There is some excellent work being done these days both in constructing new steam locomotives from scratch, and in restoration projects so extensive that they amount to more or less the same thing, but I'm afraid a lot of it leaves me somewhat cold: recreation of some random class that never made it into preservation is great if you're a particular fan of that class, but I find it somewhat lacking in comparison to a genuine preserved example with a genuine history behind it (similarly to the way a genuine XK120 is preferable to a newly-made XK120-style body with an XJ6 drivetrain in it), and few of the classes concerned have any noticeably unusual engineering features to distinguish them from other contemporary classes of similar size.
I include "Tornado" in this: a magnificent achievement, but it's still "more of the same"; it's a big Pacific much like all the preserved big Pacifics in essence, and nearly identical to some. I don't, however, particularly mean to include the various projects to reassemble selections of items from the GWR Lego locomotive parts kit in combinations which were not preserved as such, because it offers interesting technical possibilities of making up-to-date comparisons between the various different permutations (though also for this reason I am disappointed in those which do not aim to meet approval for running on the main line, since there's not much you can test and compare at 25mph).
The recent project I am particularly impressed with is the restoration of "Duke of Gloucester", because not only did they restore a unique experimental machine from a parlous and incomplete condition, they also discovered and corrected important details which BR had cocked up and thereby led to the experiment being considered a failure. With these matters put right, the locomotive performed as it had originally been expected that it should, ie. excellently. Silly trying to do an experiment if you don't build your apparatus properly... The project has other aspects also of considerable technical interest, such as the Caprotti valve gear, and as an indication of the way steam development might have continued in Britain if it had continued at all.
So I would like to see some of the talent on offer taking on the project of constructing not another new reciprocating locomotive, but a new Stanier Turbomotive: another unique experimental machine, an improvement on previous turbine experiments in that this one actually worked, and moreover worked extremely well, being well suited to the duties it was used for and apparently well-liked by its crews; its only significant problem being that it liked to explode its turbine blading every few hundred thousand miles and then sit for months waiting for spare parts, which would have been a stock item if there had been a fleet of them in service (as apparently there would have been if Stanier had had the chance to build 50 of them). Trouble was everyone at the time was preoccupied with the national ding-dong with some jumped-up corporal with a silly moustache, and the loco never got the attention it deserved...
As a project, it ought to be easier if anything than something like "Tornado", since you avoid a lot of very large and expensive parts - huge and complicated cylinder/valve castings, pistons, valves, motion parts and some at least of the massive and horribly expensive forgings for the rods. In place of that lot you have a turbine and gearbox unit which is not particularly large in itself, and is made of parts which are mostly of remarkably tractable size for a locomotive and are also very much still common parts in contemporary machinery. As for the turbine itself, turbines both gas and steam are now in far more widespread use, and better developed, than they were at the time of the original experiment, so that really ought to be far less of an obstacle than it was originally. (And we also have better metallurgy, and better cush drives, to counter the exploding-bladeset problem.)
Of course, it would absolutely have to be certified for main-line running, because that kind of speed range is the whole point of the idea and it needs to be able to run free to show its colours in a way that a piston engine doesn't. But there again, it should have a distinct advantage over any piston-engined project in the complete absence of hammer-blow, which is a big thing not to have to worry about.
I include "Tornado" in this: a magnificent achievement, but it's still "more of the same"; it's a big Pacific much like all the preserved big Pacifics in essence, and nearly identical to some. I don't, however, particularly mean to include the various projects to reassemble selections of items from the GWR Lego locomotive parts kit in combinations which were not preserved as such, because it offers interesting technical possibilities of making up-to-date comparisons between the various different permutations (though also for this reason I am disappointed in those which do not aim to meet approval for running on the main line, since there's not much you can test and compare at 25mph).
The recent project I am particularly impressed with is the restoration of "Duke of Gloucester", because not only did they restore a unique experimental machine from a parlous and incomplete condition, they also discovered and corrected important details which BR had cocked up and thereby led to the experiment being considered a failure. With these matters put right, the locomotive performed as it had originally been expected that it should, ie. excellently. Silly trying to do an experiment if you don't build your apparatus properly... The project has other aspects also of considerable technical interest, such as the Caprotti valve gear, and as an indication of the way steam development might have continued in Britain if it had continued at all.
So I would like to see some of the talent on offer taking on the project of constructing not another new reciprocating locomotive, but a new Stanier Turbomotive: another unique experimental machine, an improvement on previous turbine experiments in that this one actually worked, and moreover worked extremely well, being well suited to the duties it was used for and apparently well-liked by its crews; its only significant problem being that it liked to explode its turbine blading every few hundred thousand miles and then sit for months waiting for spare parts, which would have been a stock item if there had been a fleet of them in service (as apparently there would have been if Stanier had had the chance to build 50 of them). Trouble was everyone at the time was preoccupied with the national ding-dong with some jumped-up corporal with a silly moustache, and the loco never got the attention it deserved...
As a project, it ought to be easier if anything than something like "Tornado", since you avoid a lot of very large and expensive parts - huge and complicated cylinder/valve castings, pistons, valves, motion parts and some at least of the massive and horribly expensive forgings for the rods. In place of that lot you have a turbine and gearbox unit which is not particularly large in itself, and is made of parts which are mostly of remarkably tractable size for a locomotive and are also very much still common parts in contemporary machinery. As for the turbine itself, turbines both gas and steam are now in far more widespread use, and better developed, than they were at the time of the original experiment, so that really ought to be far less of an obstacle than it was originally. (And we also have better metallurgy, and better cush drives, to counter the exploding-bladeset problem.)
Of course, it would absolutely have to be certified for main-line running, because that kind of speed range is the whole point of the idea and it needs to be able to run free to show its colours in a way that a piston engine doesn't. But there again, it should have a distinct advantage over any piston-engined project in the complete absence of hammer-blow, which is a big thing not to have to worry about.