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Welshpool and Llanfair Light Railway

Discussion in 'Narrow Gauge Railways' started by tony51, Apr 10, 2017.

  1. Richieboy

    Richieboy New Member

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    It’s funny, there was discussion around a possible exchange in the late 90’s I think it was, as we were doing the rebuilds for the centenary, with the option of a Bayer heading to Aus as well - sadly I suspect more flight of fancy than anything concrete - but never say never I guess.

    Can’t imagine that being a cheap excursion however….

    The thought of the converted NGG16 or the G storming up the 1:29 is quite appealing too….
     
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  2. meeee

    meeee Member

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    I always thought the Welshpool was more plodding than storming.
     
  3. Spamcan81

    Spamcan81 Nat Pres stalwart

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    I’ve had some good thrash up the banks. Not much plodding involved.
     
  4. jamesd

    jamesd Member

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    Ascending Golfa can often be a bit of a plod but Dolarddyn and Sylfaen banks on the way to Welshpool are usually good for a bit of thrash.
     
  5. tony51

    tony51 New Member

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    It would be nice but they would be pretty large for the W&L. In fact they are both longer and heavier than Orion, which was sold for being too big!

    https://puffingbilly.com.au/about/rolling-stock/locomotive-fleet/

    https://jokioistenmuseorautatie.fi/...comotives/884-steam-locomotive-number-5-orion
     
  6. jamesd

    jamesd Member

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    They're pretty similar in size and weight to Orion, 1 ton lighter and and the same overall length but admittedly are rather too big for regular use on the W&L.
     
  7. MuzTrem

    MuzTrem Member

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    Quite apart from the financial costs, I think we should also be very conscious of the carbon costs of moving locos over long distances. In current circumstances, scrutiny of heritage railways for our use of fossil fuels is only going to increase; we need to show that we are being responsible and not burning more than we have to. It's one thing to ship a loco like Zillertal, which was sent to fulfil a genuine motive power need over a period of several years; but to ship a loco overseas just for a jolly is, I think, becoming hard to justify.

    Sent from my SM-A125F using Tapatalk
     
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  8. brennan

    brennan Member

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    But it's ok for the PM and entourage to jet around the world every five minutes?
     
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  9. goldfish

    goldfish Nat Pres stalwart

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    Blimey. That’s ‘whataboutery’ of the highest standard.
     
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  10. NGChrisW

    NGChrisW New Member

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    I think what would be a more relevant issue is that I don’t think that either line could actually spare any motive power at present!
    I understand from a couple of their drivers that the Puffing Billy is currently suffering from a lack of motive power availability and the W&L really wouldn’t want to lose half of its active steam fleet. Mind you, they could always send them that big red diesel as it doesn’t appear to have done much useful work on the W&L since it arrived a few years ago.
    If the W&L is better suited to a “plodder” an Alishan shay would be a far better “what if” bet (and they were used on passenger trains in Taiwan)
     
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  11. garth manor

    garth manor Well-Known Member

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    They should follow the lead of the Royals ?
     
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  12. MuzTrem

    MuzTrem Member

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    Ah, but you're forgetting politicians' logic regarding transport:

    Cars/planes = essential use of public funds
    Trains = waste of taxpayers' money...



    Sent from my SM-A125F using Tapatalk
     
  13. tony51

    tony51 New Member

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  14. tony51

    tony51 New Member

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    Readers of The Earl newsletter will now regard you as clairvoyant….
     
  15. andrewshimmin

    andrewshimmin Well-Known Member

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    Ha ha, I just read the Earl and thought "get in!".
    Unlikely to run anytime soon I would imagine.

    Sent from my Pixel 7 using Tapatalk
     
  16. tony51

    tony51 New Member

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    According to comments on Facebook, Conqueror was offered to the SKLR but they had to decline as they had no space and it is too heavy to run on the Sittingbourne viaduct anyway. I never realised it was so big, this article on Bowaters locos states its weight as 27 tons, tractive effort 12,442lbs.

    https://sremg.org.uk/RlyMag/LocomotivesAtSittingbournePaperMills.pdf
     
  17. Major Midget

    Major Midget New Member

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    Limited space on site at Kemsley Down has seen the thinning out of the number of wagons during my lifetime as well, not to mention how little space there is undercover. As nice as Conqueror returning to part of it's old stomping ground would be, space, time & usefulness work against it. Hopefully the WLLR proves a fruitful home for it.

    Conqueror, Chevalier & Unique were all too heavy for the viaduct, though perhaps surprisingly Monarch wasn't, at least on one occasion anyway.
     
  18. Vulcan Works

    Vulcan Works Member

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    Such things are only hard to justify when a minority of people take it upon themselves to make it a problem! A loco carried on a freighter that’s already making the sailing adds a fraction of a fraction to an already small carbon impact. I agree that the risk of some people making a fuss about heritage attractions using fossil fuels is likely to increase over time though.
     

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