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6880 Betton Grange

Discussion in 'Steam Traction' started by Thompson1706, Nov 4, 2011.

  1. Johnb

    Johnb Nat Pres stalwart

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    I think people who make those silly comments are just trying to provoke a reaction and start a pointless argument. I’m no GW fan but the Grange mob have achieved something we would have all thought impossible 20 years ago. When it does its first photo charter hopefully I’ll be on it.
    Now I’ll spend the rest of the day in SW London helping to get some Southern tat match fit for the mainline!
     
  2. Flying Phil

    Flying Phil Part of the furniture

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    Well done to the Grange team. Your locomotive looks fantastic and I'm sure you all feel very proud - and rightly so!
     
  3. paullad1984

    paullad1984 Member

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    I for one am glad to see her actually running.
     
  4. bristolian

    bristolian Member

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    3ABescot and Colin Allcars like this.
  5. Sidmouth

    Sidmouth Resident of Nat Pres Staff Member Moderator

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    It is all too easy to poke fun and criticise and even say we knew better when the gala withdrawals sadly happened but unless you are activiely involved in creating the engine , you do not know the conversations that take place , the completion dates suggested and dealing with the clamour from multiple railways to host the engine .
     
  6. Daddsie71b

    Daddsie71b Member Friend

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    Morris Minors were built in the Midlands
     
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  7. Scrat

    Scrat New Member

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    I'm sorry to hear you are suffering so badly with your eyesight in later life. Specsavers do home vistis now you know......
     
  8. brmp201

    brmp201 Member

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    (not my video)
     
  9. Daddsie71b

    Daddsie71b Member Friend

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    Gas works Railway
     
  10. 21B

    21B Part of the furniture

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    I can only speak from personal experience, but I would take a GW designed engine every time over an unrebuilt Bulleid. The two scariest and worst turns ever in my 35 years on the footplate were with the latter.

    GW engines can be uncomfortable and a bit basic, but they mostly just work. As do the majority of engines from any railway company. The unrebuilt BB or WC is a design that is and was fabulous when working, but more difficult than average to keep that way. I don’t buy into this now somewhat silly tribalism around the big four. If it is steam I like it, I acknowledge that I like some more than others, but that’s based on design and experience. The GW 56xx and versions is horrid for example. The Q and the S15 sublime, the GW mogul brilliant, the A1 amazing and the Std 4 tank magic carpet smooth.
     
  11. 2857Harry

    2857Harry Well-Known Member

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    Ultimately on a heritage line you will not get better than a Manor or Hall, so I’m absolutely certain the Grange will be fantastic.

    As nice as it is to fire the Bullied at the SVR, the amount of prep time it takes, coal, water and oil it uses and just the general pain in the **** it is compared to the Manors or Hall, makes it less than ideal
     
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  12. ruddingtonrsh56

    ruddingtonrsh56 Well-Known Member

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    Depends on the heritage line - I've crewed a Hall, Manor, Large Prairie, Small Prairie, 5700, Standard 2 and Caley Tank at Shackerstone and I'd say the Standard 2 was the best of the bunch for what we need.
     
    Last edited: Apr 12, 2024
  13. Jamessquared

    Jamessquared Nat Pres stalwart

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    I'd challenge that first statement :rolleyes:

    Firstly, it obviously depends on the line, the loads and the gradient. And I'd also echo @21B comment "If it is steam I like it" - I can play the tribal game for japes, but I'm happy to be on most locos.

    Clearly there will be lots of firemen more experienced than me - but I just totted up and reckon I have fired about 30 different locos, so I have some experience. They range in date from 1872 to 1959; in size from a tiny 0-4-0T industrial to a 9F; span across many pre-grouping locos, all of the big four and a number of BR standards. So I think I have got a fair claim to know "what does the job". For our line (quite steeply graded) I'd say that all round, an 80xxx tank takes some beating. A close second (load adjusted) is a Wainwright H or Stirling O1. An S15 will shift anything but is heavy to prepare.

    And a Hall? Curate's egg, to me. Out on the line they are good from a fireman's point of view - steam well, pull well. But as the curate said of his egg: "parts of it were excellent". The woeful parts about a Hall are preparing it which is singularly unpleasant and heavy. Once it is alight, the day gets better, though they need two gauge glasses for reasons discussed some months ago on the Bluebell thread. (I could point to at least two historic firebox crown collapses that would have been avoided had they had two glasses - one of which happened on a Grange, in which a fitter's mistake went undetected because there was no second glass that would have made it immediately apparent).

    Tom
     
  14. Johnb

    Johnb Nat Pres stalwart

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    I would think any engine of that size will be a bit ungainly for a heritage line, apart from possibly the GCR. The third cylinder is a bit awakward as it was never designed to be manually oiled and the firebox swallows a lot of coal. As for the original unrebuilts talking to enginemen back in steam days they seemed to either swear by them or swear at them, preparation was obviously simpler. The mystery is with all three Southerm constituent companies having developed reliable steam reversing gear Bulleid went to the trouble of designing his own that wasn’t reliable.
     
  15. 21B

    21B Part of the furniture

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    I have been on 35005 at the GCR. It was barely in steam and able to pull the train. I have also fired the same engine with 9 or more on over the MHR and had it properly superheating. Which place is it the more ungainly at? Also that engine worked over the MHR prior to withdrawal and the doyen of the class was named in a ceremony at Alresford.

    The steam reverser bit has always puzzled me too because Drummond’s works really well. Someone said to me recently that it was probably the rivalry between the different drawing offices that created the problem. Maybe there is some truth to that, I don’t know, but since driving the T9 it has me wishing that Bulleid hadn’t bothered.
     
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  16. 21B

    21B Part of the furniture

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    For “heavy” to prep…. try Lord Nelson. Over 200 oiling points as there are four sets of motion. However, once prepped the rest of the experience is brilliant. The King was the same (with fewer oiling points ).
    For ease of prep….std5. There was a bit of a flap one day and we needed another engine out. The 5 was in steam but not prepped. 20 mins later I had it on a train!
     
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  17. Matt37401

    Matt37401 Nat Pres stalwart

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    If we’re going to just willy wave about what’s ‘best’ on a 68xx thread then can I just throw this one in of 6879?;)
    IMG_9298.jpeg Cheers, Matt :)
     
    Last edited: Apr 13, 2024
  18. Steve

    Steve Resident of Nat Pres Friend

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    Never knew these were referred to as ‘willies’ and all those people who stick their torsos out of droplights when they see one are willie waving. You live and learn. ;)
     
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  19. Johnb

    Johnb Nat Pres stalwart

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    Many years ago I was talking to an ex Camden man while waiting for 46201 to appear, he said the class was known as a corky Liz there were so many oiling points.
    I agree with your point about the Mid Hants, it does have some proper gradients to make them cough a bit. What I meant was a Pacific is a bit ungainly and expensive to work on a heritage line given the average train length and the branch line nature of most lines.
     
    Last edited: Apr 13, 2024
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  20. std tank

    std tank Part of the furniture

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    Lizzies, often referred to as LMS Castles with regards to lubrication.
     

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