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2750Papyrus

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Posts posted by 2750Papyrus

  1. I also thought about the Metropolitan. 

     

    I think maybe London Transport would have preserved one or two more Met steam locos if the LNER hadn't taken over steam operated services and the locos that pulled them, as they were largely responsible for the spread of "Metroland" out into rural Middlesex and Buckinghamshire.

     

    From the several classes, I will go for the 4-4-4 tank engine - an unusual wheel arrangement which looks well balanced.

  2. 36 minutes ago, LNER4479 said:

    I don't think we did G&SWR did we?

     

    Of all the Baltic tank designs that appeared, I thought theirs looked the most stylish and striking, with their burnished steel boiler casing:

     

    image.png.f7014246ba486ee05bd12e1c929dd31c.png

     

    If we already G&SWR and I've already voted for the type then I apologise for premature senility :crazy:

    That's a an impressive looking loco but the boiler looks long.  What was their steaming like?

  3. Oh Golly, GN time.  And you say we only have one choice?

     

    I agree that a model of the J6 is long overdue, given the number of pre-grouping 0-6-0s recently released or announced, but there are other classes perhaps more worthy of preservation.  The fact there is only one non-streamlined Gresley pacific preserved argues strongly that an original A1 should have been preserved.  The K3 and O2 have claims for pioneering 3 cylinder propulsion (and conjugated valve gear).  However, I am drawn to the earlier 2-6-0s, which have a claim to be the first  modern mixed traffic engine (as they had outside valve gear). 

     

    The original K1s were rebuilt with larger boilers to become K2 so my choice has to be the latter.

  4. A difficult choice. 

     

    The Jersey Lilies were reputedly one of the best looking engines of their generation, though personally I prefer the 4-6-0 version or an Immingham, and the A5 is a classic big tank engine.  However, the B3s must take my vote for their puissant appearance, and Valour had a double claim for preservation, being a war memorial as well as an impressive locomotive. 

     

    I wonder why the LNER didn't take this action, though they didn't include Robinson amongst the named A1s either.

     

     

  5. Whilst the B16 is a good shout, there are a lot of black 4-6-0s in preservation. 

     

    One of the first issues of Railway Modeller my Dad and I took (April 1954?) contained a drawing of a NE Z class Atlantic.  This really appealed to me because of its size and elegance and I pleaded with him to build me one!  Many years later, I bought a kit built one in LNER green livery, no 714, from a shop near Goodge Street. 

     

    So my vote has to go to the Z class Atlantic.

    • Like 1
  6. Another vote for 9875 Midlothian.

     

    A long time ago, I bought a model which had been assembled and primed, but never painted.  When I'm feeling brave enough, it will be my first attempt at painting and lining a loco.  What to do about applying the name, though?

  7. This Lockdown has affected my wife, she now has this ridiculous idea that I’m playing too much golf.  Actually, it came to a head at about 11.30 last night, she suddenly shouted at me: ‘Golf, golf, golf. All you ever think about is golf!’

     

    It frightened the life out of me.

     

    I mean, you don’t expect to meet somebody on the 14th green at that time of night.

    • Like 1
    • Funny 13
  8. There is also "Great Western Horse Power" by Janet Russell, but it doesn't help a great deal.  

     

    The main focus of the book is on the use of horses for the collection and delivery of goods; in 1950-51 there were still more than 100 owned horses at Cardiff and 200 belonging to contractors but there is no reference to their use for shunting work.

     

    The section on shunting horses covers two pages only.  Here, the only Welsh reference is Newport, where the GW and Monmouth Railway shared two shunt horses with a driver and divided the cost of 82sh (£4.10) per week between them.  However, the section on stables suggests that these were hired in when additional help was required, as there was apparently stabling there for more than 36 horses - but no breakdown as to what they were used for.

     

     

  9. I wasn't going to vote in this poll because I don't know enough about the Midland (though my maternal grandad reputedly drove a horse and cart for them).  The I remembered the M&GN classes J40 and J41........

     

    So a vote for a little 3F tender engine after all!

    • Like 1
  10. Whilst I have a Silver Jubilee set in the to-do box, my vote has to go to the Coronation.  A complete matching train; the latest issue of Steam Railway has a feature on the restoration of the beaver-tail observation car, surely a candidate for restoration project of the year.  

    • Agree 1
  11. 1 hour ago, The Johnster said:

    No, all quite healthy and contented, touch wood.  7x Harlequin Rasbora, 3x Yo-yo loach, one male and two female Betta Splendens, 2x Wood Shrimp.  They are fed flake when I get up and a treat, sometimes live, food mid evening.  The guinea pig is fascinated and spends hours watching them from his cage. 

    We used to have a tabby cat, who never had both brain cells on line at the same time.  On one occasion, she leapt from the stairs at the upper  aquarium and she would spend ages watching the two catfish in the lower tank.

    • Like 1
    • Funny 1
  12. Mullie's post has reminded me that, many years ago, I appeared in a pageant at the Royal Albert Hall.  This was Boy Scout, written and produced by Ralph Reader, and I (and many others) played the parts of a football supporter, an Indian and a ghost Indian.   I seem to remember that an orange juice carton, filled with water and dropped from the top of the building, made a very satisfactory splash and noise on impact. 

     

    In recent years Mrs 2750 and I have attended various concerts and ballet performances, particularly when able to book box seats.  Sadly, our latest booking has just been cancelled, having previously been rescheduled on two occasions. 

     

    So rather than a B17, my choice also has to be Albert Hall.

     

     

    • Like 1
  13. On 22/05/2020 at 01:34, Woodcock29 said:

    Bolster wagons - here are some of my recent efforts, please don't compare them with Headstock's work! I don't think I've posted these on here before?

     

    A Cambrian Quint I built the other year that's now been loaded with 60ft rail and therefore needs extra support from a secondhand NE single bolster. I know the Quint needs weathering, particularly the floor planks - but the load is still removable.

    2008645465_IMG_0298ps.jpg.7dac9187b386bc281ada7eeea66cf6b2.jpg

    Some loaded timber wagons for Gavin Thrum's Spirsby layout.

    Two NE single bolster I bought second-hand recently that have been converted from P4 to OO - I can here some cringing! I only noticed I hadn't painted the plastic card above the coupling mounts when I saw the photo!

    1008991931_IMG_0259ps.jpg.ba293e4f4332791d4a20e4fc19bd7d16.jpg

    A David Geen NE double bolster

    4059409_IMG_0268ps.jpg.b25c411618683289a91787de64164fd1.jpg

    A Chivers LMS double bolster.

    1977751093_IMG_0271ps.jpg.dbac7ca3d9f55fdb3cfb85827dd5e7d6.jpg

    Andrew

     

    Sorry to jump quite so far back, but this seemed to be the best place for my question. 

     

    I'm just re-reading "That Was My Railway" by Frank L Hick.  In an early chapter, he refers to the use on the old NER of double-bolster wagons for the carriage of trussed hay and clover, destined for cattle and horse fodder.  This sounds like an interesting use of such wagons. Has anyone seen photographs of wagons so loaded, or attempted to model it?

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