Railways Blog

A blog about trains, covering photography, railway history, transport politics and modelling, in no particular order.

A bit windy last night

First, Psycho Chicken, posting from Glasgow:

The wind’s so strong the building is moving – and when you consider that my building is a 100 year old sandstone tennement block, that’s quite something – and I can’t see the other side of the street for the horizontal rain.

There are actual waves in the school playground.

Then this morning the West Coast Main Line gets seriously disrupted, not by fallen trees or damaged overhead wires, but by an intermodal train shedding containers at Shap at 3 in the morning..

At least one of them was a forty-footer as well. I’ve never heard of anything like that happening before. TV reports show one of them took out a signal and reduced it to a mangled wreck. Yet it didn’t derail the train, which continued into Scotland before the driver realised anything was amiss.

And it wasn’t a single incident either; a second train lost containers south of Milton Keynes.

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Harrogate Show

This is the third year I’ve attended “Festival of British Model Railways” at Harrogate. Last year my visit formed part of a rather busy weekend, of which the exhibition was probably the least significant event.

With just the show, and no gigs in the evening, I’m afraid this years event was a little underwhelming, and I’m not sure this show is really worth a two-and-a-half hour journey across the Pennines.

Basingstoke

Not that there weren’t some good layouts. Basingstoke is one of the largest and most complex N gauge layouts on the exhibition circuit, and it runs as well as it looks. It’s set in the mid-sixties before electrification when the main line out of Waterloo was one of the last strongholds of steam, and the four-track main line serves up a constant procession of trains, mostly steam-hauled, but with some “Warship” class diesels on trains to Exeter.

Basingstoke

These two views show the whole of the scenic part of the layout.

Heavy Traffic

Not all layouts are immense monsters. Steve Grantham’s 4mm scale “Heavy Traffic” is typical of the small shunting layout built my many modellers.

Heavy Traffic

Again, these two photos show the entire layout. Layouts like this are inspirational in that it goes to prove you don’t need a huge space, or need a lorry to transport it.

This one really needs a caption

This view of the layout and it’s operators (Steve is on the right) shows just how small it is. The crowd barriers are a reminder that this building is often used for agricultural fairs.

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And here are full-sized ones

Followup to my previous post about the new Fleischmann releases, here are a couple of photos of the full-sized versions, both from my Swiss trip in the late summer of last year.

Ae6/6 at Erstfeld

First, we have one of the veteran Ae6/6s at Erstfeld on a trainload of aggregates, at the foot of the climb up the north ramp of the Gotthard line. The train has stopped to attach a pilot loco, and the train later attacked the ferocious climb to the summit with the assistance of one of the more modern Re6/6s, an odd-looking combination.

Re485 at Liestal

BLS Re485 no 485.019 hurries through Liestal, just south of Basel, on a ‘rolling road’ train bound for Domodossola in Italy. The Re485 will work the train as far as Spiez, where a pair of Re465s will take over.

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Ooh! Shiny!

It’s that time of year again, when model railway companies announce their products for the coming year.. Modelling Swiss outline in N gauge, two new models announced by Fleischmann are naturally of great interest to me.

Fleischmann Ae6/6

First, the classic SBB Ae6/6. The full-sized locomotives are now in the twilight of their careers, but last time I visited Switzerland there were still plenty of them about. The first livery will be the Epoch III dark green dating from their introduction in 1952, but many of the survivors still carry this colour scheme in 2008. While there has been a Minitrix model of this loco available for many years, that model now very crude and dated by today’s standards. This iconic locomotive now looks like having the state of the art model it deserves.

Fleischmann BLS Re185

And for something much more modern; they’re doing the BLS Re485, a relivery of the DB 185, which they’ve also done as an SBB Re482.  This model is a limited edition for 2008; I can see I’m going to have to reserve one from my local model shop. It appears to be a repeat of a special edition they did a year or so ago for a Swiss dealer. If you model the BLS mainline, it’s an essential model.

It’s going to be an expensive year, I can tell.

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Photo Update

I’ve uploaded a few more photos to my fotopic site. Some photos from Cologne dating back to September (pity it was such a dull day, I’ll have to go back there when the sun is shining!), and a few concert photos from Mostly Autumn at the Astoria just before Christmas.

DB 110 at Cologne Hbf

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Security Theatre, coming to a Railway Station near you.

Profoundly depressing news about travel terror security

Mr Brown said improved security would be installed at the country’s 250 busiest railway stations, as well as airports, ports and more than 100 other sensitive locations.

“Additional screening” of baggage and passenger searches were planned at some large railway stations and other “sensitive locations”, he said.

This is a fundamentally pointless idea. All that the introduction of airline-style security will achieve is increase the time and hassle involved in travelling anywhere. It’s just so-called ‘security theater’; smoke and mirrors designed to create a false sense of security without actually making things any safer.

All a potential terrorist will need to do is board a train at a smaller local station, and they’ll bypass the whole bloody lot. So millions of travellers waste millions of hours of their lives, all for nothing. And thousands of misanthropes will be given the opportunity to ruin people’s day just because they can.

I’ve already given up flying because the every increasing security and ever more draconian baggage restrictions make it too unpleasant an experience. Please don’t let rail travel go the same way.

I have nothing but contempt for any sheep-like Daily Mail readers that bleat “it’s better to be safe than sorry”. I think it’s tragic that people that stupid and gullible are allowed to vote.

I hope the train companies persuade the government how stupid this is.

Update: Christian Wolmar completely agrees with me.

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Manchester Model Railway Exhibition 2007

The 2007 Manchester Model Railway exhibition was held, as usual, in New Century Hall in the centre of Manchester. This show traditionally features layouts of a very high standard, and this year was no exception.

Bridport Town loco shed

I’m not normally a fan of narrow gauge steam layouts.  I find too many of them to be random hodgepodges that lack any sense of verisimilitude. Bridport Town is an exception; it’s set in a specific location in Dorset, with most of the non-railway buildings based on real structures. Another touch that lends authenticity is that the scratchbuilt locomotive fleet are neither models of motive power well-known and associated with other lines, nor the sort of dubuous freelance concoctions you often see on narrow gauge layouts. Instead they’re based on drawings of proposed locomotives that were never actually built, in this case a Hunslet 4-4-0T intended for the Lynton and Barnstable

Bridport Baldwin on freight

The World War One Baldwin was a common loco on a great many English (and Welsh) narrow gauge lines. Large numbers were shipped to France during the war for service on military railways. These rough and ready beasts were available cheap after 1918 for any railway in need of motive power.

Class 25 departs Lapford Road

Lapford Road is based in the Exeter to Barnstable line in the late 1970s. The blue diesel era is now as much ancient history as any steam railway; class 25 locomotives are long since gone from the main line network. Indeed, the surviving preserved examples have now been museum pieces for longer than they were in main line service.

Clayton at Woodhouse

Woodhouse was a large O gauge terminal, very much a classic steam branch terminus layout featuring the odd early diesel, such as this class 17, a model of an attractive prototype. Unfortunately the full sized versions turned out to be almost totally useless, and were consigned to the scrapheap after less than a decade of use.

Bassenthwaite 24 and 04

There were only a couple of N gauge layouts in the show; this was one of them, Bassenthwaite, set in the lake district. Although fairly small (it’s little more than a train-set oval with some additional storage roads for exhibition use), it still displays some excellent scenic modelling, especially the late itself.

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Narra Gauge

Engleberg station

I’ve uploaded another set of photos from my Swiss trip; these ones feature two metre-gauge railways, the Zentralbahn (above), formed from a merger of the Luzern Stans Engleberg line and the SBB Brunig line, and the Matterhorn Gotthard Bahn, another merger, this time of the Brig Visp Zermatt and the Furka Oberlalp.

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Luxembourg

This is the first of a series of blog postings covering my European wanderings to fill in the time between Odin Dragonfly and The Reasoning.

Luxembourg was my first overnight stop. It’s the smallest nation in the EU; the entire country is about 40 miles long. This gives a rather unique flavour to Luxembourg’s main railway station in that almost all the trains begin and end their journeys in another country. That means Luxembourg’s own trains are outnumbered in their own country by French, Belgian and German ones. There are also three different voltages of electrification involved, and I’m not at all sure how they cope with that. I assume there’s switchable catenery involved.

The other big difference between Luxembourg and Britain is that almost everything is loco-hauled.

I took these photos in the hour I had waiting for my train to Switzerland in the morning.

TGV in HSBC advertising livery

One of the few non-loco hauled long-distance trains is the Paris TGV. Here we see an iconic piece of French industrial design disfigured by advertisements for a British bank. I can imagine some Frenchmen not taking kindly to that.

SNCF

A Basel to Brussels train arrives headed by a French “Sybic” multi-voltage locomotive

Belgian Freight loco on passenger

Only three coaches of the train carried on to Brussels behind a Belgian loco. Judging by the number of railwaymen photographing this, I’m guessing it’s a rare instance of a freight loco not often seen on passenger work. It’s SNCB no 2006.

DB 181

Deutche Bahn 181.218 heads the train Norddeich Mole.

EC

Finally, my own train arrives, SNCB’s no 2018 heading the southbound EC “Vauban” Brussels to Interlaken, made up of Swiss EC coaches. The French “Sybic” from the earlier photo took the train forward after reversal.

There are larger versions of these pictures on my Fotopic site

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Back in England

I’ve just got back from a week in Switzerland, travelling all the way by rail, with a stopover in Luxembourg on the way out, and Köln on the way back.

I haven’t got time for a full writeup, but here are a few random observations:

  • You know you’re a Mostly Autumn fan if you use the phrase “The weather was absolutely Murrayfield”. It didn’t rain all week, fortunately.
  • Now I know why travellers don’t recommend the EC “Vauban”. 5 hours from Luxemboug to Basel with no catering. Argh!
  • Only serious delay was on the way back, where the Deutche Bahn ICE-3 from Köln to Brussels broke down. So much for the wonders of German engineering promoted in all those car adverts. Fortunately I managed to get on board the following Paris-bound Thalys TGV and make the connection into the Brussels-London Eurostar with just a couple of minutes to spare.
  • Rosa Klebb has a new job as the sleeping car attendant on the Frankfurt to Moscow sleeper that I saw departing from Köln on Wednesday night. The contrast between the shiny red Russian sleeping cars and the absolutely filthy German locomotive wasn’t something I would have expected to see.
  • Swiss beer is good. Cardinal, Gurten, Eichhof and Walliser Beir all taste great. It’s not just the atmosphere and ambience that makes it seem good; I ate at one restraunt in Brig where the house beer was Heineken. And it tasted, well, like Heineken :(

And now I’m off to see The Reasoning at The Borderline in London, for the final gig that bookends the holiday.

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