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Everything posted by Compound2632
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GWR 3 plank wagons appreciation thread
Compound2632 replied to drduncan's topic in GWR Rolling Stock: model and prototype
The second digit looks rounded top and bottom - 0, 3, 6, 8, or 9 - and the third flat-topped but round-bottomed - 5? Neither 33xxx or 38xxx are 3-plank series, the former being mostly loco coal wagons and the latter cattle wagons. 36547 was from os Lot 294 and 39547 os Lot 323, but both these were built square-ended. That would leave 30547 of os Lot 188 but that lot ought to have wood end pillars rather than iron stanchions, surely? -
That's not physics - it's biology. But the same two rules apply to the digestion of cake by large mammals.
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GWR 3 plank wagons appreciation thread
Compound2632 replied to drduncan's topic in GWR Rolling Stock: model and prototype
Except to remark on that one really shouldn't put H0 rolling stock behind an 00 locomotive. -
Traeth Mawr -Building Mr Price's house , (mostly)
Compound2632 replied to ChrisN's topic in The Railways of Wales
This is true but Powsides do a good few for Gloucester wagons based on Gloucester official photos taken in the late 1890s and early 1900s, which is good for my 1902 date! (Too many nearly-new wagons, not enough old dumb buffers - which is tolerable in a Midland context but poor balance for other lines.) On the other hand, the Slaters Gloucester wagons have the round-bottomed Gloucester type 4 axleboxes of the early 90s rather than the square-bottomed 4S ones seen in all those photos. Fortunately Dart / MJT have cast whitemetal ones, or one can use the Cambrian Models Gloucester underframes. -
Midland Railway Company
Compound2632 replied to technohand's topic in Pre-Grouping - Modelling & Prototype
Jonathan now has a full set of instructions for the 4mm ones, thanks to @mikeallerton posting them on my carriage-building thread. -
RCH 1907 Private Owner Wagons - with added 2024 range.
Compound2632 replied to rapidoandy's topic in Rapido Trains
A modeller of the SECR clamouring for Midland opens - music to my ears! Although to be fair, balanced, and open minded, I think Great Northern ones would also be useful to you - there was a great deal of mineral traffic via both companies passing onto the SECR and LBSCR. -
Traeth Mawr -Building Mr Price's house , (mostly)
Compound2632 replied to ChrisN's topic in The Railways of Wales
At your period, Evans and Bevan's sole colliery was Seven Sisters, Neath, producing anthracite: http://www.dmm.org.uk/company/e1007.htm. Headleys has an entry in Turton's Tenth. The Headley brothers were proprietors of Cwrt-y-Bettwys colliery ate Coed Franc near Neath, Brynwith and Raglan collieries at Pencoed, east of Tondu, and Garnet Colliery at Jersey Marine. The two Gloucester wagons of 1902 illustrated are marked Empty to Raglan Colliery Sidings. As far as I can make out, these were all anthracite. -
Traeth Mawr -Building Mr Price's house , (mostly)
Compound2632 replied to ChrisN's topic in The Railways of Wales
In 1923, the directors of the Ruabon Coal & Coke Co. were Charles B.O. Clarke (Chair)*, H.D. Dennis (Managing Director), P.S. Godman, G.N.E. Hall-Say, H. Kent, and Sir Stephenson H. Kent, KCB: http://www.dmm.org.uk/company/r1004.htm. Clarke and Kent were also directors of Powell Duffryn among other coal firms. A partial list of Great Western directors reveals no overlap: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Directors_of_the_Great_Western_Railway, which is not to say that at some period the two companies may not have had directors in common. *His parents must carry for the blame for the misery he undoubtedly suffered at school in consequence of his middle initials. It would appear that HRH was down one of the pits of the Wynnstay Colliery Co., whose directors in 1923 were L.E.W. and T.F. Edgerton: http://www.dmm.org.uk/company/w1043.htm. The Durham Mining Museum website is a really useful tool, though it does not have a complete list of collieries. -
Midland Railway Company
Compound2632 replied to technohand's topic in Pre-Grouping - Modelling & Prototype
Yes, No. 10282 is in my little list! (Psst - the headstocks should be square-ended not slope ended.) -
Paul Merton had the ultimate riposte to the Baconian, Oxfordian, etc. authorship fantasies: they are the product of snobbery by people who can't accept that the greatest poetry and drama the world has ever heard was written by someone who spoke with a Brummie accent. This was illustrated by a rendition of the "To be or not to be" monologue in perfect Brummie...
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Schools are required to have a "British Values Statement" amongst their paperwork. These are unexceptional statements of what I would consider generally-accepted human values but I find they are increasingly un-British compared with the values espoused by those said to be representing us, or with Government policy.
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To nail this one, No. 1 Son off the top of his head says:
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RCH 1907 Private Owner Wagons - with added 2024 range.
Compound2632 replied to rapidoandy's topic in Rapido Trains
It looks to me more like a fixed bar with latches; note the bolt heads along its length. How that was worked is a question, since it would seem to need a man on each side. At any rate, the latches or catches are on the end of the side-sheeting. The horizontal strap on the side is probably a washer plate for a more substantial catch on the inside. I don't think there is anything there extending out beyond the wagon side? -
Traeth Mawr -Building Mr Price's house , (mostly)
Compound2632 replied to ChrisN's topic in The Railways of Wales
Mike Lloyd's Private Owners on the Cambrian (WRRC, 1998) - perhaps the book you are thinking of? - gives examples of wagons from the North Staffs coalfield (Florence Coal & Iron Co.; Midland Coal Coke & Iron Co., etc.) and Cannock Chase (J. Hawkins & Sons, Old Coppice Colly; Cannock & Rugeley Colly; Cannock Chase Colly). From Rapido's point of view, several of these firms' wagons were widely distributed, with examples photographed in the popular south-of-the-Thames area. -
RCH 1907 Private Owner Wagons - with added 2024 range.
Compound2632 replied to rapidoandy's topic in Rapido Trains
In a twisted way, I quite like it - it's the sort of maltreatment a preservation group might meet out to a poor unsuspecting semi-derelict ex-PO wagon. -
When I started there, in 1995, the area around what was then the main entrance was recognisable in the film and the ship tank building was still standing, though disused. (The oft hear cry of the library staff was "Oh no the ducks have got in again!") We specified our new labs in 1997 and finally moved in in 2007, by which time that specification was well out of date. (Oh the joys of the PFI process and lack of engagement between designers, contractors, and final users.) Much of the stuff I was involved in has moved again to an Advanced Metrology Lab back in the vicinity of Bushy House, close to where it had been before.
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By the time the real 2112 was that old, it had been a 3F for half its life! (According to Summerson Vol. 4, built Sharp Stewart Oct 1892, H boiler June 1904, reno. 3389 July 1907, G7 boiler (i.e. 3F) Jan 1924, reno. 43389 Mar 1950, withdrawn Jul 1962, just short of its 70th birthday. Allocated to Skipton, Hellifield, and Carnforth in Midland days.)
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The Midland's North & West carriage marshalling book for July - September 1911 [Midland Railway Study Centre item 00615] shows this same pair of carriages from Bradford, except that the Midland carriage is allegedly a corridor composite rather than brake composite. However, most Bain 54 ft composites and brake composites had at least one half-compartment. The only diagram I can find with two first and three third class compartments (each seating four and six passengers respectively) is D472, ten brake composites built as lot 686 in 1909; these were to the reduced height of 12' 8" to clear the Met loading gauge. This has the Great Western brake compo as a corridor carriage whereas in your 1912 document it appears not to be. But two first class compartments seating 10 and four thirds seating 28 is strongly suggestive of a non-corridor lavatory carriage. The E39 Falmouth Coupe as seen in the Lime St photo above would fit, I think?
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According to No. 1 Son, geologists and in particular glaciologists are highly sceptical of that very early date for the Happisburgh footprints, for highly technical reasons that I only half-understood when explained to me and have now forgotten.
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GWR 3 plank wagons appreciation thread
Compound2632 replied to drduncan's topic in GWR Rolling Stock: model and prototype
4GWR-007 3 plank wagon with round ends and iron u/f - so the penultimate version. I think that's chiefly because it's translucent and has no below solebar clutter - i.e. brakes - but also it may be riding a whisker high. -
GWR 3 plank wagons appreciation thread
Compound2632 replied to drduncan's topic in GWR Rolling Stock: model and prototype
Has been done... Best cure is to post something OT. He's my progress with @drduncan's kit: I stopped to think about brakes then got distracted onto something else...