Sunday, August 3, 2014

Slowly Getting There

As you can see from the photographs above, we have been making steady progress with this new section of the layout. Carswater station now has fencing and buildings, the ballast depot is coming along nicely and more of the hills have been grassed over.
The track here has almost all been ballasted too and this should be finished next weekend. 
Of course there is still much more work to be done, both here and elsewhere on the layout, but at least we can start running trains again - once the track has had a deep and thorough clean!

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Built-up Area

From the photographs above you will see that we have been busily working on the new, central, section of the layout during the past few weeks. 
As a result, this area now looks vastly different to how it was in my post entitled 'The Second Crossing'.
Lots of hills have been constructed and there is now a lake, albeit a dry one at the moment, opposite the new station.
We have also started work on the Ballast Depot with a re-alignment of the track following the acquisition of new buildings. These buildings were constructed using the Knightwing Mine Top Buildings kit (PM113) and were expertly put together and wonderfully weathered by Alex of Mikron Models, Taunton. This area will slowly be developed during the next few weeks.
The new station (called Carswater) has also acquired a station building and footbridge. These are the Hornby Skaledale Hagley Station (R9752) and Covered Footbridge (R9751). We still need to add more buildings to this station but this is a start.
Meanwhile the hills that have sprung up in this area are slowly being covered by grasses and trees and, when finished, should look quite spectacular.
So, watch this space for further developments!

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Vulcan's Bad Baby

Class 23, D5906, is pictured on a down train at Belle Isle on March 18 1961.
Photo: R C Riley
Sporting the 2B65 headcode and two-tone green livery, D5900 prepares
to leave King's Cross in February 1965. Photo: Jim Slater



It is generally accepted by both professional railwaymen and enthusiasts alike that the English Electric range of locomotives, from the humble but efficient Class 08 shunters to the high and mighty Class 55 "Deltics" were a pretty good investment for British Railways.
However, there was a "black sheep" in the family of EE locomotives - and that was the class of ten Type 2 diesel electric locomotives, otherwise known as Baby Deltics.
These locos were 1100 hp Bo-Bos, with BR Numbers D5900 - D5909 that were introduced in 1959.
Sadly, they were to be retained in BR revenue-earning service for less than 12 years, during which time there would be long periods when they were either out of service or back at the manufacturers.
The "Baby Deltics" were of conventional build with their superstructures being similar, in both construction and external appearance, to the Class 37 and Class 40 locomotives although, of course, the Type 2's were much shorter than their sisters.
When completed at Vulcan Foundry, in late 1958, the locomotives were found to be too heavy and BR subsequently refused to take delivery. Various measures were taken to reduce weight, including drilling holes in the bogie beams and frames as well as in some of the internal structural members. However, even when they were eventually accepted by the Eastern Region in 1959, the "Baby Deltics" were still too heavy and were banned from certain routes in the London area.
Once in traffic they were soon found wanting due, largely, to engine failures. They tended to throw their pistons and their cylinder liners would often work loose. Both defects that would lead to engine damage which, in turn, would require a change of power unit.
Most serious was a spate of fractured auxiliary drive shafts which caused an immediate loss of the fan, traction motor cooling and air pressure, which would lead to overheating.
The broken drive shafts would then flail around in the engine room, cutting through pipework, radiators and other components and cause complete engine seizure.
Their poor availability and frequent failures in traffic made them very unpopular with everyone; not least BR management.
One by one the locos seized up, with Stratford being the collecting point for the withdrawn members of the class. By the middle of 1962 only D5900, D5901, D5905 and D5907 had survived and each of these slowly succumbed until the last one, D5905, was finally withdrawn in June 1963.
All ten locos were duly returned to English Electric where they were parked in a siding together with the similarly ill-fated EE Gas Turbine 4-6-0 NÂș GT3.
One by one the Baby Deltics were taken back into the shops and mechanically refurbished, re-engined. They also had their nose ends fitted with flush panels and a four-character route indicator. A new two-tone green livery was applied, which was similar to that worn by the big, twin engined "Deltics".
By the middle of 1965 all ten locos were back in use and, although some improvement in performance and availability was recorded, the "Baby Deltics" never lived down their previous bad reputation and local commuter workings, empty stock haulage and station pilot duties were their usual lot!
By 1967 they were considered to be non-standard, which was another way of saying that they were  to be scrapped!
The first to go was D5906 in October 1968. D5907 followed later the same month and, by early 1969 D5900/3/4/8 had joined them on the scrap heap.
The remaining four locos were then a familiar sight outside of Finsbury Park depot, where they stood for several months in the company of a doomed Class 15.
D5902 was withdrawn towards the end of 1969 while D5901 was sent to Derby Research Centre for driving control experiments. D5905 was the next to go, in February 1971, while the blue liveried D5909 managed to linger on for just another few weeks.
Then there was one! 
D5901 continued in traffic through the early 1970s, usually to be seen in charge of the mobile adhesion test laboratory train. However, it was eventually replaced by a Class 24 and was duly dumped at Doncaster Works in January 1977.
This time there was to be no escape for what was, by then, the remaining member of the class and it is sad to think that it met its end while the attention of enthusiasts and preservationists was diverted to what was happening to the diesel-hydraulics on the Western Region.
What a pity that there is not just one less Class 52 so that a Baby Deltic could have found its way into preservation.

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

The Second Crossing

We have now made the second crossing, between the main line and the new central section, although this has still to be wired to the bus.
With space at a premium here, not helped by our desire to include a ballast depot, it has been tight getting the track from the station to the point where it must cross the new 'bridge'.
I think we have finally cracked it, by using Radius 2 curves and some flexi-track.
Hopefully, during the Easter break, we should get the track fixed down and wired to the bus - and, hopefully, we might even run a short test train.
It will be interesting to see how this area develops during the coming months and I will, of course, report on our progress throughout.

Monday, March 31, 2014

It's Looking All White!


Over the weekend we progressed the railway on the central section so that it has now reached, what will be, Carswater station, albeit is a bit incomplete at the moment.
The track has been raised off of the board slightly using the white foam board so that we can include a small lake near the station.
We are still not sure if we will use all or some of the ridge that is currently dividing the baseboard almost in two. It does make a good scenic break, between Carswater and its environs and the ballast depot on the other side. 
We just have to decide how best to fit it in.
So, in the meantime, watch this (white) space!

Monday, March 24, 2014

Central Line

So, I hear you all ask, what's been happening on the Lakeland Railway since the last posting?
Well, whether you are asking or not, it has been quite a while since I gave an update and, as you can see from the photographs, quite a bit of progress has been made during the past few weeks.
In the first picture you will see that Manxton now has working lamps. The main station building also has lights but these are, currently, ordinary bulbs rather than LEDs and do not shine as brightly. This will doubtless be rectified in due course! 
The white area in front of the station is not snow but a layer of plaster to provide a smooth surface for the road and station car park.
The second picture shows the central area with a rough idea of the track layout marked in chalk. There is to be a new station here (the tenth one on the layout) although it is only partially shown here.
The long thing in the middle of the table is a hill that we made in the very early days of the layout and, because of its sentimental value, we would like to use all or some of it again to divide the new ballast depot, which will be to its right, from the station and its environs, to its left.
In the third picture you can see that the car park and road, in front of Manxton, have both now been painted while, in the fourth photograph, Class 53 'Falcon' takes a short test train across the first of the two removable crossings between the central section and the main line running around the side of the Shed.
The track over both crossings will be single, with a passing loop through the new station. This should make it operationally interesting as trains have to wait to enter the single line sections.
Now, you might ask why, then, is the bridge so wide? Well, this is because it is going to carry a road as well the railway to give vehicular access to both the ballast depot and the station.
The track across the bridge does have to rise very slightly (the reason for which will become clear in future postings. This made life a little awkward and the test train was more to check the continuity of the electrical supply and the smoothness of the track rather than the strength of the bridge. 
And, I am happy to report, the first crossing went very smoothly indeed.

Monday, January 27, 2014

Tree-mendous!


At the weekend we started planting trees along the embankment between the main line, running along the bottom, and the branch line, running along the top.
The trees are from a pack of Gaugemaster Seafoam Trees (GM195), which were duly treated with spray on glue and then sprinkled, dipped and coated with various shades of green scatter material.
The fencing, along either side of the branchline, is the faithful old Hornby Trackside Fencing (R537), of which we had plenty, with the bottom bar removed to make it a three-bar fence rather than a four.
More trees, bushes and undergrowth will be added during the next week or two to transform what was a plain embankment into a wooded landscape that will, almost, conceal the main line from view.