Merle Haggard
Established Member
By the way - private owner wagons on Speedlink - the empty ones - got a free ride !
Not always - this is taking me back to the bane of my working life 25 years ago!
One of our customers had their own wagon controller, who would phone the local TOPS office for empty (PO car carrying) wagons to be released back to the loading point. This should have required a flow number, so that a charge was raised, but the customer didn't quote it so the TOPS office assumed it was another railway employee making the request and released it as an empty, which didn't require a flow number and went free. I spent a lot of effort tracking these down, and generating not inconsiderable revenue - far more than my salary!. Mr Bekhardt's men, who didn't understand TOPS, thought I was wasting my time, TOPS did everything, and put a stop to it.
One of the purposes of what became Speedlink was the conveyance of major customers' minor flows; the idea that every customer with very profitable trainload traffic also had small flows of less traffic than could be run economically as a trainload. The concept was that these flows could provide a base load, requiring only a comparatively small amount of other customers' ad hoc traffic to move into profitability.
Air braked 45t GLW wagons were introduced in number around 1970. The two usual types were originally known as 'Supervans' and 'Superwagons' (although one of my colleagues referred to them as 'the new GLW-type wagons

And my thanks for the details about 56302 - so much knowledge here, we all learn something. Garston was a story in itself - some of the tales seemed unbelievable - turned out they were true
