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Hunslet Engine Co. works numbers


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Evening all,

 

I'm looking for a works list but I can't find one online and Don Townsley's excellent book on the company lists some locomotives but doesn't have a complete list.

 

I want to get a works plate made up for my 15" Hunslet so I would like to know if there are gaps in the works list that I could use a spare number from, rather than taking a number that was actually allocated to a known loco. The 15" 0-6-0STs appear to have been built between the years 1923 and 1947, so a works number suitable for any time in that span would suit.

 

Thanks.

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These would appear to be spare numbers in the Hunslet works list following 15x20 0‑6‑0ST locos actually delivered:

 

1811 - follows 1810 of 1937 Airedale Collieries Ltd., CORONATION

1829 - follows 1828 of 1937 Mersey Docks & Harbour Board No.8

1903 - follows 1902 of 1938 New Fryston Colliery Co.Ltd., MEXBOROUGH

1957 - follows 1956 of 1939 Airedale Collieries Ltd., AIREDALE No.2

1986 - follows 1985 of 1940 Mersey Docks & Harbour Board No.11

2410 - follows 2409 of 1942 Linby Colliery Co.Ltd., KING GEORGE

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  • 1 year later...

Sort of vaguely on topic, a batch of outside cylindered, Walshaerts valve geared Hunslet 0-6-0s were delivered to John Mowlem and Edmund Nuttall for construction work. The survivor of the batch is HE 1690 "Cunarder" which is believed to be on a private site undergoing restoration.

 

Here is a link to Quainton Road's history of the loco although they don't quote the Hunslet maker's number.

 

http://www.brc-stockbook.co.uk/cunarder.htm

 

According to the Warwickshire Railways site http://www.warwickshirerailways.com/misc/misc_hcw173.htm Edmund Nuttall purchased six similar locos and one ended up working collieries in South Staffordshire - HE 1685 named "Nuttall".

 

Returning to "Cunarder" which has led a rather nomadic and "schizophrenic" lifestyle as both a saddle tank and a side tank - apparently currently returning to it's original configuration as a saddle tank. Struggling to find any online dimensions quoted for this type, but the look in some way like an outside cylindered 16" Hunslet, but with a "squashed" bunker.  Does anyone have a few dimensions like wheelbase, length etc please ?

 

TIA   

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Cunarder was HE1690

 

(EDITED) 'Treasurer' looked similar but was a 15" loco. (HE 1446)

post-898-0-83014700-1511119445_thumb.png

post-898-0-15499800-1511119425.jpg

 

'Birch Coppice' is 16" (HE 1637)

post-898-0-04582800-1511119433.jpg

 

I prefer 'Cunarder' in its original form. As a side tank it was also given a curved, Jinty style bunker.

 

According to Don Townsley in this thread:

The intention was to make 'Cunarder' appear like an LMS Dock Tank while it was at Swanage.

 

I believe that they are retaining this bunker in the current rebuild rather than the angular Hunslet one, which is a shame but understandable.

post-898-0-45917100-1511119439.jpg

14821482787_763a165054_b.jpg

Edited by Corbs
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These outside cylinder 0-6-0s are a bit complicated, they are different sizes, some are 16', some 14" and Treasurer was 15". 

I built one of these in 7mm quite a long time ago using Hunslet drawings. Photos of GA and painting diagram below

post-1643-0-74634600-1511164957_thumb.jpg

post-1643-0-81867400-1511165013_thumb.jpg

and my drawing prepared from the above

post-1643-0-40705500-1511165055_thumb.jpg

I'm sure I have something on Treasurer as well but I can't find it at the moment.

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Yes but this is Birch Coppice, Treasurer was a smaller loco. All these HE saddle tanks look similar but there are lots of dimensional differences.

 

 

Thanks Michael and "Corbs". Where does "Cunarder" and her ilk come in then Michael ? I agree they all look very similar so is the 5'x5' wheelbase common to them ?

 

TIA

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I'm not sure about Cunarder but HE1645 is one of a batch with 14" cylinders, this was the biggest batch of these outside cylinder locos. They may well all have the same wheelbase but frame lengths are not the same and the 14" locos have 3'4" wheels. The bigger ones are 3'9", these are different wheel castings.

There's a lot of this in Don Townsley's book on Hunslet, do you know the works number of Cunarder?

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The reason for the similarity of names can be revealed thanks to Eric Tonks:

 

TREASURER  (1446 / 1929) was 15" x 22" with 3'7 wheels - new to Oxfordshire Ironstone and transferred to S&L Corby in Jan 1933.

THE BURSAR (1645 / 1930) was 14" x 20" with 3'4 wheels - to Oxfordshire Ironstone in 1940 following rebuild by Hunslet upon loco's return from Haifa Harbour works.

Edited by Osgood
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These outside cylinder 0-6-0s are a bit complicated, they are different sizes, some are 16', some 14" and Treasurer was 15". 

I built one of these in 7mm quite a long time ago using Hunslet drawings. Photos of GA and painting diagram below

attachicon.gifHE 16in OC GA 1637 Birch Coppice.jpg

attachicon.gifHE 1637 Birch Coppice painting diagram.jpg

and my drawing prepared from the above

attachicon.gifHE OC 0-6-0ST CD158.jpg

I'm sure I have something on Treasurer as well but I can't find it at the moment.

 

Thanks Michael,

 

I had pondered (as I am sure others have) about how to adapt one of your 15" Hunslet Kits - looks like a little more scratch building required!

 

Not just a case of providing a chassis to sit under your 15" and 16" kits then!

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Thanks Michael,

 

I had pondered (as I am sure others have) about how to adapt one of your 15" Hunslet Kits - looks like a little more scratch building required!

 

Not just a case of providing a chassis to sit under your 15" and 16" kits then!

 

Birch Coppice is more or less a 16" above the frames so you would be better to start with that kit, you would need new frames for any of them.

Cunarder is a 14", HE catalogue sheet below.

post-1643-0-70973700-1511248562_thumb.jpg

Thus is the catalogue sheet for Treasurer which was the only one with 15" cylinders

post-1643-0-74129000-1511248677_thumb.jpg

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  • 1 month later...
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Stumbled across some more pics of THE BURSAR so thought I'd repost here.

Noticed the cab is very different to the others.

 

https://photos.smugmug.com/Trains/British-Industrial-Systems/i-FmnHtRK/1/549fec5d/XL/GMP_Slide700_TheBursar_Wroxton_OxfordshireIronstone_220564-XL.jpg

 

GMP_Slide700_TheBursar_Wroxton_Oxfordshi

 

 

https://www.flickr.com/photos/trains-travel/37851898871

post-898-0-47499800-1514313206.png

Edited by Corbs
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  • 5 years later...
On 20/11/2017 at 10:07, Michael Edge said:

These outside cylinder 0-6-0s are a bit complicated, they are different sizes, some are 16', some 14" and Treasurer was 15". 

I built one of these in 7mm quite a long time ago using Hunslet drawings. Photos of GA and painting diagram below

 

post-1643-0-81867400-1511165013_thumb.jpg

 

 

 


Michael, can you please share the names of the shades noted on the paint diagram? They are not legible in the photo of it.

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On 26/12/2017 at 20:33, Corbs said:

Stumbled across some more pics of THE BURSAR so thought I'd repost here.

Noticed the cab is very different to the others.

 

https://photos.smugmug.com/Trains/British-Industrial-Systems/i-FmnHtRK/1/549fec5d/XL/GMP_Slide700_TheBursar_Wroxton_OxfordshireIronstone_220564-XL.jpg

 

GMP_Slide700_TheBursar_Wroxton_Oxfordshi

 

 

https://www.flickr.com/photos/trains-travel/37851898871

post-898-0-47499800-1514313206.png

Though I'm a bit late to the party, I can explain the reason for the strange cab back is that HE 1645 originally built without one, as Haifa Harbour Works Dept. No. 5. The usual weather in then-Palestine made this mostly redundant.

This is exemplified in this high-res picture of its sister, No. 6, at the Athlit Quarry:
https://www.loc.gov/resource/matpc.15386/

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