B class may refer to:
The B class of 1899 was a class of steam locomotives that operated on New Zealand's national rail network. An earlier B class of Double Fairlies had entered service in 1874, but as they had departed from the ownership of the New Zealand Railways (NZR) by the end of 1896, the B classification was free to be re-used. Despite early difficulties they were amongst NZRs' most influential designs.
The B class was designed as a larger, more powerful locomotive to handle mainline freight trains that were becoming too heavy for locomotives of the O, P, and T classes. The first was built in NZR's own Addington Workshops in Christchurch and entered service on 4 May 1899, and an order was placed with Sharp, Stewart and Company of Glasgow, Scotland to supply four more. The first engine from Scotland entered service on 20 December 1899, followed by the other three within the next month.
Over the course of 1901–1903, five more Bs were built in Addington Workshops, with the last entering service in May 1903. The locomotives were advanced for their time, featuring a new piston valve design and a modified form of Walschaerts valve gear, and they were designed to haul 600-long-ton (610 t; 670-short-ton) freight trains on flat lines and 220 long tons (224 t; 246 short tons) on the hilly section of the Main South Line between Oamaru and Dunedin. For the time, these were quite significant figures. The Addington engines were unusual in the fact that they employed a screw reverse configuration, instead of the standard reversing lever. They also had fold down seats for both driver and fireman.
The NZR B class of 1874 was the first of two steam locomotive classes to be designated as B by the Railways Department that then oversaw New Zealand's national rail network (the second B class was introduced in 1899). Ordered from the Avonside Engine Company in 1874, the locomotives were of the Double Fairlie type and were the first British-built locomotives to feature Walschaerts valve gear. They were not the first Double Fairlies to operate in New Zealand, as the first two members of the E class had commenced operations in 1872.
The first member of the B class, nicknamed Snake, was introduced in September 1874 and it worked in Auckland; it was followed by its partner Lady Mordaunt on 5 April 1875, which was based in Otago. This lcomotive had been ordered by the Otago Provincial Coouncil to work the lightly laid Awamoko branch, but advice received by the council before it an arrived was that it was too heavy. It was sent to work elsewhere and two more locomotives were ordered instead.
She's a revolution
Anarchy in hell on high heels
I get called the villain
Washin' down my love with her
pills
Lips are speakin' chaos
But her eyes are
As blue as the sea
She carries Mother's Bible
Mixes valium with her beliefs
And you know she gets me high
I've seen flowers and razors in
her hair
She's walkin' trouble with her
innocence
I'll just sit here thinkin' on my
window sill
She keeps me high, Miss Babykills
She's sugar but she's spicy
Licks the venom off her lips
Dresses like a school girl
Loves her poisoned fingertips
I just know I love her
Sent from up above for me
And you know she gets me high
I've seen flowers and razors in
her hair
She's talkin' trouble with her
innocence
I just sit here thinkin' on my
window sill
She keeps me high, Miss Babykills
I've seen flowers and razors in
her hair
She's walkin' trouble with her
innocence
I just sit here thinkin' on my
window sill
She takes me higher
Takes me higher
I've seen flowers and...
I've seen razors blades
I just sit here dreamin of my
latest fill
She steals' my heart, Miss