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lanchester

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Posts posted by lanchester

  1. Just caught up with this thread and the discussion a few pages back about setts, cobbles etc. A couple of observations.

     

    Firstly, the line of the kerb may often delineate land ownership, rather than necessarily a sensible layout of roads, pavements etc.

     

    Second, you quite often see, 'inside' such a kerb, that the 'paving' is cobbles rather than setts - I assume to discourage traffic from straying onto your property, and indeed from peering through your windows or bashing into your house/factory/warehouse walls.

     

    Third, quite often, at least round here (East Cheshire) the main thoroughfares/heavy traffic routes are paved with granite setts - better able to resist iron-shod wheels/horse hooves, whereas pedestrian paving and minor lanes use setts of the local, significantly softer, sandstone. On steep slopes the latter is often laid with the laminae/bedding planes vertical, which gives an interesting texture and more grip, (no idea how you would model it) although I imagine it is less hard-wearing.

     

    There is also the question of economics. I imagine granite setts are by some way the most expensive option (even in a granite area - they are a lot harder to work). Suitable local sandstone may be cheaper if available (for example, round here the Kerridge sandstones made good flags for roofing, but some beds that didn't readily cleave as thinly might be used for setts). Cobbles would be cheap if you are beside a suitable beach, but they don't have to be beach/river derived. Round here suitable cobble-sized stones occur in glacial boulder-clay deposits and have been used as in my second point above.

     

    Finally, there is always the wooden block option.

     

     

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  2. 8 hours ago, Hroth said:

     

    As far as the Desolate South is concerned, the North is beyond two lines, drawn between the Severn (say Gloucester) and The Wash, and the Welsh border.  They are very Parochial Folk below the line!

     

     

    I really must read ALL the posts before responding, just so I can combine them all in one!!!

     

    Of course, if you do a map of the UK with true North actually at the top, instead of slanting our islands so we can fit Shetland in, it turns out that the fabled North South divide is more accurately close to an East West divide. (You  can't get more southern that Cornwall but it has many of the same problems as the North). I blame Geology. And the first phase Roman occupiers ran their boundary more or less along the A46 for a reason - why spend your time yomping over Dartmoor or the Pennines being abused by the natives when you can set up a nice tight little villa in the Cotswolds and swap chariot anecdotes with Hieronymus Scribafilius. 

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  3. 8 hours ago, Compound2632 said:

     

    Eastbourne, as rapidly becomes evident to anyone walking along the Grand Parade past the Devonshire, Chatsworth, and Cavendish hotels*, is owned by a family of well-known anarchist-communist sympathisers:

     

    511305943_AnnualPicnic.jpg.8023f293160ba90ed3ba162199627b5b.jpg

     

    *quarter of a century ago - no idea if they're all still there.

    The Cavendish Dukes of Devonshires are indeed often suspected of pinko-liberal tendencies, but just for the record Haddon Hall is actually a property of the Manners Dukes of Rutland (the Belvoir Castle mob) along with quite a lot of the Bakewell area. Unlike the Devonshires they don't seem to have done politics much, but one Marquis of Granby (the courtesy title of the eldest son) was Colonel, the Horse Guards, from 1766 and was used to set up outstanding soldiers that were no longer of use to the Regiment with their own pub, provided only that they called it 'The Marquis of Granby'. That makes him a GOOD CHAP, even, surely, in the eyes of the anarchist-communist comrades.

  4. Thing I've wondered about for a long time - why was a 2-4-4 wheel arrangement almost unknown (tank or tender) in the UK. (I understand the arrangement was called the 'Boston' and there were a few in the US; also in parts of Europe, but never many, and none that I can find in Britain. I'm not counting 2-4-4 Mallet, or Forney 'logging' types, although I think Bachmann did one of the latter).

     

    On the face of it, you might think think a leading pony truck to give some 'steer' but, especially if you are taper boilered and perhaps unsuperheated, not carrying too much weight. Two driving axles carrying most of the fixed adhesive weight; and a rear bogie carrying, and clearing, any weight of firebox plus, if you are in tank mode, a generous coal/water bunker (and if you get the springing right, perhaps a better ride for the crew).

     

    But I am not aware of any locomotives, at least working in Britain, (we might have built some for abroad?) of that arrangement.  2-4-2T were common on many lines - you could have added a rear bogie just for range (and probably still fit the available turntables). Whereas 2-6-2T or 2-6-4T tend to be quite significantly bigger locomotives, and 'Atlantic' tanks seem to me to be putting the extra carrying capacity at the wrong end..

     

    Now, full disclosure, I failed my Mech Eng degree twice, (although that was final year at a Russell Group University so that is almost a qualification in the modern world).so I may well be missing something obvious. But I am curious why no-one here went down that road (and heaven knows, some of our finest locomotive engineers explored most other by-ways).

     

    And now the fun bit - what would a 2-4-4 or 2-4-4T by say Worsdell or Stroudley or Johnson or Dean (I'm not suggesting eg Churchward cos I imagine the extra weight of superheat into the 1900's might change the equation). I can't do the pix /graphics ec but anyone out there like to have a go? oR explain why this is a no-go?

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  5. 7 hours ago, Tony Wright said:

     

     

    Returning to book reviews, where there are obvious errors of fact in a work, then they should be pointed out. For instance, I'm just reviewing a railway book on York. The author claims that the ancient city has 'The most complete medieval city walls in England'. Leaving aside the fact that the walls are not medieval in origin, but Roman, this is just not true. Chester has the most complete set of walls (actually complete, unlike York's). As a native Cestrian, of course I know this, but do others? 

     

     

    Tony, I think you have picked a slightly iffy 'fact' to 'leave aside' here. I'm sure you are right that Chester's walls are more complete than York's, but I think they may also be more Roman?  Although York's walls run mostly, but by no means always, on the lines of the Roman walls, hardly any of the visible fabric of York's walls is Roman - the multiangular tower, parts of Bootham Bar (below ground level), and that's about it. To the extent that the medieval is built on top of the Roman, the latter is embanked in ramparts and invisible. By contrast many visible sections of Chester's walls include in situ Roman masonry ten or more courses high.

     

    As a former journal editor and occasional reviewer, albeit in a quite different field, I myself have too often been guilty of introducing one error while trying to correct another, which of course is what gives pedantry a bad name!

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  6. Personally I would go for something long-boilered - The NER 1001 'class' and its many relatives. The glory is that they were built in several different works, (Leeds, Gateshead, York, a few outside contractors I think, plus the S&D built much the same sort of thing when it was a semi-independent operation, 1863-1873 or thereabouts). Fletcher really didn't do standardisation - not just of details like cabs but even of wheel diameters, and to call any of these a 'class' is really stretching things. So if you've run out of, say, Salter safety valves, that's OK. If your attempt at a cab looks like it was run up on someone's allotment, or you nicked one off a Worsdell body you had lying around, (hey, take the whole boiler, for a later period) well there's a prototype for that (especially since most of them were never photographed). Poor old McDonnell came in with ideas for standardisation, and was he thanked? No way!

     

    And if it doesn't look quite North Eastern, you could claim it is one of the Earl of Durham's home-grown jobbies ex Lambton Engine Works exploiting running rights. Some of them look exactly like they were assembled from a spare parts box (they were before my great grandfather's time, 1897 onwards, but I suspect that is exactly how they were put together. Lambton did have a proper boiler shop at one time, also foundry etc but why would you when you can buy in boilers, wheelsets etc from the North East's many local contractors, or second hand from the 'big railway'). 

     

    Can't go wrong.

  7. 4 hours ago, Johnson044 said:

     

    The curious thing is that a recognized indicator of a poor area is the large number of fast food places on the High St. The more hard up people are the tendency is to live for today and let tomorrow take care of itself and It doesn't help with tv advertising promoting all the rubbish food.

    Didn't Dickens have Sam Weller say something similar about poverty and oysters?

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  8. I know this has been touched on in various threads, but I am curious about traffic in fodder for the hundreds of thousands of horses employed in the pre-motor age.

     

    Villages and small towns, OK I imagine mostly animal feed was sourced locally and didn't involve the railways. But for major conurbations (London, obviously, but Birmingham, Glasgow, Manchester etc) that doesn't work - the nearest fields are miles out, and anyway would have more value raising crops or milk or veg for human consumption in the cities (and we know quite a lot about traffics including milk, fruit and veg, etc over the railways).. The rail companies themselves had stable-loads of horses involved in distribution (and some, I know, - Midland had a big depot near Melton Mowbray, I think, and I seem to remember the, Great Western had dedicated fodder wagons/vans for its own needs), but there are all the other 'private' horses involved in distribution from railheads, not to mention hackney carriages, private carriages, cavalry regiments etc. They've all got to be fed. But how? Hay, straw, whatever, low weight, high volume, must be brought in to the cities from many miles away: it is seasonal so you need warehousing. Yet it is hard to find either pictures of rail-based foddering (if that is a word) operations - or indeed of road operations: there are scenes of urban areas crammed with horse-drawn traffic, both passenger and freight, but you don't often see cartloads of hay or the equivalent in urban settings - being delivered for example to those 'mews' that the posh folks had behind thee West End mansions. Nor do you see on the maps and photographs any obvious facilities at stations.

     

    So how did the average urban carthorse or Hackney get its feed? Or the stables in areas such as Newmarket? Was hay/straw baled or loose (which might affect the type of wagon employed). And if it wasn't by rail, then...?

     

    I know the Lambton Hetton and Joicey  had vans for 'choppy', the local term for feed for pit ponies, but that was only moving a few miles in a mostly rural area on a private railway. How did all those other nags get their oats?

     

    If we knew, strikes me it could be an as yet underexploited traffic to model, for example from your otherwise traffic-light BLT?

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  9. 11 hours ago, Compound2632 said:

     

    Presumably the son of Ralph Brocklebank, shipping magnate and LNWR Director, after whom Claughton No. 1159 was named?

    Not son of, but  the same family. Ralph B had his seat in Bunbury, Cheshire and his father was something to do with Mersey Docks & Harbour amongst other things.

     

    Sir Aubrey of l'al Ratty connection (the house was Irton Hall, incidentally, which is now a hotel/conference centre), was a Director of the GWR (as well as of Cunard who had a controlling interest in, and eventually bought out, the family shipping company). J & T Brocklebank was originally a Whitehaven company going back to the 1790s, both building and operating ships, but moved to the Mersey in the 19th century. Cunard kept the Brocklebank name going for cargo operations until, I think, the 1980s.

     

    Sir A was a financial backer of the R&ER in the Twenties (died 1929) because he owned the quarries and the crushing plant at Murthwaite that R&ER served with their standard gauge arrangement (sold to Keswick Granite in the 1950s when his last surviving partners clocked out).. 

     

    I suppose it might be quite helpful for  Brocklebanks to have one Director in the LNWR looking after the Liverpool interests, and another influencing the Great Western across the river in Birkenhead. Covering all the bases and ensuring favourable rates for the Boat Trains? Alternatively these, as I suppose cousins of some sort, may have hated each other's guts, and backed rival rail companies just out of spite? Who knows?

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  10. On 24/05/2022 at 14:33, Bucoops said:

     

    Certainly LNER Truss rod underframes had a deliberate curvature to them, so when the body was added it was level. Not sure the angle iron ones had or needed that.

    I've probably got this all wrong, but I had the idea that (some?) truss rod underframes had some sort of turnbuckle arrangement so they could be adjusted for the body load (obviously, not for varying loads in traffic, just to be about right for the superstructure) and that this was the whole point of a truss rod (as opposed to a truss made up from angle irons). 

     

    Of course there is also the well-known case of the prototype glass-fibre bodied carriage (S1000, which I think still exists on the East Somerset Railway?) which flexed to the point that the doors jammed when loaded, despite being perfectly sound in terms of structural strength. I don't know whether such considerations affected wooden-bodied vehicles when they became longer - I can imagine they might to have needed more solid members to avoid undue flexure than were strictly necessary for strength? That would take up usable body width - only a few inches each side, but it matters. (Which would in turn favour steel-skinned vehicles which can take some of the shear loads - a similar evolution to that occurring in aviation, where the metal skin of a Spitfire, for example, is taking load that the fabric skin of a Hurricane can't, (which if I'm right is why the Spit was capable of continuous improvement/ size increase etc. whereas the Hurricane was competitive with the Spit Mk 1 or 2, but couldn't really develop beyond).

     

    And of course, over different timescales but for similar reasons, trains planes and automobiles all tended towards monocoque construction.

     

    Health warning _ all this could be rubbish - I failed final year Mech Eng at Sheffield not once but twice - so what do I know! (On the other hand, part of the reason for that was that I was Secretary of my Student Union, and my success rate in getting late licences from the magistrates is still revered.  I suppose, if I was put on this Earth for a reason, that was probably it!).

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  11. 20 hours ago, iands said:

    Along with 'Brightside'. 

     

    Sorry, I jumped in with Brightside before reading the following posts. 

    In fairness, Brightside is mostly on the higher ground and indeed, before the total spread of the city, was a 'resort' for people looking for some fresh and unpolluted air. That may have been true even when the railways first arrived (1840's?) although of course they were a contributor to, how can I put this nicely, a certain degradation in the quality of the lived environment.

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  12. 5 hours ago, Tom Burnham said:

    I believe the only areas where 6.25kV was used in regular service were Glasgow and the GE lines out of Liverpool Street. I think the Shenfield 1500V DC electrification was initially converted to 6.25kV using the original insulators and then gradually upgraded.  It was certainly possible to tell whether you were in 6.25kV or 25kV territory by looking at the number of discs on the insulators.

    Was there an experimental section of 6.25kV on the Styal line which was used as a testbed for AC electrification?

    I had always been under the impression that the Styal line electrification had been at 6.25kV initially, but confess I can't find any evidence for that. An urban myth?

     

    But there may have been a lot of 'urban myth' even in the day, 28 July 1968, Dad and I were on a railtour, promoted by the Severn Valley and Manchester Rail Travel Societies ,originating and terminating  BNS, around Lancashire, the last steam-hauled segment of which was with 48773 from Rose Grove: and all the 'pre flight info' said that would come off at Man Vic (from memory I think the wires issue may even have been mentioned in the literature - my timing sheet is currently in storage with the rest of my previous life, so I can't check). Nonetheless, 48773 went on via Droylsden to finish under the wires at Stockport (where we were picked up by the same Brush 4, (D1945 from memory although I may be wrong on the last digit) as had brought us up that morning. Point is, Everyone (not just spotty eleven year olds like me) on the train was amazed - this isn't allowed, look at the yellow stripe. So the belief that yellow stripe was a total ban under the 25kV wires was, I think, universal - regardless of what the actual rules may have been.

     

    Note this info does not totally correspond with what is on Six Bells Junction (including the ID of the Brush 4). When I finally get my stuff out of storage, if its still there - not checked for about four years but I'm still paying the fees, and now that the Mother in Law has 'passed' (side query- why does everyone now 'pass': why don't they just die, like people used to?) and we can get our own stuff into the house I will find the timing sheet, confirm and email the Six Bells chappy accordingly. But 48773 under the wires at Stockport is definitely true..

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  13. 1 hour ago, Florence Locomotive Works said:

    I thought it seemed a bit of stretch for one of them too, thank you for clarifying it. I presume the house was destroyed by conventional bombing/fire then during the Liverpool blitz. 

    I wondered whether perhaps the confusion was with the V1 (doodlebug). There was a raid on Manchester, Christmas Eve 1944, with forty odd V1s air launched from He 111s over the North Sea, and one actually came down in Chester, although as far as I can tell, none hit Liverpool.

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  14. On 05/05/2022 at 19:25, Happy Hippo said:

    We sent a nice day at Beaumaris.

     

    Compared to other Welsh castles, it is remarkably low slung.

     

    I saw my first train of the holiday; a Voyager between Bangor and the Bridge over the Menai Straight.

     

    We return tomorrow, so there is a chance we may stop by Llangollen and get a look at the railway there, or we could go via Bala lake and get some narrow gauge action. 

    I believe Beaumaris is low slung because it was never finished - Edward decided the Welsh were pacified enough and went off to blatt the Scots. He wasn't altogether a nice person, old Longshanks.

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  15. The thing I don't quite get, though, is that it was really the Midland that started the trend towards heavier (passenger) trains, with their introduction of sleepers, diners, Pullmans - heavier vehicles and more of them - so you would expect them to have been going towards larger locomotives, and indeed as has been noted above the Compounds were large for their time: but then it all stopped. Other, reasonably comparable, lines didn't - the GER didn't stop at 'Clauds' (and they certainly had infrastructure constraints such as turntable lengths) and built 4-6-0s, the Great Central went beyond 'Directors', and the NER beyond the M and R class, to Atlantics (successfully) and 4-6-0s (less successfully). Even most of the Scottish railways tried to bulk up, and while the Highland's attempts were kyboshed by their CCE, at least they tried. Some at least of those must have had passenger businesses with similarities to the Midland?

     

    Freight/minerals business models of course are entirely different things, even on the same railway. One takes the point about coal trains (limits on lay-by lengths, too many dodgy PO wagons, not time sensitive, etc) but I would have thought the Midland would have had an interest in faster, if not necessarily heavier, trains for traffics such as Fish, Beer, parcels, newspapers - these were highly competed for on time as well as rates, not to mention the operational advantages of getting these a bit closer to passenger timings. I would have thought the Midland's Commercial people, not to mention the customer-shareholders in places like Burton, would have been kicking up? But where is the equivalent of the GNR's K1/K2; the S1/2/3 on the NER, the GCR's Imminghams, Urie's S15s etc?

     

    Saying that a 'smaller engine' policy suited their business model only raises questions about why they had a business model seemingly unlike any of their competitors.

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  16. I suspect (and think I've seen this somewhere, though heaven knows where) that Directors and active shareholders of many of the pre-grouping companies were quite relaxed, or even quietly enthusiastic, about the possibilities of nationalisation circa 1921. It makes sense. War damage to make good, at a time when the economy was veering from boom to bust and so new capital difficult to raise; serious industrial unrest (on the railways and the industries they served). Suburban traffic had been under intense pressure from trams since well pre-war, and buses were becoming a thing (the NER, for example, went into replacement bus services on quite a large scale -  Ken Hoole did a book). Ex-servicemen were buying up ex-army lorries and cherry-picking suitable freight. Some visionaries were seeing air as competition on long-distance passenger, and mail, routes. Coal, the mainstay of many lines, was under increasing pressure from oil in, for example, shipping - the 'Jellicoe specials' of WW1 were already an anachronism, most major capital warships, and many smaller vessels, being oil-fuelled. All this would be obvious to the more thoughtful investor. At best, railway shares would become like a current utility (low but secure and steady returns) but that would only happen if there was government regulation of rail and of its competitors such as applies to modern day utilities, (and even then, as we have seen recently with energy companies, things can still go horribly wrong).  I don't know to what extent 'widows and orphans' were invested in railways but I suspect that, in late C19 and after the various bubbles, railways were seen as a fairly safe investment. That was about to change.

     

    Government had powers anyway, dating back to mid-Victorian times (Gladstone before he was PM?) to nationalise individual companies under some circumstances.

     

    All told, I suspect that if the government of the day had pushed for nationalisation, offering shareholders a reasonable buy-out, they would have met with a lot less resistance than they might have expected. 

     

    But what did the 'Daily Mail' of the time (which would be, er, the 'Daily Mail') say? 

     

     

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  17. 16 hours ago, melmerby said:

    Hence some brake vans being break vans.:o

     

    Also Coach is the US term for the basic passenger car class. (Like standard class in the UK.)

    Car is the US term for railway vehicles, also used in the UK from the early 1900s

    Freight is the US term for non passenger traffic, imported into the UK by the NER in the early 1900s.

    The GWR 1936 general appendix, in the index it uses the term freight for the trains and goods for what they carried , however the term goods train still crops up in the text!

    Minerals are only mentioned once, when coupling to a "freight" train

    Couple of quick queries - if coach was 'economy class' a) am I right in thinking that in 'stagecoach' days the coach was the outside/on the top seating? and b) what did Americans call vehicles that were superior to coach cars? (I imagine being ever so egalitarian they wouldn't have gone much for First, Second etc).

     

    Elsewhere, there is discussion of the differing applications of bogies and trucks. But a tram was a four wheeled colliery truck or tub over here as well as what the Americans call a street car, but their street cars are also called trolleys, but we had trolley buses even though they didn't run on trolleys, trucks, bogies or trams!

     

    Oh, and 'tram' is from an Old German name for a beam or shaft, and I think originally may have implied something more like a sledge (ie wheel-less).

     

    I don't think 'A Tram/Bogie/Trolley/Tub called Desire' would have worked quite so well for Tennessee Williams, though. Although 'That's why the Lady is a Tram' works quite well?

     

    And when you see old accounts along the lines of 'the train was of eight bogies', is that four vehicles running on eight trucks, or is it eight bogied vehicles?

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  18. 14 hours ago, kevinlms said:

    It's hard to come to the conclusion that the LMS wasn't making inroads into their steam shunter fleet, because they weren't wanted or desirable. There was a major set back called WW2, so not surprising more diesel shunters didn't get built.

    But it's true to say the LMS didn't build a single steam shunting loco after the mid 1930s. Other railways did.

    And a lot. On the ex-GWR, the 1600, 1500 and 9400 classes (some of the latter lasting barely five years, I believe). OK, they may not have been purely shunting locomotives (light branch line work, empty stock movements, etc). And then there was the outrageous new build of J72 (NER class E1) - what was that about, especially since the LNER had been acquiring ex-MOS Austerities (J94)? I don't remember J72s doing much trip work - most of those I knew were station pilots and the like, and very pretty they looked too, in NER light green, east end of Newcastle Central, (68723, 68736?) and viewed through the big front windows of a dmu going to my gran in Hexham past Geordie Stephenson's birthplace and over the bowstring bridge at Wylam. Sometimes invited into the dmu cab to 'drive' (well, put my hand on the throttle at least).

     

    So many unrepeatable experiences in one short trip. 

     

    PS Thinking about it, J72s may have been tripping in Hull, I suppose, but then as now that was a foreign country and they did things differently there. 

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  19. On 29/09/2021 at 20:02, corneliuslundie said:

    That's all right. They can remove the signs when we have all had our flu jabs.

    Seriously, I have only just read this thread and I am horrified by the number of signs the driver is supposed to keep tabs of. As another poster said, the aim should be to make the driver's job as easy as possible - and therefore as safe as possible.

    It reminds me of being with a German colleague driving back from Hanover Fair many years ago. Her comment was that there were so many road signs on German roads that it was almost impossible to notice and read them all, let along digest their meanings. Perhaps we have imported the person who specifies those signs.

    Jonathan

    Worse things happen at Hannover Fair. My advertising manager was driving, gave me a map and told me to navigate. I had to admit we were completely lost: I couldn't find a place called Ausfahrt anywhere on the map! (Admittedly it was 2 in the morning and drink may have been taken - by me, not the driver)

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  20. On 14/09/2021 at 18:05, spamcan61 said:

    It's been a few years since my day job was writing requirement specifications for outsourced electronic equipment, then vetting the received proposals, but I always used to include one impossible requirement in the specification, so I could weed out the obvious BS merchants with little effort.

    That's sort of the inverse of the well-known 'Van Halen rider', whereby the band specified M&M's in the dressing room with a particular colour removed. The justification was that the band had a particularly complex technical set-up, and if the promoter hadn't read the contract/ couldn't be bothered about the M&Ms, they probably weren't observing the more important/expensive/potentially life threatening requirements either.

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  21. 22 hours ago, Nearholmer said:

    The GWR General Appendix, which cites a lot of Min of Ag regulations, makes clear that all livestock was to be treated approriately as regards feeding and watering. Not all the regs are dates in the Appendix, though, and I know that animal welfare legislation improved over the years, so pre-grouping porkers may have been trated more harshly than post-grouping ones.

     

    What happened to pigs at Cirencester, dare I ask? It had (still has I think) a big livestock market, but was it a centre of "processing" too, or was the district one where pigs were fattened-up before the inevitable happened at Calne?

     

    PS: Swindon is named from "Swine-down", because the area was pig-central from AnglSaxon times, apparently.

    The 'Wiltshire Cure' was, and still is, a highly regarded treatment (unlike the 'York Cure', which was at least equally regarded but now, as I understand, is extinct). So the pig trade into (and products out of?) places like Cirencester or Calne may have been of pretty high value/priority?

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  22. On 12/09/2021 at 15:12, Steamport Southport said:

    I've read somewhere that it was such a faff to fit them to the LNWR smokeboxes that many didn't get them and most that did later had them removed. 

     

    It was more fitting the locating bits than the actually numberplate that was the problem. Something to do with airtightness I believe.

     

    This 4 cylinder 0-8-0 has got one though. Also with the LMS number on the tender with meant a repaint every time they swapped the tender which was common on the LNWR. Soon ditched.

     

    https://lnwrs.zenfolio.com/p492945023/h4F40DF98#h4f40df98

     

     

     

    Jason

    Totally off-topic, but why are the wheels on that 0-8-0 so small? Or alternatively, why are the splashers so big - it hardly looks as though it needs splashers at all.

     

    As regards the lack of plates on ex-LNWR engines, could it be that, because the smokebox door didn't have to support a dart or wheel mechanism, it was of significantly lighter construction?

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