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70s Industrial steam


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On 10/06/2021 at 18:54, montyburns56 said:

Littleton Colliery 1970

 

Littleton Colliery

 

1975

 

Littleton Colliery

 

Littleton Colliery

 

1977

 

NCB7. Reserve Loco @ NCB Littleton Colliery

 

Interesting to see a couple of SR brake vans here, one is a rare(?) left hand ducket version. I've often felt that magazine articles focussing on industrial locos miss out information on a lot of interesting wagons and buildings. The other BV is MR?

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2 hours ago, sir douglas said:

are they MoSI's Planet carriages?

 

Yes. Although they pre dated Planet as they were converted for Rocket 150 in 1980.

 

They went there for an open day just before the end of steam in 1981. So wrong thread. :prankster:

 

5297562_520d1995.jpg

 

They had two of the three engines running.

 

More photos here.

 

https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/5297571

 

 

 

5297571_f9322e31.jpg

 

This one was out of use.

5297568_775e1565.jpg

 

 

Photos David Dixon

 

 

 

Jason

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On 04/07/2021 at 23:16, Steamport Southport said:

 

I remember Number 5 at Southport.

 

On paper it was more powerful than a Black Five!

Birchenwood asked for another loco expecting to get another 16" Bagnall as they rather liked No.4. Instead they got a lump of a Peckett with that huge rear overhanging bunker that was not well liked and had a propensity of breaking the track and derailing. One has to wonder why Peckett's thought it would be a sensible design and perhaps the fact they didn't build more answers that question.

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1 hour ago, Mark Saunders said:

More interesting is the use of Iron Ore tipplers in coal traffic!

Possibly destined for a coke ovens ,/smokeless fuel plant or power station that used a rotary tippler. The apparent random mix of internal wagons at Wheldale was explained by the use of such a method at Fryston where the coal was washed

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8 minutes ago, doilum said:

Possibly destined for a coke ovens ,/smokeless fuel plant or power station that used a rotary tippler. The apparent random mix of internal wagons at Wheldale was explained by the use of such a method at Fryston where the coal was washed

The coal they were probably meant to be carrying was anthracite duff, best described as 'black mud'. This was burnt at Carmarthen Bay power station; it had been conveyed in a very mixed fleet of former Loco Coal wagons and similar, but these were life-expired by the late 1970s.

Methil power station in Fife used ex-Iron Ore tipplers in similar fashion.

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