Thanks for posting this. It was interesting to see how the area looks todayFantastic story at Heckmondwike
Have been recently watching a local vlogger in the area concerned.
Thanks for posting this. It was interesting to see how the area looks todayFantastic story at Heckmondwike
Have been recently watching a local vlogger in the area concerned.
I'm intrigued to know why the 25s weren't operating in multiple.25050 + 25068 2220 Perth – Mossend
The 2220 Perth – Euston was load 12 including sleeping cars, and the driving of the class 25s was less than perfectly co-ordinated. Pulling away from Gleneagles they took it in turns to take power then overload, so it took several bouncy overloading attempts to get us going.
Amazing! If only you could organise something like that nowadays!Sunday 15/06/80 “The Heckmondwike”
Following the demise of D6130 in 1971, 5355/27 009 was my machine on the WHL. It's a shame that she also met a premature end in 1980 following a fire caused by a generator flashover.27009 0938 Dundee – Perth
The 25s each had a Perth crew in them, and were originally going coupled light engines to Mossend to work two separate freight / ballast services back north. It was a last minute arrangement to substitute them onto the Perth - Euston following the failure of 40157. As they had 2 crews anyway, the extra fuss of multi-ing the locos together - and then de-multiing them at Mossend - seemed unnecessary.I'm intrigued to know why the 25s weren't operating in multiple.
I've been up to Jungfraujoch - a very interesting trip and you certainly notice the thinness of the air when you get to the top. For our return journey, the unit was declared a failure, but their was a spare in the next platform, so no problem. A bit ironic that you can have a spare set available on the roof of Europe, but not at a mainline station in the UK!Tuesday 16th June 1981:
Interlaken Ost-Lauterbrunnen: BOB 307
Lauterbrunnen-Kleine Scheidegg: WAB 278
Kleine Scheidegg-Jungfraujoch: JB 28+207
Jungfraujoch-Kleine Scheidegg: JB 201+25
Kleine Scheidegg-Grindelwald: WAB 118+226
Grindelwald-Interlaken Ost: BOB 304
Saturday 19th June 1976:
I was thinking much the same thing. Whatever did they use them on?...and just look at all those 03s scattered across East Anglia. How times have changed!
Far from it! Keep up those memories!Phew! That was a bit of a marathon. Hope you're all not bored to tears!
IIRC, the 03s at Ipswich were used on the docks branch and the one at Stowmarket shunted grain wagons in and out of the maltings, but I'm open to correction. Norwich was the central maintenance depot for all the shunting locos in East Anglia and, judging by the number of 03s on shed on that date, they were probably already running out of employment for them. I think they also used to work the quayside lines at Lowestoft....and possibly Yarmouth as well at one time. Three of those seen at Ipswich (03 179/180/196) were ex-Bournemouth locos, fitted with high-level air brake pipe connections, which used to work the Weymouth Quay boat trains in pairs (and occasionally in threes) but, by this time they had been displaced, as the 33/1s had been cleared to run all the way to the Quay.Whatever did they use them on?
I was thinking much the same thing. Whatever did they use them on?
There is complete PDF scan of the 1973 shunter duties in this link:IIRC, the 03s at Ipswich were used on the docks branch and the one at Stowmarket shunted grain wagons in and out of the maltings, but I'm open to correction. Norwich was the central maintenance depot for all the shunting locos in East Anglia and, judging by the number of 03s on shed on that date, they were probably already running out of employment for them. I think they also used to work the quayside lines at Lowestoft....and possibly Yarmouth as well at one time.
Very interesting! Thanks for that.There is complete PDF scan of the 1973 shunter duties in this link:
Ah - the joys of "liberating" window labels!17/06/1989
Being a summer Saturday this must have been a day for trying to collect “Holidaymaker” window labels, the bonus being the ‘Hoover’ on the 14:15 Paddington to New Street
156425 Barrow In Furness - Preston
90003 Preston - Stafford
85014 Stafford - Wolverhampton
47714 Wolverhampton - Birmingham New Street
43005 / 43138 Birmingham New Street - Cheltenham Spa
43146 / 43136 Cheltenham Spa - Birmingham New Street
43165 / 43023 Birmingham New Street - Wolverhampton
86212 Wolverhampton - Birmingham New Street
47552 Birmingham New Street - Birmingham International
47407 Birmingham International - Birmingham New Street
47520 Birmingham New Street - Birmingham International
50034 Birmingham International - Birmingham New Street
86419 Birmingham New Street - Wolverhampton
86415 Wolverhampton - Preston
1420xx Preston - Barrow In Furness
17/06/2015
Work trip with the return timed for a 37 home!
1564xx Barrow – Whitehaven
37402 Whitehaven to Barrow
Summer Saturdays in 1983, the return morning Bangor at 11.15 was 1E99 to Scarborough. And at least on this day, 028 appears to have only worked as far as York, then working the 13.24 off Llandudno (1E53). Your two moves in an Easterly direction. The 19.25 off Scarborough was 1M80 to Liverpool. All courtesy of Motherlist for helping my memory with the slight change on 1983 summer Saturdays.Saturday 18/06/83
40028 1430 Huddersfield – York
40028 1750 York – Scarborough
40028 1925 Scarborough – Leeds
...
[Note that the appearance of 40028 on a Trans Pennine diagram doesn't fit well with NorthWestRover's BOO HOO comment above. It definitely wasn't on The Bangor in the afternoon].
Funny enough I was just mulling that over in my mind when you posted. I think the loco change at York was a regular diagrammed feature, due to fuel capacity issues.Summer Saturdays in 1983, the return morning Bangor at 11.15 was 1E99 to Scarborough. And at least on this day, 028 appears to have only worked as far as York, then working the 13.24 off Llandudno (1E53). Your two moves in an Easterly direction. The 19.25 off Scarborough was 1M80 to Liverpool. All courtesy of Motherlist for helping my memory with the slight change on 1983 summer Saturdays.
I think you are going to be very fed up with me and @CW2 over the next week or so.18th June 1983:
While there were 40s across the Pennines, in the north west and North Wales, things weren't so interesting further north:
Somewhere I have (had) a copy of Shunter Duties. Most of those 03s eluded me. It will not be far into the future when a railway enthusiast asks "what is a shunter ?".There is complete PDF scan of the 1973 shunter duties in this link:
There is one post with pages 1-3 and then further down the rest of the doc.![]()
Shunter Duties books - the illusive 1973 edition
Hi, I've been trying to track down a copy of the illusive 1973 edition of Shunter dutuies, the earliest one I;ve been able to find is the quite common 1979 edition, has anyone got any of the earlier edtitions?www.rmweb.co.uk
(Hope it's OK linking to another forum )
Oh yes memory jogged. Guide Bridge - I remember standing on the ground between two 40s. It was almost frightening - the noise. I also remember leaving the station to get a bus - I think it was a Sunday as that was the only day I could get to Manchester. It might have been a bus towards Reddish though. But as I walked away yet another freight would come scuttling through and I would rush back to id the loco. I had to tear myself away in the end. Every time I went to Manchester I seemed to have to go via the freight only line beyond Walsall to Rugely. Usually a duff and an excruciatingly slow route !. That bit into my available time further away from Birmingham.If you were clearing your 76s, you were probably at Guide Bridge and Reddish. You'd have seen 40s at both of those too, well I think there were at Reddish - it's a bit hazy now. Victoria would have had 40s on passenger and freight. Longsight depot too for 40s.
Victoria was tired looking - as it is now, but the old platform 11 (?), i.e. the very long one holds special memories as the point of many 40 departures. It's now platform 3 and sees mainly TPE units.