Railguy220
Member
Do you think they should of kept these instead of scrapping them? Opinions please! 

Before that the word was Nott's County Council were going to buy them for the Robin Hood Line.
Another great idea that never came to fruition. They'd have been perfect for the RHL, although doesn't this line take 3 diagrams, 1 for the Woodhouse runs and 2 for the Worksops?
As to looking attractive - what? They were but ugly units I'm afraid and very alien to most other units. The dull grey livery didn't exactly help spruce things up either. I never travelled on one though so I can't comment on that side of things.
Don't know, it would be nice to do one. I'd like to see the drivers view for once - the closest I can get to that is on trainz or looking through the window of the locked out cab in a LM 150/0 unitware can i get a 150 cab ride from
What are the 'bumpy' things on the roof in the middle of each carriage, I noticed they're on pacers too?
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Don't know, it would be nice to do one. I'd like to see the drivers view for once - the closest I can get to that is on trainz or looking through the window of the locked put cab in a LM 150/0 unit
wher can i get your 150 untet for trainz
Wonder what they would have looked like had they been kept and ended up in proper Regional Railway colours, then Central and finally East Midland Trains? Someone with photoshop tallent should try that out. Of cource if they had gone into production instead of the 150 they would have ended up in a big variety of liveries (Central, Northern, First North Western, Arriva, Valley Lines, Wessex, Anglia, Scotrail etc).
That's the radiators and cooling group. On Pacers, the roof mounted pod served the same purpose as on a Leyland National bus, that of a roof mounted heater. They proved inefficient, and many Pacers now have floor level heaters, and the later Leyland National buses also were not fitted with this feature. I'm not sure if the heating pods also doubled up as the radiators on Pacers and Leyland Nationals, which would make sense as a more efficient use of excess heat.What are the 'bumpy' things on the roof in the middle of each carriage, I noticed they're on pacers too?
I suspect that such a scenario would be possible, but only in the realms of an alternate reality where demand for rail travel was on the up in the mid eighties, and funding was more forthcoming for better quality trains.Imagine if they had both gone into production (150 & 151), would we have pacers anymore (as in now)?
What if Metro Cammell had won the 150 contract, the fleet of Britain's Railways could be different today.
Really?
The only thing I would see that would of been different is that we would be talking about the BREL Sprinter in the same context as we speak about the Metro Cammel one now?