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great central

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Posts posted by great central

  1. I can vouch for that, especially in winter months. My mother liked Nottingham shops and I loved the trains and the trolleybuses, so we used to travel there from Lincolnshire on a regular basis. Sometimes the entire city would become engulfed in this thick yellow/orange blanket (I am not sure if the fog was actually a yellow colour, or whether it was just the effect of the street lamps), so I had a good excuse to stay on the station.

     

    I think the trolleybuses were taken out of service in the mid-60s which was almost as sad event as the demise of Victoria station.

     

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O3gOEEAxgYY

     

    Nottingham trolley buses and half cab AECs, including a Renown, so 1965 or later. Oddly no shots of the rear engined Fleetlines or Atlanteans, perhaps the camerman didn't like 'them new fangled things with the engine at the back'?

    • Like 4
  2. Looking the other way from the previous picture we spot another diverted St Pancras - Sheffield HST.

     

     

    The Peaks and Class 25s have gone from Toton now, but there's Class 20s, 56s and 58s on shed, plus a pair of (probably Thornaby) Class 37s.

     

    With Trowell Junction being out of use, due to an MGR derailment, I wonder if that was the time I stood at the side of the bridge at Trowell watching them trying to extract wagons which had reared up and got wedged under the bridge. First of all they dragged wagons away which were simply derailed, rather like you might a model to get it to a more accessible spot.

    Then they started on the ones tight up under the bridge, first trying one of the relatively new 58s. it tried but couldn't shift anything, maybe due to traction control or similar? Then a pair of 20 was brought into play, hooked up to the wagon coupling with a long line, then just kept tugging at it until it moved, even snatching it at times. No finesse but it sure shifted the wagons :sungum:   

    • Like 1
  3. There's a couple of shots of Jubilee nameplates in this video;

     

     https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Puxlo1c29t4

     

    First one around 2m 10s. It's in black and white, but given it was shot on a bright day, I would reckon the plates are black. Funny thing, I could have sworn the film was in colour! Can't say I recall seeing red backgrounds but it was over 50 years ago, I was only about 10!

     

    Edit; Found a bit of colour film here;

     

    http://www.annesleyfireman.com/id11.html

     

    The 'Alberta at the Vic' one, don't be fooled by the 'sound' It's just a bit of generic loco sound (badly) edited in.

  4. Derby Station some 35 years ago - pouring with rain and precious little shelter from some of the removed canopies on platform 2.

     

    A Class 47/0 waits at platform 1 with a northbound cross-country service. Note the Mk1 RMB at the front of the train and whisps of steam heat. A Matlock-bound Class 120 stands adjacent.

     

    There's not much shelter from the new ones either! Also I understand they don't have enough clearance for overhead wires, so will need to be modified :jester:

  5. Another branch line this evening, this time on the Great Central at Barton on Humber and New Holland.

     

     

     

    The normal chocolate coloured Humber water - other words are available to describe the  colour.  Not only is the Humber water full of mud it often has logs floating in it, they are are a considerable hazard when sailing in the area.  You could never relax when on a boat.  The navigable channel moves about a lot as well.

     

     

     

     

    David

     

    Surprised Boris hasn't picked up on those quotes :jester:

  6. A regular Brit freight turn in the early 60s was the Grimsby-Whitland fish train which ran up the GC main line. All of the Immingham allocated ones (70035-41) turned up on it at sometime. One of the highlights of the day in my area, it came down the bank heading into Nottingham at a fair rate, fully fitted of course. The 'aroma' it left behind would linger for quite some time on a still evening. The Britannia worked as far as Banbury, I believe, but we never saw the return working, probably overnight.

  7.  

    Having a good nose around Spalding (not that there was a great deal to see)

     

    attachicon.gif821127 Spalding.jpg

     

    And this is looking north from the footbridge.

     

     

    Chris Turnbull

     

    There's even less at Spalding now. Since the re-signalling was commissioned from there to Werrington Junction it's effectively a single platform station, northbound services crossing over to use platform 1 so allowing the removal of the barrow crossing and also the necessity of providing a lift to the footbridge.

  8. Did any of them tell you that they were delivering a rail bridge and had just stopped to ask for directions... :jester:

     

    Incidentally, just been brought to a dead stand on 1S24 south of Grantham whilst the Liverpool-Norwich cut across our bows (and we were right on time). Another East Coast HST suspiciously occupying the up relief line. Back-wash of the bridge bash or inept regulation? Please explain! (I shall be looking it up tomorrow on TRUST... :mosking: )

     

    1E15 at fault according to my Blackberry, presumably the one shunted onto the slow? Broken down, no further info. 1Z99 sent to rescue. There may well have been something in P2 meaning you couldn't go forward anyway so get the Norwich out of the way.

  9. Talking to one of our driver instructors yesterday, he was doing something fairly unusual. Taking the spare HST set for a spin down the joint line from Lincoln-Peterborough then back to the MML via Melton Mowbray. Using it for driver training, been run a couple of times recently apparently. Now that the joint is 75mph it provides a useful days traction handling experience. 

  10. Some photos at Radcliffe on Trent for this evening.  Radcliffe on Trent is on the Nottingham to Grantham line, just to the east of the River Trent.  Colwick Yard was on the west side of the Trent.

     

     

     

     

    attachicon.gifh Radcliffe on Trent 2 Class 25s Nottingham to Skegness 16th Aug 75 C2255.jpg

    Radcliffe on Trent 2 Class 25s Nottingham to Skegness 16th Aug 75 C2255

    The feather on the signal was for the west facing junction to the branch to Cotgrave colliery.  That connection was later removed.

     

     

     

    Hi Dave, I think you mean east facing junction to Cotgrave. Anyway, do you know if that side of the triangle was ever used? While I didn't travel much by rail around the time, it always seems to have looked unused, I can't even recall seeing track on it.

  11. Yes Market65, and the last photo also shows one of the harder weathering aspects to get correct on blue/grey Mk1 stock of the late 60s/early 70s; i.e. the 'bleaching' of the blue under each window, caused by the chemicals used when windows were cleaned individually (with a man and a long handled brush?).

     

    Some trains are still cleaned by a man (or woman, mustn't be sexist) with a brush and hose/power washer. Funny thing is they often miss the windows :scratchhead:

    • Like 2
  12. Sat on a ballast job at Rugby last night I was having another trawl through some old 'Motorsport' mags from 1971, wishing I had a time machine and a bundle of white fivers in my back pocket... here we go then, eyes down for a full house and no sighing at the back...

     

    ''Maserati 3500 GT Superleggera. This car has been my own personal transport for the last seven years. New car reason for sale, £750 o.n.o. Tel : London 485 1065''

     

    ''Aston Martin DB5, 1964. Excellent condition, low mileage, sundym glass, five speed 'box, radio etc. Growing family forces sale, £1,300 o.n.o. Tel : Rudgwick 543''

     

    ''Jaguar 3.4 Mk2, 1961. Automatic, power steering, engine as new, beautiful condition, finished in dark blue, £295. Tel : Lusty Glaze Beach, Newquay, Cornwall 2444''

     

    ''Registration number 'FPD 1' comes with immaculate grey Ford Zodiac, 1966. Under 15,000 miles guaranteed. Written offers only please, P.O. Box 2741''

     

    ''1953 Rolls Royce Silver Wraith, ex- Rolls Royce company car, immaculate, £2,000. Mr. Goult, The Dower House, Easton, Bath. Tel : Chewton Mendip 377''

     

    ''Bentley S1, sand over sable. Afortune has been spent on this car. Perfect, £1,750. Tel : Loughborough 78995''

     

    ''1964 Facel Vega II. Under 25,000 miles from new, 140mph automatic V8, electric windows, arial and performance, r.h.d, metallic silver blue and red leather, one meticulous owner until last October, outstanding throughout and at this mileage a unique motor car. A great French classic, £2,450. Private sale but part exchange considered. Tel : Hammersmith 741 0527''

     

    ''Registration number '1 BCH' on Triumph Vitesse, 1962. Good running order. Offers? P.O. Box 2751''

     

    ''Ferrari 250 GT 2+2, 'G' registration, l.h.d, metallic grey body in excellent order, new exterior chrome, mechanically sound and highly reliable, not concours but above average. Best offer over £1,000 secures. Tel : Huntingdon 3617 (evenings only)''

     

    ''Jaguar XK150 3.8S fixed head coupe, 1960. British Racing Green, immaculate, low mileage, radio, luggage rack, bills and history, £850. Mr.Whyte, tel : London 248 3628''

     

    ''Ferrari's most beautiful car, 0-100mph 19.5 secs, quote from road report on Ferrari Lusso. I have an immaculate example in red with black upholstery, low mileage, offered for sale at £2,799 o.n.o. Tel Knowle 4980 (private) or 021 440 1032 (business)''

     

    ''Performance Cars Ltd, Great West Road, Brentford, Middlesex (1 & 1/2 miles west from Chiswick Roundabout) : 1965 Jaguar E-Type fixed head coupe, 4.2, white / red leather, heater, wire wheels, disc brakes, leather steering wheel, history known to us.... £965''

     

    Nurse.... pass the smelling salts!

     

    Yes but, how much did we earn then? Personally as an apprentice telephone engineer, about £10 a week if memory serves. Cars like that were still way out of my league, just as they are today. I'm not one for the exotica, the only ones I would have considered would be the Vitesse and E Type, 

    A work colleague of the time had 1GNN on the plate of the Triumph Herald he bought about 1970, transferred it to his Mk2 Cortina, then a Triumph Spitfire. When he got married a few years later he decided to sell the plate to raise some cash. The government of the day had set their face against anything which seemed a bit exclusive or different and made transferring number plates difficult and expensive. After many tries and continually reducing the price he got, I think, £400 and had to pay the fees as well!

    Wonder what that's worth now?

    • Like 1
  13. Anybody remember the match races at Brafield? (I still can't get used to Northampton International.....)

     

    A 5 lap dash to the line. All power from the start. Until Les Mitchell 238 (later to be my brother's number) v Stu Smith 391.

     

    Les let him go into the first bend whereupon the bumper was applied and Smithy found himself in the wires! Les cruised to the win to much cheering from most of the fans.

    For the unitiated, Stu Smith was the stock car equivalent of Manchester United of the Fergie era.

     

     

    Cheers,

    Mick

     

    Brafield, don't remember the match races to be honest, most memorable meeting was one of the early races of John Thorpe 367. As a white top he was obviously very good from the start. I'm not certain but I think he won heat and final, very fast. His transporter was an adapted artic trailer so while others were taking multiple shunt moves to get out of the pits, he did one move and was gone. He only did a few meetings before retiring for business reasons.

    Also an odd memory comes to mind of the pit 'call attention' siren. It was a large wooden box, presumably with a car battery(ies) in. Mounted around the outside were several dozen car horns. Couldn't be ignored!

  14. So is speedway to be included in this thread?

     

    At one time it had quite a following in this country.  My parents used to watch Harringey in the days before I came along.  When when I was old enough, we used to go to watch Hackey (in the shadow of the Lesney factory) every Friday.  We also went to the West Ham track at Custom House for internationals and champion qualifiers.  I could still name the Hackney line-up, the other teams and some of their star riders from those days.

     

    Well before my time, but High Beech - where speedway began - is just up the road from me.  My father could remember the "leg trailing" days.  Not sure if my parents ever got to see ice speedway, but they used to get "Speedway and Ice News" in the 'fifties.  Racing motorbikes with spiked tyres on ice - that must take a special kind of insanity!

     

    Absolutely, that's why I headed it stadium racing. Although I wouldn't describe myself a fan, I certainly used to take an interest.

    Any motor based sport is welcome, don't want somebody thinking running or push bikes!

    There is/was a series on one of the digital channels recently, the only sport I'd consider watching on telly. Can't remember which channel or when though, I only found it through channel hopping. 

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