British Rail Class 47
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British Rail Class 47
Summary
British Rail Class 47 is a locomotive class[1]. It ranks in the top 0.73% of locomotive_class entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,088 views/month, #15 of 2,055).[2]
Key Facts
- British Rail Class 47 is in the country of United Kingdom[3].
- British Rail Class 47's instance of is recorded as locomotive class[4].
- British Rail Class 47 is operated by Eastern Region of British Railways[5].
- British Rail Class 47 is operated by London Midland Region of British Railways[6].
- British Rail Class 47 is operated by North Eastern Region of British Railways[7].
- British Rail Class 47 is operated by Scottish Region of British Railways[8].
- British Rail Class 47 is operated by Southern Region of British Railways[9].
- British Rail Class 47 is operated by Western Region of British Railways[10].
- British Rail Class 47 followed British Rail Class 48[11].
- British Rail Class 47 is a type of diesel-electric locomotive[12].
- British Rail Class 47 is a type of Type 4 locomotive[13].
- British Rail Class 47's Commons category is recorded as British Rail Class 47[14].
- British Rail Class 47's powered by is recorded as Sulzer 12LDA28C[15].
- British Rail Class 47's service entry is recorded as 1962[16].
- British Rail Class 47's track gauge is recorded as standard-gauge railway[17].
- British Rail Class 47's total produced is recorded as {'amount': '+512'}[18].
- British Rail Class 47's fleet or registration number is recorded as D1500–D1999, D1100–D1111[19].
- British Rail Class 47's fleet or registration number is recorded as 47001–47298, 47301–47381, 47401–47585[20].
- British Rail Class 47's wheel arrangement is recorded as Co′Co′[21].
Body
Geography
British Rail Class 47 is in the country of United Kingdom[3].
Designation and Status
British Rail Class 47's instance of is recorded as locomotive class[4].
Why It Matters
British Rail Class 47 ranks in the top 0.73% of locomotive_class entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,088 views/month, #15 of 2,055).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[22] It is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[23]