RMweb Premium keefer Posted October 17, 2015 RMweb Premium Share Posted October 17, 2015 (edited) Is that not the Strawberry Hill 'shunter', ex-501 driving motor converted to work with SR stock? (often ex-works or on test) Edited October 17, 2015 by keefer Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jonny777 Posted October 17, 2015 Author Share Posted October 17, 2015 (edited) Do you mean ADB975032? Ex-M75165? It might be, but I can't quite read the numbers. Edited, to add that on looking again at the original, it looks like ADB977385 which in my book is a Willesden based Sandite unit. Edited October 17, 2015 by jonny777 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jonny777 Posted October 17, 2015 Author Share Posted October 17, 2015 I am going back over 50 years with this one. I know from the locos (and from SixBellsJunction) that this is the 24th June 1962 and the Sussex Coast Limited run by the LCGB. 30055 was only attached to the train for the Eastbourne - Polegate - Rotherfield section, so the photo must be somewhere on this route. My knowledge of Sussex stations is around 'nil', so does anyone recognise this location? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jonny777 Posted October 18, 2015 Author Share Posted October 18, 2015 I feel as though I ought to know exactly where this is, but I can't think of an answer that fits with other old photos. Can anyone help me out? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rivercider Posted October 18, 2015 Share Posted October 18, 2015 Colchester St Botolph? cheers Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jonny777 Posted October 18, 2015 Author Share Posted October 18, 2015 That's it. Thanks Rivercider. Saved me hours of mental torture and searching. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jonny777 Posted October 18, 2015 Author Share Posted October 18, 2015 This photo has me stumped. Does anyone know where this is? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jonny777 Posted October 19, 2015 Author Share Posted October 19, 2015 Here is another mystery to me. This photo was obviously taken at a scrapyard or depot scrap-line, with units awaiting cutting up. The green livery suggests late 60s/early 70s and they bear a resemblance to the class 501. But those units carried on well into the blue era, and some gained blue/grey. Not only that but the only full readable number on the driving car is M75194 and the 501s only went up to M75189. I have searched in vain so far, for a class of EMU which include that number. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Peter Kazmierczak Posted October 19, 2015 Share Posted October 19, 2015 (edited) Thought that the North London units had window bars on the droplights. If it was M75134 with TS ---134 adjacent, that was withdrawn in 1968 so might well have ended-up in green. E75194 was aBDTSOL from an ER Class 302, though that lasted until 1997 so wouldn't have ended-up in green. Edited October 19, 2015 by Peter Kazmierczak Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Premium keefer Posted October 19, 2015 RMweb Premium Share Posted October 19, 2015 Certainly look like 501s, with leaf-sprung bogies (furthest bogie has shoe-beam mounts), side buffers and screw couplings. I've seen similar pics of 504s at bury and croxley green but these had gresley or wagon style accommodation bogies. They also had centre buckeye couplers and no buffers on the inside ends Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
eastwestdivide Posted October 19, 2015 Share Posted October 19, 2015 (edited) Are you sure about that number? E75194 was a class 302, and the 302s didn't have guard's vans in the driving vehicles, did they? I can see ..134 on the left, which was part of the batch of 501s, and had already been withdrawn by the time the 1976 RCTS coaching stock book was printed. Edit: as for the missing window bars, if you look carefully at the left side of the photo, you can see the places where they've been removed. Edited October 19, 2015 by eastwestdivide Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
luckymucklebackit Posted October 19, 2015 Share Posted October 19, 2015 This photo has me stumped. Does anyone know where this is? Scan-151018-0003.jpg Stranraer Town Station Jim Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Peter Kazmierczak Posted October 19, 2015 Share Posted October 19, 2015 Are you sure about that number? E75194 was a class 302, and the 302s didn't have guard's vans in the driving vehicles, did they? I can see ..134 on the left, which was part of the batch of 501s, and had already been withdrawn by the time the 1976 RCTS coaching stock book was printed. Edit: as for the missing window bars, if you look carefully at the left side of the photo, you can see the places where they've been removed. Well spotted. You can see the former fixings on the other car too. Presumably useful as spares. Must be the North London set ending in 134 then. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold russ p Posted October 19, 2015 RMweb Gold Share Posted October 19, 2015 Here is another mystery to me. This photo was obviously taken at a scrapyard or depot scrap-line, with units awaiting cutting up. The green livery suggests late 60s/early 70s and they bear a resemblance to the class 501. But those units carried on well into the blue era, and some gained blue/grey. Not only that but the only full readable number on the driving car is M75194 and the 501s only went up to M75189. I have searched in vain so far, for a class of EMU which include that number. m75194.jpg Bit of a long shot... South tynside EPBs before they moved south? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jonny777 Posted October 19, 2015 Author Share Posted October 19, 2015 Certainly look like 501s, with leaf-sprung bogies (furthest bogie has shoe-beam mounts), side buffers and screw couplings. I've seen similar pics of 504s at bury and croxley green but these had gresley or wagon style accommodation bogies. They also had centre buckeye couplers and no buffers on the inside ends Yes, thanks everyone. It looks like M75194 when magnified, but I suspect there is a mark just in the right place to make the 3 look like a 9. I didn't look far enough back in my ABCs for the full number series, and going back to 1961 I find they started at 61/70/75133, so the 134 set must have been an early withdrawal. Thanks Jim for the Stranraer info. I had been through most of the Scottish stations which came to mind, but because the following slide in the sequence is at Perth I had concentrated more in that area. This is all wonderful and saving me weeks of brain-pain. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jonny777 Posted October 20, 2015 Author Share Posted October 20, 2015 Here is yet another photo that I can't place, but full of detail and would seem to make a great model, even though it has a double slip on the main running line . It looks as though it may be close to a junction, because although the near signalbox is on the left, there is another on the right not much further back. My best guess is possibly near Carnforth. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jonny777 Posted October 20, 2015 Author Share Posted October 20, 2015 And another. My brain says Wakefield for this, but I have no idea why. The horizon is pan flat and the train appears to be climbing in order to cross other tracks, and there is a goods yard to the left. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fat Controller Posted October 20, 2015 Share Posted October 20, 2015 And another. My brain says Wakefield for this, but I have no idea why. The horizon is pan flat and the train appears to be climbing in order to cross other tracks, and there is a goods yard to the left. Scan-151019-0003.jpg Warrington? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold beast66606 Posted October 20, 2015 RMweb Gold Share Posted October 20, 2015 Here is yet another photo that I can't place, but full of detail and would seem to make a great model, even though it has a double slip on the main running line . It looks as though it may be close to a junction, because although the near signalbox is on the left, there is another on the right not much further back. My best guess is possibly near Carnforth. Scan-151019-0004.jpg Not Carnforth, possibly Cumbrian coast was my thought. There's a trailing junction - from the right as we look - joining at the box in the distance. The near box is an LNWR Type 4 and the far one appears to be a Type 5, very short name on the near box. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
luckymucklebackit Posted October 20, 2015 Share Posted October 20, 2015 And another. My brain says Wakefield for this, but I have no idea why. The horizon is pan flat and the train appears to be climbing in order to cross other tracks, and there is a goods yard to the left. Scan-151019-0003.jpg Looks like just to the South of Warrington, Warrington? I would agree with this, just north of the bridges over the Manchester Ship Canal. Jim Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RMweb Gold beast66606 Posted October 20, 2015 RMweb Gold Share Posted October 20, 2015 Warrington? Looks to be climbing the slow line towards Acton Grange Junction, Walton Old up starter and Acton Grange up slow signals at clear towards the rear of the train (meaning it's taking the Chester line) and just above the wagons can be made out a bracket signal which would read to WBQ and onto the goods lines to Arpley. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jonny777 Posted October 20, 2015 Author Share Posted October 20, 2015 Thanks Brian, Jim and Beast. It would appear that the only bit that I got right was the place name beginning with a W. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
luckymucklebackit Posted October 20, 2015 Share Posted October 20, 2015 Here is yet another photo that I can't place, but full of detail and would seem to make a great model, even though it has a double slip on the main running line . It looks as though it may be close to a junction, because although the near signalbox is on the left, there is another on the right not much further back. My best guess is possibly near Carnforth. Scan-151019-0004.jpg Thought for a moment that this could have been somewhere on the North Wales Coast, as looking at the shadows cast by the old station building the sun is fairly high in the sky (so would have been in the south) so therefore the photograph would have been taken looking west. Unfortunately I couldn't find a likely location Jim Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
eastwestdivide Posted October 20, 2015 Share Posted October 20, 2015 (edited) Here is yet another photo that I can't place, but full of detail and would seem to make a great model, even though it has a double slip on the main running line . It looks as though it may be close to a junction, because although the near signalbox is on the left, there is another on the right not much further back. My best guess is possibly near Carnforth. What have we got - pebbledashed(?) station building (suggests Wales or Lake District), rugged-looking hills/mountains, platforms seen better days, what looks like new cable troughing piled up (maybe increases likelihood that the line might be still open) - edit: or are they platform coping stones recovered from the opposite platform? possiby red-coloured stonework on the right (if it's local red stone, west Lake District/Cumbria? Cheshire area? where else?), fair sized chimney on the right, church steeple on the horizon. Anyone recognise the type of coach lurking behind the platforms? Edited October 20, 2015 by eastwestdivide Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
luckymucklebackit Posted October 20, 2015 Share Posted October 20, 2015 What have we got - pebbledashed(?) station building (suggests Wales or Lake District), rugged-looking hills/mountains, platforms seen better days, what looks like new cable troughing piled up (maybe increases likelihood that the line might be still open) - edit: or are they platform coping stones recovered from the opposite platform? possiby red-coloured stonework on the right (if it's local red stone, west Lake District/Cumbria? Cheshire area? where else?), fair sized chimney on the right, church steeple on the horizon. Anyone recognise the type of coach lurking behind the platforms? Add to the above, having blown up the picture the line clearly curves to the right beyond the second signalbox, possibly crossing a bridge or viaduct before entering a cutting close to the church spire on the horizon. Jim Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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