Commonwealth Engineering, Australian engineering company, also known as Comeng.
Commonwealth of Nations | Commonwealth | Commonwealth Games | engineering | Engineering | 2006 Commonwealth Games | Commonwealth of Independent States | 2002 Commonwealth Games | Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs | Foreign and Commonwealth Office | Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation | 2010 Commonwealth Games | National Academy of Engineering | Electrical Engineering | civil engineering | Virginia Commonwealth University | Mechanical Engineering | mechanical engineering | electrical engineering | Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth | Civil Engineering | Intel International Science and Engineering Fair | chemical engineering | 1998 Commonwealth Games | Electrical engineering | Commonwealth of England | Mechanical engineering | Commonwealth Bank | Aerospace engineering | 2008 Commonwealth Youth Games |
Seventy cars were introduced into service between 1987 and 1996 with the first 20 built by Comeng between 1987 and 1989 numbered #3001-#3008 and #3101-#3112, and the remaining 50 built by Clyde Engineering between 1992 and 1996 numbered #3009-#3030 and #3113-#3140.
Comeng had expected an extension to the Z-class order, and in the early 1980s drew up plans for a Z4-class, due to a change in state government in 1982 these plans were put on hold.
The New South Wales 85 class were a class of 10 electric locomotives built by Comeng, Granville between May 1979 and July 1980 for the State Rail Authority.
In 1956 two 1900 class railmotor prototypes were constructed by Commonwealth Engineering, Granville using Budd construction techniques.