Twentieth-Bagginess Posted December 21, 2023 Share Posted December 21, 2023 Where were distillers co2 tanks transported to? How was they unloaded? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stoke West Posted December 21, 2023 Share Posted December 21, 2023 4 hours ago, Twentieth-Bagginess said: Where were distillers co2 tanks transported to? How was they unloaded? Bath Midland Bridge Road for the Distillers Company . 70's into the 80's a weekly block load from Severn Beach to Bow out sunday evening returning in the consist of any suitable train during the week 1 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Twentieth-Bagginess Posted December 21, 2023 Author Share Posted December 21, 2023 59 minutes ago, Stoke West said: Bath Midland Bridge Road for the Distillers Company . 70's into the 80's a weekly block load from Severn Beach to Bow out sunday evening returning in the consist of any suitable train during the week They were only used for the distillers company? silly me, I assumed they were for delivering co2 to various industries Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fat Controller Posted December 21, 2023 Share Posted December 21, 2023 David Ratciffe's book on 'Private Owner Wagons has a photo of a road tanker unloading a rail tank. The operation seemed to be fairly simple, using some re-inforced stainless hose. Terminals could be as simple as this, or something more permanent, like the one serving the Midlands. Gas was a by-product of yeast manufacture like that at Bristol, and brewing the 'mash' for distilling, like the Menstrie one. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stoke West Posted December 21, 2023 Share Posted December 21, 2023 36 minutes ago, Twentieth-Bagginess said: They were only used for the distillers company? silly me, I assumed they were for delivering co2 to various industries Distillers company discharged the rail tanks into their road tankers and delivered to their customers , much the same as coal factors unloaded coal and delivered to their customers along with other traders and comodities 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Twentieth-Bagginess Posted December 21, 2023 Author Share Posted December 21, 2023 I was imagining a (freelance, fictional) brewery receiving co2 for carbonating the end product. But after reading your post, I searched around and found that some breweries are capturing the co2 from the brewing process 44 minutes ago, Fat Controller said: Gas was a by-product of yeast manufacture like that at Bristol, and brewing the 'mash' for distilling, like the Menstrie one Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Twentieth-Bagginess Posted December 21, 2023 Author Share Posted December 21, 2023 32 minutes ago, Stoke West said: Distillers company discharged the rail tanks into their road tankers and delivered to their customers , much the same as coal factors unloaded coal and delivered to their customers along with other traders and comodities Thank you so the co2 was produced at Severn Beach? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cwmtwrch Posted December 21, 2023 Share Posted December 21, 2023 It was one of the products from ICI Severnside [built in 1963], along with fertilisers and other chemicals at different times. Whether there was any connection with the Distillers Co CO2 traffic I don't know, but Distillers was never a part of ICI. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tallpaul69 Posted January 14 Share Posted January 14 Hi Folks, A point of interest to me is when and where did the Distillers Company use the red and black lettering on a buff tank colour as depicted on Hornby 20 ton tanker R6122? Many thanks Paul Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cwmtwrch Posted January 14 Share Posted January 14 If it's genuine [i.e. not something Hornby made up], then anywhere in the UK, before WW2; the tank is in standard Class A traffic livery for that period. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mark Saunders Posted January 14 Share Posted January 14 In this there is confusion between the postwar Carbon Dioxide tanks and the prewar Ethanol tanks (industrial alcohol). The Hornby rtr tank is the former Airfix rtr one and they remained in traffic till the early 1970’s but in BP use after the Hull plant was sold to them; the last remaining tank is now at Leeming Bar on the Wensleydale Railway, 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cwmtwrch Posted January 14 Share Posted January 14 I wasn't looking for it, but found +https://www.modelrailshop.co.uk/p/1208/20-Ton-Tank-Wagon---Industrial-Alcohol. 1 hour ago, Mark Saunders said: The Hornby rtr tank is the former Airfix rtr one and they remained in traffic till the early 1970’s But not in that livery - the post-war livery for class A liquids was a silverette tank with red solebars. "The Distillers Company Ltd" was in red, the rest of the lettering in black. Their 201 is on page 52 of David Larkin's 'Non-Pool Freight Stock 1946-1968', volume 1. The tank should, of course, not have a hand wheel on the top, as in that era only class B tanks had a bottom outlet; class A was emptied by syphon at the top of the tank. Airfix produced a class B tank and also painted it in class A liveries. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mark Saunders Posted January 14 Share Posted January 14 Found the photo' of the one at Leeming Bar in the BP livery that it was withdrawn from mainline use in before going into internal use at BP Grangemouth before initially entering preservation at Bowness. 2 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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