jonny777 Posted December 17, 2014 Share Posted December 17, 2014 (edited) There is nothing wrong with photos from the 80s railsquid. They are now just a memory for everyone and are just as fascinating for livery variations as the green/blue transition era. You upload away. I, for one, will be looking. Edited December 17, 2014 by jonny777 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fat Controller Posted December 17, 2014 Share Posted December 17, 2014 J4180 - how many hoppers? I make it 35 by the bridge. I thought it was usually only 30 behind a Cl.47 and 36 for a Cl.56. I realise they are empties. I think Didcot workings were as many as 42 hoppers, though I'm not sure if that was behind 47s as well as 56s. This might have been a working of a Didcot train that had been 'staged' at Washwood Heath. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
50A55B Posted December 17, 2014 Share Posted December 17, 2014 Looking back at that 3 car DMU, it looks to me like it's a hybrid with a BRCW trailer (common enough at Etches Park). Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
brian daniels Posted December 17, 2014 Share Posted December 17, 2014 47's had 36 on for Didcot P.Stn but 56/58/60 had 45. I think I am right in saying Didcot was the only P.Stn to have rakes of 45 HAA's? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold Popular Post DaveF Posted December 17, 2014 Author RMweb Gold Popular Post Share Posted December 17, 2014 A visit to Teesside this evening to look at some trains at Grangetown and Lackenby in the 80s and 90s. Grangetown BSC 261 & 37514 up 20th Feb 88 C9350 Grangetown Class 101 Middlesborough to Saltburn 12th Oct 85 C7221 The coke works is in the background. Lackenby BSC 37416 empty potash 14th April 93 C18504 Lackenby BSC BSC 37271 & 37254 up freightliner 14th April 93 C18502 Lackenby BSC BSC 37405 up salt 14th April 93 C18496 David 29 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold russ p Posted December 17, 2014 RMweb Gold Share Posted December 17, 2014 Excellent pictures, 93 was coming to the end of the good days Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold SHMD Posted December 17, 2014 RMweb Gold Share Posted December 17, 2014 ^^ Initially, I thought that first photo was of BCB! Kev. 2 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium Mallard60022 Posted December 17, 2014 RMweb Premium Share Posted December 17, 2014 Slightly OT here but.......... a good few years ago, probably late 70s/early 80s on a shed bash coach tour from London, as we approached Thornaby and were passing under a railway line, a bog cart passed and lo, a bloke was thrown (?) out of the train and rolled down the embankment! Think it might have been footy hooligans but can't confirm that. Smart area (not). Thornaby was a great shed in those days. I always thought what a huge waste of money the 1958 Roundhouse had been...... P Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold Market65 Posted December 17, 2014 RMweb Gold Share Posted December 17, 2014 Hi, Dave. Very interesting photo's of Grangetown and Lackenby tonight. Terrific detail shots of infrastructure as well as the trains, just look at the pipe-work in the last two photo's. Then there are all those wagons with the steel coils in the background sidings. And always great to see class 37's. Please keep the photo's coming, All the best, Market65. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium Clive Mortimore Posted December 17, 2014 RMweb Premium Share Posted December 17, 2014 Looking back at that 3 car DMU, it looks to me like it's a hybrid with a BRCW trailer (common enough at Etches Park). Hi 50A55B It is a BRCW trailer, 3 1/2 windows in the centre saloon, where a Cravens would have only 3. And the BRCW style vents on the roof help indentify it. Lucky Mr Hornby has already made this coach, so this combination can be made. I was too busy looking at the S&T work, the nearest telegraph pole is a terminating one and the wires are then carried to the trackside where they run in the raised trunking that was a feature of the linesides in the 50s, 60s, 70s and some places the 80s. The LMS style lineside cabinets also caught my eye. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
railsquid Posted December 17, 2014 Share Posted December 17, 2014 There is nothing wrong with photos from the 80s railsquid. They are now just a memory for everyone and are just as fascinating for livery variations as the green/blue transition era. You upload away. I, for one, will be looking. Thanks. Certainly nothing wrong with photos from that era, just I don't have many at all and most of those are of fairly lousy quality and exist as prints only. Wish I'd taken more when I had the chance, but I was earning my own pocket money. But I've been planning to scan them and upload as they might be of interest to someone. Luckily I was diligent enough to write the date and some details on the back of most. 2 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold The Stationmaster Posted December 17, 2014 RMweb Gold Share Posted December 17, 2014 47's had 36 on for Didcot P.Stn but 56/58/60 had 45. I think I am right in saying Didcot was the only P.Stn to have rakes of 45 HAA's? Agree Brian - 45 was definitely the 'standard' length HAA size wagons train for Didcot in the later but I have a suspicion they might have been used at that length elsewhere as some folk in Trainload Coal used to refer to them as their 'standard length train' implying the sets were interchangeable between flows. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium keefer Posted December 18, 2014 RMweb Premium Share Posted December 18, 2014 Thanks. Certainly nothing wrong with photos from that era, just I don't have many at all and most of those are of fairly lousy quality and exist as prints only. Wish I'd taken more when I had the chance, but I was earning my own pocket money. But I've been planning to scan them and upload as they might be of interest to someone. Luckily I was diligent enough to write the date and some details on the back of most. ditto for me too - i only have some instamatic pics from the mid-80s, must get them scanned in sometime! thing is, even if they're 'boring' snaps, chances are someone somewhere will notice a detail that answers a question they have about a particular place/loco at a particular period in time. The amount of times on RmWeb someone says 'if only I could find a pic of X on a certain date' - so if you have photos where you know the date is correct, that may be very useful as a reference source in its own right! Even from Dave's excellent thread here (and others) much has been spotted in the background of pics, away from the main subject, which can answer a question or indeed start a whole new argument! Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
darren01 Posted December 18, 2014 Share Posted December 18, 2014 (edited) The things I saw in the 1970's and early 80's spotting, wish I had a camera then, like seeing a double header 25 hamming through Southall on an FA cup final day special, going round OOC on a Sunday morning and seeing it packed out with loco's.Again Dave stunning set of photo's ,never miss this thread ,well done sir I miss it so much but I am glad I did get to see it all, even when I got into trouble bunking off school to see the last Deltaic leave KX, it was worth it Darren Edited December 18, 2014 by darren01 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
40044 Posted December 18, 2014 Share Posted December 18, 2014 Agree Brian - 45 was definitely the 'standard' length HAA size wagons train for Didcot in the later but I have a suspicion they might have been used at that length elsewhere as some folk in Trainload Coal used to refer to them as their 'standard length train' implying the sets were interchangeable between flows. The Liverpool Docks - Fiddlers Ferry flow was also booked for 45 HAA Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
eastwestdivide Posted December 18, 2014 Share Posted December 18, 2014 I think Didcot workings were as many as 42 hoppers, though I'm not sure if that was behind 47s as well as 56s. This might have been a working of a Didcot train that had been 'staged' at Washwood Heath. I think I may have got my numbers mixed up with Westbury stone workings with PGAs. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold Popular Post DaveF Posted December 18, 2014 Author RMweb Gold Popular Post Share Posted December 18, 2014 (edited) Having spent the day shopping, cleaning the car, taxing the car, a bit more shopping and putting up the Christmas tree I've decided it's time to put my feet up for a few minutes with a cup of tea. Hence the slightly early photos for today. This evening we'll have a trip up the Wear Valley to Eastgate on a day out in a Class 101 on 23rd May 1987. The North Briton started at Darlington and explored the lines in the Darlington area as well as travelling to the gates of the cement works at Eastgate. The weather was very dull and grey. Are any RMWeb members in the photos? Etherley 08575 23rd May 87 C8489 Etherley Class 101 North Briton tour 23rd May 87 C8493 Etherley station 23rd May 87 C8491 Frosterley Class 101 23rd May 87 C8500 Eastgate cement works 23rd May 87 C8517 Eastgate Class 101 North Briton 23rd May 87 C8509 David Edited December 20, 2014 by DaveF 22 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
DY444 Posted December 18, 2014 Share Posted December 18, 2014 I think I may have got my numbers mixed up with Westbury stone workings with PGAs. I don't think you have - those numbers (47s + 30 and 56s + 36) sound familiar albeit not for the Didcot flows. My memory is not wholly reliable but I have a feeling they come from when the first Tinsley based 56s went into service on the short Yorkshire MGR circuits operating from Knottingley Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
JeffP Posted December 18, 2014 Share Posted December 18, 2014 Interesting headcodes on the dmu, varying from Barton on Humber, through Matlock to Rowntree Halt. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold Market65 Posted December 18, 2014 RMweb Gold Share Posted December 18, 2014 Hi, Dave. Liking the photo's of the North Britain rail-tour from May, 1987. There are indeed a good selection of destinations on the unit, and as only a 2-car 101, it must have been quite full! I like the road-works sign on the front of the 08 in that first photo'. Please keep the photo's coming, All the best, Market65. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold DaveF Posted December 18, 2014 Author RMweb Gold Share Posted December 18, 2014 Interesting headcodes on the dmu, varying from Barton on Humber, through Matlock to Rowntree Halt. Hi, Dave. Liking the photo's of the North Britain rail-tour from May, 1987. There are indeed a good selection of destinations on the unit, and as only a 2-car 101, it must have been quite full! I like the road-works sign on the front of the 08 in that first photo'. Please keep the photo's coming, All the best, Market65. The tour participants and the crew were enjoying themselves! I think the tour was a sell out, so all seats were occupied, at least in theory. In practice much time was spent taking photos out of windows, especially at locations where we couldn't detrain - such as Ferryhill on another part of the day's trip. David Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium Mallard60022 Posted December 19, 2014 RMweb Premium Share Posted December 19, 2014 Etherley Tip. Good grief, I can remember spending huge amounts of time getting to there (and back/on to wherever) to see a single shunter (was it ever an 03/4?) that was supposed to be there (TOPS Report said it should be!!!!); that was again on those Shed Bash trips that now seem so long ago. Thanks Dave (again) for nostalgic times...... P 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Irishswissernie Posted December 19, 2014 Share Posted December 19, 2014 I really enjoyed those DMU trips that the late Chris Wolstenholmes used to organise for the NERA, the one round the Blyth & Tyne was also called the North Briton if I remember correctly. Chris actually called in the shop at Hexham just a couple of months before his untimely passing; he was photographing the signalling I think. I'm not in your pictures Dave, we were probably standing side by side for most of the photography. Its got me thinking I must have more photos somewhere to bung on Flickr! Ernie Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold Popular Post DaveF Posted December 19, 2014 Author RMweb Gold Popular Post Share Posted December 19, 2014 (edited) A visit to Kent this evening, specifically Teynham station and Graveney Marshes in the in 1977 and 1975 respectively. I never did manage to visit the Graveney area in good weather. Teynham Class 47 down excursion 23rd April 77 C3309 Edit - Sorry, This one has been on before, I forgot. Teynham Class 411 7174 Victoria to Ramsgate May 77 C3336 Graveney Class 33 down parcels March 75 C1889 Graveney Class 411 7154 Ramsgate to Victoria March 75 C1894 Graveney Class 411 Victoria to Ramsgate March 75 C1897 David Edited December 19, 2014 by DaveF 25 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium New Haven Neil Posted December 19, 2014 RMweb Premium Share Posted December 19, 2014 (edited) Etherley Tip. Good grief, I can remember spending huge amounts of time getting to there (and back/on to wherever) to see a single shunter (was it ever an 03/4?) that was supposed to be there (TOPS Report said it should be!!!!); that was again on those Shed Bash trips that now seem so long ago. Thanks Dave (again) for nostalgic times...... P Yes Phil it was an 03 when I visited there, just pre-tops I reckon, or just about when they began re-numbering. We had cycled from South Shields to Hamsterley Forest to camp, and on one day out ended up at Etherley Tip. Crikey, it seems like another life ago. edit - sorry for the off topic diversion. Etherley Tip was one of those places that were on fire underground due to the pressure of waste, it was a surreal place. wonder if it's still burning? Edited December 19, 2014 by New Haven Neil Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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