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OAA wagon loads in the late 80s


ess1uk

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I saw one in Northampton yard carrying concrete kerb stones from Newton Heath for Northamptonshire County Council. Also remember them carrying carriage cleaning chemicals in 45 gallon drums from Wolverhampton to Euston carriage shed on Speedlink services

 

 

Richard

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Don't know if 1985 counts as late 80s, but:

 

and Rochester with something unevenly loaded (military??), possibly 100054 with back-to-front arrows and the remains of an ABN yellow circle:

post-6971-0-60674200-1354981379.jpg

 

I might be wrong but that load looks a Uniflote pontoon which the Army used to build Bailey Bridges.

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  • 2 years later...

Were OAAs ever used to carry MoD LandRovers?

I just wondered how they would be loaded and unloaded if it were true.

I've not seen them with Land-Rovers in, though I have seen OBAs and OCAs so loaded. In some cases, the state of the vehicle would suggest that it was dropped in by fork-lift, in other's they may have been driven on via a side-loading platform. Here are some views from Brian Daniel's site:-

https://www.flickr.com/photos/brianews/6023211982/in/set-72157627371646720

https://www.flickr.com/photos/brianews/6022662179/in/set-72157627371646720

https://www.flickr.com/photos/brianews/6022671245/in/set-72157627371646720/

https://www.flickr.com/photos/brianews/6023229922/in/set-72157627371646720/

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  • 2 weeks later...

On a couple of occasions they did turn up at Hereford carrying logs from Scotland. They had to be desperate to use them as they were not ideal as the wood dropsides where easily damaged by the grabs.

 

Paul J.

Were the dropsides more vulnerable on the OAA's than the OBA's?

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Sounds interesting

I wonder why somewhere in Berkshire used spilt coal from staithes and coal-hoists; elsewhere on this forum, someone mentioned a flow of 'recovered' coal to Padworth sidings, which seem to be at Aldermaston. Apparently, this traffic was loaded into Tube wagons, for some reason, and often included bits of shrubbery and even old bikes.

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Were the dropsides more vulnerable on the OAA's than the OBA's?

Were the dropsides more vulnerable on the OAA's than the OBA's?

OBA's weren't particularly liked either. Grab access was difficult when grabbing the last few logs that tended to congregate in the bottom/side corners and required you to get into the wagon. The OBA's where marginally preferred to OAA's as the higher ends and extendable side stantions meant you could put a few more logs in, improving the payload very slightly. Both types were only used as a last resort and I only saw them very rarely. Never saw any OCA's in timber traffic at Hereford.

 

Paul J.

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  • 1 year later...

OBA's weren't particularly liked either. Grab access was difficult when grabbing the last few logs that tended to congregate in the bottom/side corners and required you to get into the wagon. The OBA's where marginally preferred to OAA's as the higher ends and extendable side stantions meant you could put a few more logs in, improving the payload very slightly. Both types were only used as a last resort and I only saw them very rarely. Never saw any OCA's in timber traffic at Hereford.

 

Paul J.

The great Storm of 1987 brought down many trees and for months afterwards there was extra timber traffic on offer to BR,

so many extra wagons of varying types got used. 

 

Here is a pair of OBAs with logs at Middlesboro

https://www.flickr.com/photos/36034969@N08/6919713188/in/photolist-inWWY3-DsUm95-m2X3J5-bxtkDN-kLQV7K

 

cheers

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