Penmorfa
Member
The Conwy Valley will get 197's. The 230's are only for Wrexham to Bidston230 aren't even using the same power as the original
The Conwy Valley will get 197's. The 230's are only for Wrexham to Bidston230 aren't even using the same power as the original
The lines north of Whitehaven were just about the first ones to get the Derby Lightweights.Cumbria Coast line ??
Depending on how strict we're being, the class 140 ran on the HOWL as part of its trials. Arguably if that route wasn't the first one it ran, it wasn't "new".So if we ignore reopenings we seem to have the Island Line (dead cert there!) and my suggestion of the Central Wales - anyone know about the 150s on that line?
175s (and possibly 185s) ran to Millom from new I think. Anything north of there might well qualify though...Cumbria Coast line ??
...Or not!The lines north of Whitehaven were just about the first ones to get the Derby Lightweights.
Cumbria coast was recipient of one of the very first BR DMMU schemes a whole fleet of Derby lightweights were delivered specifically for it.Cumbria Coast line ??
Are you sure about that? I thought the 230s were for Wrexham to Bidston and the Conwy Valley?The Conwy Valley will get 197's. The 230's are only for Wrexham to Bidston
The first two had brand new 142s during the 1980s, albeit soon replaced with older stock. Moreover, the first has had brand new intercity stock over the years.Newton abbot to Paignton / Torquay?
Exeter to Exmouth?
Bristol to Severn beach?
The Marple Wharf Jct-Macclesfield line got new Derby Lightweight DMUs in the 1950s, when the passenger services were dieselised at the same time as the Hayfield line. The Hayfield line retained a couple of rush hour steam services for a few years, but I am unsure if the same was true of the Macclesfield (via Romiley) route. On both routes the usual steam locos were C13s,and occasionally A5s neither of which were definitely not new when they arrived from their previous duties in London suburbia.When I was a kid and the Rose Hill line still ran through to Macclesfield (the Rose-Hill - Macc bit closed in 1971) it tended to see 101s but 101s were pretty new then. I never saw a kettle on it.
The first two had brand new 142s during the 1980s, albeit soon replaced with older stock. Moreover, the first has had brand new intercity stock over the years.
Bank Foot - Newcastle Airport (1991) would count, as although most of it was formerly heavy rail as part of the former Ponteland branch, it shut to passengers pre WW2, and used cast offs from other lines.If we really wanted to stretch it .. could say sections of the T&W metro built after 1982?
The DMUs weren't new. The Exmouth line received new Mk1 suburbans around 1956, but I don't think they worked the other lines - however, there would have been new stock on the Waterloo workings.I guess the DMU's that replaced steam in 1964 were also new at that point? ( Exmouth- Exeter/Exmouth - Tipton St Johns, Sidmouth Junction - Sidmouth) ? Also I guess the 2-6-2's and 4's which replaced earlier steam engines were new when they replaced older SR classes. Which begs the question is a loco classed as rolling stock or just a loco? Also Warships and 47's would have been new ( ish?) on loco hauled services at this time?
The cross-country sets were new to Bristol area services, which included the Weymouth lineDid 155s work Westbury to Weymouth when new? That route may be in with a chance of qualifying as 150s were secondhand and 158s most likely didn't go there new.
I’m pretty sure that the S&C got brand new 156s. The attached photo is estimated to be from around 1996, so assuming that such diagramming had been around for a few years then the S&C would have been the recipient of new trains.The cross-country sets were new to Bristol area services, which included the Weymouth line
When did Morecambe-Leeds get DMUs?
And Settle-Carlisle?
The service was an extension of the Airedale service when I first knew it in 1990, so I think it had Pacers from new.When did Morecambe-Leeds get DMUs?