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Ex-GER J65 no.8211


Buckjumper

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J65 no 8211 was the penultimate survivor of twenty locos. Built as GER no.155 in 1889, it spent much of its life alongside several others of the class working the Blackwall line from Fenchurch Street (hence the class nickname 'Blackwall Tanks') until rusticated by the LNER in the late 30s. It then spent the rest of its life vacillating between Ipswich and Norwich, with spells at Cambridge, Colchester, Yarmouth and Yarmouth Beach until withdrawn in November 1953. For almost all of its life it ran as a 2-4-0T with the front coupling rods removed, remained solely Westinghouse braked throughout its existence, and somewhat unusually, retained the old GER wooden roof with low, single arc profile front and rear weatherboards.

 

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The model is largely scratchbuilt - I have more than a dozen 'buckjumper' kits, with etchings and castings in a pile from which I can grab what I need to make any given loco, however the J65s are sufficiently different in most dimensions from the larger J66-69 classes that little was scavenged for use here. All the GER 0-6-0T classes shared one diagram of boiler and I had a spare from a J67, which was useful, and the castings came from Connoisseur, Gibson, Ragstone, CPL and Laurie Griffin. The wheels are AGH, the gearbox an ABC three stage spur & helical gear set, and split axle pickups are employed.

 

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The livery may seem to be anachronistic with the wartime NE on the tank sides and the BR number and shedplate on the smokebox door, but chronologically it was possible. Numberplates were introduced to the class in 1948, and 8211 remained in the wartime NE livery until March 1951 when it received the early 15½" emblem. Photographs of bucks in this period show this and even stranger combinations - with this species I learned a long time ago to never say never as someone will soon produce a photograph!

 

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In this period the smokebox of 8211 was flush riveted along the front seam but had snaphead rivets along the rear.

 

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The old District plate of 1915, located under the cab roof on the rear weatherboard, was removed from most locos in the 30s, but 8211 was one of the few to retain the plate. This may be because the weatherboard never received the extension to raise the hight so that an LNER steel roof could be fitted.

 

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As usual, nothing looks more like glass than glass and my usual 0.13mm microscope slides look the part. The cab is fully detailed with all the crew's paraphernalia.

 

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Tank top clutter and the inevitable pool of water. Boiler cladding bands are 2 thou strip which are within a gnat's of being to scale. Nothing looks worse in 7mm than boilers without cladding bands...except perhaps boilers with grossly overscale cladding bands!

 

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It's unlikely the J65s ever had their cabs painted cream - by this time they were far too lowly, however, it does make it easier to see the detail inside.

 

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At the end of the day....

 

In profile they were quite a handsome little class. It's a shame they had all gone before the preservation movement got into gear as they were the go anywhere loco and perfect for lightly-laid branchlines.

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Smashing. Absolutely smashing. The attention you have paid to the detail illustrates your skill and knowledge to excellent effect. Interestingly, I was wondering about the cab interior colour of some of the ex-GER tanks; given that they worked in the dark and dank of the East End, I wouldn't doubt that their cab roof and the upper portion of the walls would be the treatment, but I don't if it would have reached the floor. But as you say, it serves to give the viewer a further journey into the depths of your model.

 

I'd like to meet the fireman who took such care in stowing the irons on the tank top, mind - in my experience (admittedly on the GWR panniers and tanks), they were lumped through the window until needed again!

 

Excellent work.

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Your "signature class" :-) Brilliant. What's so amazing about your locos is that they are so neatly and precisely built *and* at the same time have all the character and casual wear of a real-world engine. Such a hard combination to achieve, I think.

 

Oh, and the water on the tank top is superbly done.

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Thanks for the positive comments Mike and David, and thanks for all the 'likes'.

 

Jan: As far as I know the first cab for many years to get the treatment was Ipswich shed B12 61535, and this had a cream roof with chocolate sides. This was followed by 61566 which went all-cream, and then the driver of 61253 went one better and had the cab painted ultramarine blue. J15 65447 followed soon after with an off-white roof. After that it spread and various suburban N7s got the treatment . Just how many bucks were 'creamed' is debatable - by this time they were very much second-string and generally not well cared for, so I suspect very few, so not like the the good old days when all GE locos had tan coloured cabs. As for the tools - well I usually arrange them as if they've been chucked out of the window by an exasperated fireman, but thought that for once I might make them a bit nearer. It must have happened at least once. Surely... ;-)

 

Thanks Mikkel, always appreciated.

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