Why are you assuming (and incorrectly I might add) that privatisation is anything to do with the Class 60's lasting forever? Before the loss of BR, Britain was building its own trains and had more people on the railway in employment! So prove me wrong if you think that I am lying. Because its the truth and if it wasn't for the 66 ying ying ying invasion. We would have British built locomotives even now such as the proposed Class 62 and the Class 65 locomotives that BR was developing on the mainline.You say that but if the railways hadn't been privatized, you couldn't say that the 60s would survive for ever.
They might have looked similar in design like the Class 92 and Class 60 etc as that was the design that Brush Traction was using back then. But the guts and the technology of the locomotives would be superior and designed for other purposes as 100 Class 60's back in the 1990's was more than enough for the heavy haul work like steel, coal and oil etc. New locomotives at the time were being sought after to eventually replace the ageing Class 47's, Class 37's etc on the intermodal and the lighter freight trains as they were getting on a bit due to age. But Brush Traction didn't offer any more new locomotive products to the market post-privatisation because the foreign firms like Wiscousin Central etc wanted a foreign built cheap to run to maximise profits like the Class 66 and this paved the way for the Class 66 swarm into the UK not that I am saying its a bad thing mind from a FTOC's POV

Also I dare say this with confidence that Brush Traction and BREL would still be building locomotives in Britain today had BR not been privatised and there is nothing wrong with having British designed and built locomotives as we did after all create the railway and I am proud of our history in terms of inventions and technology that we have given to the world
