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1165Valour

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  1. Given Huddersfield would be relatively close to Gorton, you might see some more experimental types, with the works not too far away - the Robinson Compound Atlantics (LNER C5), for example.
  2. From the 1920s until the end of steam, the various iterations of LMS and BR 2-6-4Ts were frequently used as bankers up Shap summit. The BR Standard 4MT 4-6-0s would also be allocated to Shap - was there any particular reason they were used for this work?
  3. In the comment section of a YouTube video on D0280 Falcon, a former BR employee stationed at Ebbw described seeing the engine, and mentioned that the engine spent more time under repair than working. The implication seems to be that this was due to the difficulty of obtaining spares for the one-off engine, rather than it being a poor design. That leads me to wonder: compared with the other Type 4 locomotives, how did Falcon compare?
  4. The Staveley Basher linked in your signature seems to be wearing GC unlined black, like many GC goods and shunting locos...yet the 9J Pom-Poms received lined black, to the best of my knowledge, so I assume the GC considered them mixed traffic engines, which they were.
  5. Of course, you can always make up a load of companies for PO wagons if you must.
  6. @Nearholmer, do you still have some of the images for this thread (especially the maps) that were lost in the great image purge?
  7. Looking at my junctions with foreign roads: Manchester London Road: LNWR Ardwick: L&Y Ashburys: MR Guide Bridge: LNWR Stalybridge: L&Y (I don't think there would be much need for the LNWR line to Stalybridge to be built here) Huddersfield: L&Y, MR Heaton Lodge to Dewsbury Junction: use L&Y main line Dewsbury: possible junction with MR West Riding lines? Batley: GNR Holbeck: GNR (Holbeck station may include the line to Huddersfield here) Leeds: GNR, NER, probably somewhat less traffic from MR and L&Y
  8. I made this account several years ago, when I was still a GWR fanboy, and I'm now unable to change it.
  9. I apologize, I wanted to get information related to this specific question, and saw no harm in creating a new topic.
  10. I'm continuing to plan my c. 1907 GCR what-if West Yorkshire line, and I'm wondering: what proportion of my rolling stock should be "native" - that is, Great Central - and how much should be "foreign" - everything else? Obviously, this will all depend on location, type of traffic, and time period, but I'd be interested in finding out some general guidelines.
  11. An interesting case is the 8F (B4) class, as I've seen models in both green and black. https://gladiatormodels.com/product/lner-b4-gcr-8f-immingham-4-6-0/
  12. I'm trying to figure out liveries on the Great Central, and while some are fairly easy to figure out, I would love to get confirmation on some classes, especially the 4-6-0s. Which GCR 4-6-0s carried the green livery in GC days, and which carried the black?
  13. For reference, here are the gradient profiles for the Talyllyn and Corris Railways. Did they have trouble with trains sticking on some of these flatter portions?
  14. Famously, the Ffestiniog Railway used gravity working on their slate trains, as did the Corris and Penrhyn railways. However, what was the minimum gradient necessary to keep a slate train of the average length and weight rolling?
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