bramling
Veteran Member
I know the class 508s originally entered service on the South Western division, and were subsequently transferred to the Wirral Line after their first few years.
However, when ordered, was it the original intention these trains would transfer to Liverpool, or was this decision only taken after the trains entered service?
I've heard two conflicting theories, firstly they were always originally intended for Liverpool (but seems a lot of expense to build them as 4 cars when presumably it was always known Liverpool would require 3/6 car trains), but equally I've heard it said from reliable sources that they were intended for the South Western, but the Southern didn't like them because they were non-standard compared to the rest of the (then) Southern units (if intended for the Southern how come the class 5XX?). Always wondered as it's something that's never quite made sense.
Of course there were wasn't any other design on the table at the time, the MkIII designs didn't come until slightly later as I understand it. This does make me err more towards the stop-gap idea. It's noticeable the class 508s have different compressors to the 507s, sounding more akin to the contemporary Southern units.
However, when ordered, was it the original intention these trains would transfer to Liverpool, or was this decision only taken after the trains entered service?
I've heard two conflicting theories, firstly they were always originally intended for Liverpool (but seems a lot of expense to build them as 4 cars when presumably it was always known Liverpool would require 3/6 car trains), but equally I've heard it said from reliable sources that they were intended for the South Western, but the Southern didn't like them because they were non-standard compared to the rest of the (then) Southern units (if intended for the Southern how come the class 5XX?). Always wondered as it's something that's never quite made sense.
Of course there were wasn't any other design on the table at the time, the MkIII designs didn't come until slightly later as I understand it. This does make me err more towards the stop-gap idea. It's noticeable the class 508s have different compressors to the 507s, sounding more akin to the contemporary Southern units.