The 90v vs 110v distinction in the large D.E. shunters seems to have been relevant to condemnation decisions. Around 1970 I used to see the stock changes lists which gave reason for condemnation and, for the D.E. shunters, it was either 'run-down condition' or 'xx volts'. This voltage was always the same, I think that it was the 90 variation but I'm not sure.
I kept (somewhere but can't find) an article about B.R. D.E. shunters in a trade magazine I used to see in the 1960's - I think it was called
The locomotive Engineer. This referred to the rating being 400 h.p. (in most cases) but also some were 430 h.p. (or maybe 425??) . Shattered my faith in the accuracy of Ian Allan's A.B.C.s
Indeed, this was a condemnation decision factor; somewhere or other I have the original build list breakdown by numbers which was 90 or 110 V; not on hand.
re horsepower, when you look at trade mags, and especially w.r.t. to EE stuff, one must bear in mind what is being quoted - is it the continuous engine rating, the one hour rating, or something else.
The jump from 'original' gronk 350 hp to 400 hp was a continuous rating uprating (if you see what I mean); by the time BR was into huge series production, the basic 6K engine had already been around for 20 years or so and progressed in that time. Just as late 1940s the EE 16SVT per prototypes was 1600 hp, it was 2000 hp by 1955 orders - the 6K moved the same way.
I would suggest if 425/430 hp were quoted for a gronk power unit, that might be the one hour rating. EE had an infernal habit of doing this; the matter of everyone going around stating EE507 motors in 4Vep were nominal 275 hp but everything else EE507 nominal 250 hp is an example: 4Vep motors were EXACTLY THE SAME EE507s as Cigs, Ceps, EPB, and all the rest had, and indeed freely interchanged with them, just EE quoted the one hour rating in blurb and everyone taken in ever since.
IA ABC inaccuracy - omissions as well as errors - is a more significant issue than many realise. And the root cause of much debate. It always concerns 'trainspotter' OCD on accuracy and precision of information, yet quite significant data in ABC was wrong. RCTS then P5 moved a big step forwards in this respect on locos - but still errors get through - or old errors reintroduced; I have recently done a review of a 2024 publication for a publisher where I identified around 100 errors in this sort of data, few of which are howlers or typos, but most of which are replicated from flawed sources. Unfortunately, the review was after publication not before. I'm not going to say which book it is.
Back to IA ABC, there are whole complete locos omitted from every edition - and if you follow those omissions through, the /same/ locos are /generally/ omitted from other works compiling 'registers' of all diesel locos, for example, and the same locos are /general/ omitted from the likes of wiki-dribble and similar web stuff.
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47468 of course was renumbered 47300 purely to replace 47343 which had been withdrawn following collision damage.
I am glad this one has been mentioned again.
I have asked more than once before was 47300 REALLY a 47/3 or a 47/2.
The knee jerk answers of 'third digit is a 3' and 'it had SSC => 47/3' do not answer that one - many 47/2 had SSC. Was 47300 really SSC fitted at rebuild ? Given the run down of the need for SSC loco well well under way at that , why would they do this ?
It just happens the number 47300 fell in the one single gap between 47299 and 47301, and no way is it clear if it was added to then end of 47/2 or the start of 47/3.
A perfect example of trainspotter categorisation not necessarily providing the right answer.