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jhb171achill

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jhb171achill last won the day on November 24

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    Here, where I'm sitting

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  • Biography
    I was born at a very early age. I am still here and hope to remain until I am no longer with us.

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    Placing post-it notes on people's heads after dark and persecuting aliens. Certified pigeon-worrier.

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    Collector of Waistline Inches

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  1. They could do this with relative ease as the sort of place they took “tail traffic” from and to, tended to be major stations, junctions of termini which had a resident shunting engine. This would creep up behind the railcar and detach / attach vans while it was stopped.
  2. An absolute work of art!
  3. A Tony Mirolo job, I believe!
  4. 10:22 was when the down day Sligo got to Mullingar. The Westport table shows nothing going via Mullingar by then - all via Portarlington and Athlone. However the 03:10 Dublin to Ballina Newspaper train arrived via Mullingar in Athlone at 04:54, and Ballina by 06.57.
  5. In the 1973 WTT, for example, when mullingar - Athlone was still fully functional, the Galway mails were as follows: Down Day Mail 08:20 ex Connolly 09:29 - 09:36 Mullingar 11:30 Galway Down night Mail Pearse 20:05 Connolly d 20:15 Mullingar 21:24 - 21:31 Galway 23:34 No up day mail working Up Night Mail Galway d. 20:15 Mullingar 23:32 - 23:45 Connolly 01:00 next morning Pearse 01:30 The Sligo services were: Down Day Mail Connolly 09:05 Mullingar 10:22 - 10:26 Described leaving Dublin as "Passenger", but leaving Mullingar as "PAS MAIL"; they possibly switched the bags from the earlier Galway Mail here? Or, it left Dublin with the mail? Sligo 12:40 Down Night Mail Leaves Mullingar as a connection off the Galway at 23:40 Sligo 02:05 next morning No Up Day Mail Up Night Mail Sligo 20:25 (This is the one I travelled on several times, in all cases with a pair of 121s up front). Mullingar 23:21 Await Galway train. Returns to Sligo at 23:40 as above. So - in summary - the morning ones went through, possibly; the evening one was a Galway - Dublin one, and a Sligo - Mullingar one.
  6. In steam times, yes! But - see my post below for 1973.
  7. Yes, that seemed to be what it was the several times I travelled on it in the 1970s. You had to change at Mullingar and wait the guts of an hour.
  8. Activity this afternoon! IMG_4490.mov IMG_4491.mov
  9. THIS I am learning........................................!
  10. Superb work!
  11. I’ve code 75, which means three old coaches I have can’t run till I get better wheels for them….
  12. This is the Lartigue model at Malahide….
  13. My favourite RPSI loco!
  14. Interesting stuff! 2011, thus, closed my personal chapter of interest in operational locos. 145 and 150 were personal favourites - the former, as I watched it shunting the Limerick - Sligo goods in Tuam, and the latter on account of a cab run to Cobh, only the 2nd time I ever went there. 190 my favourite 181, as I did Limerick - Ballina behind it, with a train of two laminates and a bockety-looking 4 wheeled tin van not long before that service was withdrawn……
  15. No blue 4.4.0s on it today? (I remember the last blue 4.4.0 on the Thursdays only train - travelled on it too….)
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