BeijingDave
Member
- Joined
- 26 Jul 2019
- Messages
- 579
A straightforward question:
As a very junior spotter (accompanied by a very knowledgeable uncle, now unfortunately deceased) in the early 80s, a frequent trip was from Warrington BQ up to York to the National Rail Museum (and the Jorvik Viking Centre).
As I recall, 45s and occasionally 40s headed this service, which may have been ex-Llandudno to the North East. If there was no loco-hauled traction, we would hop on a DMU to Newton-le-Willows to catch one ex-Liverpool.
Having been built around the same time, why was the 45 preferred over the 40? What little I know of the 40s is that they had less tractive power but better acceleration which may have suited a stop-start service such as Llandudno-the North East (with its various North Wales stops and Newton-le-Willows, Stalybridge, Huddersfield, Dewsbury etc).
== Doublepost prevention - post automatically merged: ==
I do vaguely recall having a pinched window display sticker Llandudno-Newcastle (or maybe Scarborough) which ran to at least three lines of stops.
As a very junior spotter (accompanied by a very knowledgeable uncle, now unfortunately deceased) in the early 80s, a frequent trip was from Warrington BQ up to York to the National Rail Museum (and the Jorvik Viking Centre).
As I recall, 45s and occasionally 40s headed this service, which may have been ex-Llandudno to the North East. If there was no loco-hauled traction, we would hop on a DMU to Newton-le-Willows to catch one ex-Liverpool.
Having been built around the same time, why was the 45 preferred over the 40? What little I know of the 40s is that they had less tractive power but better acceleration which may have suited a stop-start service such as Llandudno-the North East (with its various North Wales stops and Newton-le-Willows, Stalybridge, Huddersfield, Dewsbury etc).
== Doublepost prevention - post automatically merged: ==
I do vaguely recall having a pinched window display sticker Llandudno-Newcastle (or maybe Scarborough) which ran to at least three lines of stops.
Last edited: