Was asbestos used in 1980s built trainsI can see they was worried about possible asbestos!
58050 is in Spain, not France, and still exists.Does that mean 58050 has been recycled or not? I'm pretty sure that's where it was,I thought it was designated for national collection
Wasn't that one in Spain with three others ?Does that mean 58050 has been recycled or not? I'm pretty sure that's where it was,I thought it was designated for national collection
of course not... but they were relatively heavy locos, so I guess they have a good scrap value, especially as a lot of it is in the underframe/chassis.Was asbestos used in 1980s built trains
Good locos ? Not by the reports of the time , very liable to slipping unlike the 56’sGood locos, but from another era
Would be 36-40 years old
58s were inferior to class 56s in most respects and that is why EWS binned, then exported them. Whilst working on the hire contracts in France and Spain they had the benefit of being out and back from the same maintenance location, unlike EWS diverse locatrions in the UK.The video comments always provide a bit of light relief on weekend mornings like this. What a load of hyper emotional nonsense.
That is irrelevant really. The IDS bought a redundant 58, took what they needed from it and disposed of the rest. It hasn't affected the outcome of the remainers in England because the "preserved" ones are still broke anyway, with apparently little support for them apart from line in the book merchants and their red pensTo think one of the few in the UK is being butchered to make a facsimile of one of the LMS prototypes...
But if there were only a handful of 37s left, and a load of them had just been destroyed by the "cheese-eating surrender monkeys", there probably wouldn't be so much support for the Baby Deltic project.That is irrelevant really. The IDS bought a redundant 58, took what they needed from it and disposed of the rest. It hasn't affected the outcome of the remainers in England because the "preserved" ones are still broke anyway, with apparently little support for them apart from line in the book merchants and their red pens
Though as we’ve seen numerous times of late, listing something for the National Collection doesn’t mean it will happen, eg 77382 (442401), 313201 etc…58050 is in Spain, not France, and still exists.
But there aren't and haven't been.But if there were only a handful of 37s left, and a load of them had just been destroyed by the "cheese-eating surrender monkeys", there probably wouldn't be so much support for the Baby Deltic project.
Indeed. The first one I encountered was bringing a train of Seacows into Woking Yard. It's a good job the wagon brakes worked, or the whole lot would have slid onto Platform 1 (wouldn't have been the first time that happened BTW).Good locos ? Not by the reports of the time , very liable to slipping unlike the 56’s
Quite.What a load of hyper emotional nonsense.
37188 certainly won’t run again. It was cut up in 2019.But there aren't and haven't been.
Besides which there are extant 37s which are unlikely to ever run again, in exactly the same scenario as the 58s. Straight off the top of my head 37042 37152 37188 and 37679 are just four.
Not sure that slurring the French supports the argument too much because AIUI it is DB who have planned the destruction of the 58s. But hey
The 58s were conceived as a stopgap, but within 10 years of them being built, the trainload coal traffic that they were built for was in terminal decline.
In preservation terms, it would probably be more important to have 60100, as the last main line diesel locomotive built in Britain to date.
Quite. Their withdrawal after 10-15 years was ridiculous.Personally, I'm not bothered what some people think, I love the class 58's and miss travelling to monk Fryston and Worksop and other great locations to see them, yes they weren't perfect but what trains are. From seeing the mock-up model and reading about them in the Railnews when I was a youngster, they're the only 'modern' locomotive that I like as much as 50s and 60s classic traction.
Yes I know I'm sentimental, it's what helps me to live in this mad world.
The video comments always provide a bit of light relief on weekend mornings like this. What a load of hyper emotional nonsense.
Indeed.The video comments always provide a bit of light relief on weekend mornings like this. What a load of hyper emotional nonsense.
No. Have some respect please. Just because you don’t like the 58s some people like them (including me).The video comments always provide a bit of light relief on weekend mornings like this. What a load of hyper emotional nonsense.
No. Have some respect please. Just because you don’t like the 58s some people like them (including me).
Yes. Next questionAre we meant to have a period of mourning every time something is cut up these days?
Respect of other people’s opinions. Calling comments on YouTube videos that have sentiment “rubbish” is extremely disrespectful, which I’m relatively sure is against the forum rules. You think they weren’t good locos, so what? Some people think the 37s weren’t good locos, yet they survived 60 years. Other people think they were good locos. I’m not condemning their scrapping, I’m annoyed at the people that have no respect for others who’s childhood locos may have been 58s.Where does respect come into it? Some machines that weren't especially effective at the job they were designed for have been scrapped; the only realistic outcome for them, and a totally understandable one.
Are we meant to have a period of mourning every time something is cut up these days?