.

The Granville factory closed in 1989 and has been demolished. The site, which sat between the Great Western Highway and Main Western railway line west of Duck River, has been replaced with new developments that include high rise housing and light industry.

The Dandenong plant was sold in 1990 to ABB Transportation and is now operated by Bombardier Transportation while the Bassendean facility was sold to A Goninan & Co.

The history of Comeng has been published by John Dunn:

  • Volume 1, 1921 – 1955 published in 2006[1]
  • Volume 2, 1955 – 1966 published in 2008[2]
  • Volume 3, 1967 – 1977 published in 2010[3]
  • Volume 4, 1977 – 1985 published in 2013[4]
  • Volume 5, 1985 – 1990 published posthumously in November 2013[5][6]

Products[]

Commonwealth Engineering's products included:

Buses[]

Preserved former Sydney Albion Venturer in Glasgow in October 2009

Australian Capital Territory[]

New South Wales[]

Victoria[]

  • 50 AEC Regal IIIs

Western Australia[]

Leyland OPSU1/1s

Diesel locomotives[]

New South Wales[]

Queensland[]

  • 1 Mount Isa Mines 302 class diesel-hydraulic locomotive
  • 1 Mount Isa Mines 305 class diesel-hydraulic locomotive
  • 7 DL class locomotives for Innisfail Tramway operations

Western Australia[]

Preserved Mount Newman Mining MLW M636 diesel locomotive in April 2012

Electric locomotives[]

New South Wales[]

Diesel multiple units[]

New South Wales[]

Queensland[]

South Australia[]

Western Australia[]

Tasmania[]

India[]

  • Diesel railcars for Indian Railways[7]

Electric multiple units[]

New South Wales[]

Victoria[]

Carriages[]

Commonwealth Railways[]

Long Island Rail Road[]

  • 10 C1 bilevel cars (design only; built by Tokyu Car Corporation)

New South Wales[]

Queensland[]

Trams[]

Z class Melbourne tram 168 at Preston Workshops in August 2007

New South Wales[]

Victoria[]

  • 230 Z class Melbourne trams
  • 70 A class Melbourne trams
  • 132 B class Melbourne trams

Hong Kong[]

Hong Kong Light Rail Phase I LRV in February 2009
  • 70 MTR Phase I Light Rail Vehicles 1988

References[]

  1. ^ a b Dunn, John (2006). Comeng: A history of Commonwealth Engineering: Volume 1: 1921-1955. Rosenberg Publishing. ISBN 1877058424.
  2. ^ Dunn, John (2008). Comeng: A history of Commonwealth Engineering: Volume 2: 1955-1966. Rosenberg Publishing. ISBN 978-1877058738.
  3. ^ Dunn, John (2010). Comeng: A history of Commonwealth Engineering: Volume 3: 1967-1977. Rosenberg Publishing. ISBN 9781877058905.
  4. ^ Dunn, John (2013). Comeng: A history of Commonwealth Engineering: Volume 4: 1977-1985. Rosenberg Publishing. ISBN 9781922013514.
  5. ^ Dunn, John (2013). Comeng: A History of Commonwealth Engineering. Vol. 5: 1985–1990. Kenthurst, New South Wales: Rosenberg Publishing. ISBN 978-1-922013-52-1.
  6. ^ "John Dunn Obituary". The Sydney Morning Herald. 5 January 2013. Retrieved 10 January 2013.
  7. ^ The Indian Railcar Contract Adam, Eric Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin, December 1989 pp285-291

External links[]

Media related to Commonwealth Engineering at Wikimedia Commons

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