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Rebuilt Patriot and Rebuilt Scot

Discussion in 'Steam Traction' started by andrewshimmin, Nov 1, 2014.

  1. Sheff

    Sheff Resident of Nat Pres

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    Has no one mentioned that 1930's anachronism, the ultimate in retro-styling, the Dukedog? How crews from other companies must have reacted to seeing one of these 'new loco's' rolling up to an adjacent platform one can only wonder!
     
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  2. Jamessquared

    Jamessquared Nat Pres stalwart

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    Ah yes. Just imagine the railway scene in Britain on the eve of the Second World War:

    On the Southern, a striking new Malachite paint scheme is being applied to a stupendous class of 3 cylinder 4-4-0s, running Waterloo to Bournemouth expresses in two hours, while mainline electric trains rush to the south coast resorts. On the East Coast, garter blue A4s are streaking north at 100mph. On the west coast, giant Duchesses are hauling prodigious loads at speed over the northern hills.

    Meanwhile, in Swindon, Victoria is still on the throne, the Kaiser is still the future King's cousin, Churchill is a young war reporter in South Africa and the works are busy turning out the latest state-of-the-art double-frame 4-4-0s ...

    Tom
     
  3. Sir Nigel Gresley

    Sir Nigel Gresley Member

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    Thank you for that explanation. I have always wondered about the SR classifications ever since my first holiday visit to Devon, with my parents, in 1962. (Pulled by "Lydford" from Barnstaple Junction to Exeter Central for a day's spotting, including 72A: Absolute heaven for a young lad whose home sheds were 55A, 50A and 36A.) Do you know the meaning of the yellow triangle on the cabside? Water treatment?
     
  4. andrewshimmin

    andrewshimmin Well-Known Member

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    I must admit that it turns out ignorance was bliss where all classification business is concerned.
    I wish the LMS had had a proper class designation system like the LNER...
    (unabashed LMS fan).
     
  5. ADB968008

    ADB968008 Guest

    Its always been a fascinating thing to me.. is to look back at documents / images etc from the late 1930s.. and to see the complete naivety at was about to become..
    In my room I have a Summer 1939 LMS timetable... not a hint inside... indeed it's even advertising LMS Airline flights to the Isle of Man !

    The other interesting example is those Borsig guys in Ashford building 4-4-0's (imported from Germany) who completed them in July 1914.. did they really complete assembly of them to the letter or drop tools and got out of town on the last boat ??

    Its scary to compare those images to our current life and how easily it could be turned upside down...for instance what happens if we quit the EU and Europe says no... would Putin be our ally or our enemy ?.. Kind of suspect that decision would split East / West Europe overnight and start the war right there...
    As for our rail network... 7 well placed explosions on 7 well intended centralised signal boxes / power supply sources would see steam back on the mainline and manual signalling for the rest of the term putting us at equal with Russia's primitive road vehicles.
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Nov 4, 2014
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  6. Kinghambranch

    Kinghambranch Well-Known Member

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    I have a copy (not in good condition) of the 1939 copy of the GWR "Holiday Haunts" catalogue. It makes for interesting reading. Despite apparent commercial normality (business always does well, even in conflict) the UK was very busy preparing for the inevitability of WWII, witness the phenomenal "expansion period" of the RAF in the years 1936 to 1940, with many new "permanent" bases being built and some aircraft types ordered off the drawing board. Anyway, must stop now as we are on holiday and its our 25th wedding anniversary and I've just received a stern look from my other half.
     
    Last edited: Nov 5, 2014
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  7. NOTFORME_99

    NOTFORME_99 New Member

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    Did the Black 5 and the 8F share the same boiler ?
     
  8. LMS2968

    LMS2968 Part of the furniture

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    No, the 8Fs' barrel was one foot shorter than the Black Fives'. There were in fact four types of Class 3 boiler: 3A = Jubilee; 3B = Black Five; 3C = 8F and 3D = 2-6-0. However, the 3A, 3B and 3C boilers were each subdivided into two sub-groups: vertical and sloping throatplate. There was therefore seven types of Class 3 boiler, none of which were readily interchangeable without modifications to the receiving engine's frames, and then only within the same class of engine.
     
  9. flying scotsman123

    flying scotsman123 Resident of Nat Pres

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    I believe the 44901 group were/are (the patriot group have given up waiting for it) going to use the boiler from the 8F that still hasn't returned from Turkey, with the relevant modifications.
     
  10. LMS2968

    LMS2968 Part of the furniture

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    They would need to replace the front boiler ring, which was made parallel specifically to allow the same firebox and tapered boiler section to be common. The small tubes on the Black Five were 1 7/8" while those of the 8F are only 1 3/4", so unless tubeplates are changed, it might be a little shy for steam. Superheaters will interchange, but new, longer elements required, along with new tubes and flues.
     
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  11. 242A1

    242A1 Well-Known Member

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    A fine example of standardisation.
     
  12. LMS2968

    LMS2968 Part of the furniture

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    ... or getting the best tool for the job!
     
  13. 242A1

    242A1 Well-Known Member

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    Not if it's a Belpaire box it isn't.

    But as a small aside, it is a shame that Maeve is not included here, for comparison's sake and all that.
     
    Last edited: Nov 4, 2014
  14. ADB968008

    ADB968008 Guest

    Aye, the excuse I read for this was because they prefer working with Steel Fireboxes... ??? errr...
     
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  15. andrewshimmin

    andrewshimmin Well-Known Member

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    Now you're talking....
    Despite the superficial similarities (i.e
    very handsome!) I think the GSR 800s had little detail in common with the LMS rebuilt 4-6-0s. For example, I believe the Irish locos have parallel boilers under the casing. But what magnificent locos, and how wonderful we still have one, even if there is no realistic prospect of her steaming again.
    Of course the 800s (or B1a if you prefer) predated the LMS rebuilds (apart from British Legion)
     
  16. Jamessquared

    Jamessquared Nat Pres stalwart

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    Yes, AFAIK it showed the locos were fitted with the briquette water treatment system. Originally I believe it was a round dot rather than a triangle.

    There are lots of oddities when you look closely. Amongst the mixed traffic designs, it seems they tended to either use separate P/F classifications (i.e. 2P 2F) but sometimes just a number (i.e. 4). I'm not sure if it was time-dependent, or just local variation amongst the people responsible for painting.

    Some examples (none of them my photos, and all modern photos though I believe properly researched):

    34067 Tangmere - labelled 7P 5FA, yellow triangle - http://www.hentis-rail.co.uk/PooleGallery/2012/PEJD12/images/2/34067Number.JPG

    73082 Camelot - labelled 5P/5F (with slash, no brake classification), yellow dot - http://www.the-siding.co.uk/steam/pictures/73082.jpg (I think this is an earlier scheme)

    32473 Birch Grove - labelled 2P 2FB (no water treatment) - http://www.the-siding.co.uk/steam/pictures/73082.jpg

    80151 - labelled plain 4 (implying mixed traffic), yellow triangle - http://locoyard.files.wordpress.com...park-br-standard-4mt-tank-80151-rear-view.jpg

    32678 Knowle - labelled 0P (because it is a passenger design, not mixed-traffic, so can't just be labelled "0") - https://locoyard.files.wordpress.co...tenterden-town-a1x-terrier-ex-lbscr-32678.jpg

    And for perversity: 30585 - labelled 0P because technically it was built as a passenger tank, even though a Beattie Well Tank probably hadn't had a regular passenger duty for about 50 years by time they received a BR power classification! - http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1c/LSWR_0298_Class_Beattie_Well_Tank_4.jpg

    The Standard and Fairburn class 4s were both classified 4P 4FA. However, the Fairburn's at least seemed to arrive on the Southern with just 4P as a power classification (I believe they were classified 4P by the LMS). Given that a more common class-labelling scheme on the Southern was letter-number rather than number-letter, they rapidly became known as P4's (even though fundamentally the class name and power classification are entirely separate constructs).

    Tom
     
    Last edited: Nov 4, 2014
  17. LMS2968

    LMS2968 Part of the furniture

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    A point of view, of course, and there is some merit to it. But while the LNER stayed with round-topped fireboxes, the GWR, LMS and Southern, even after OVS Bulleid came from the LNER, and BR all went for Belpaires.
     
  18. Martin Perry

    Martin Perry Nat Pres stalwart Staff Member Moderator Friend

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    Will have to disagree regarding the looks, personally I think that the 800s look a little oddly proportioned; top heavy and the bogie wheels look too small.
     
  19. andrewshimmin

    andrewshimmin Well-Known Member

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    But surely, 242A1, Chapelon used Belpaire boxes on all his new-build designs...
     
  20. Steve

    Steve Resident of Nat Pres Friend

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    When you're building to the limits of the loading gauge,boiler design very much becomes a compromise of limiting dimensions (how many people realise that wheel diameter limits the size of a boiler?) and it is easier to fit the safety valves in on a Belpaire boiler.
     

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