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DERAILED

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Posts posted by DERAILED

  1. On 28/10/2022 at 11:22 PM, jhb171achill said:

    Possible, at a pinch; but there weren’t many LCs on the W & T, and there has been a glut of duds in the last 20 years…..

    Wrong line and its a gate sign anyway not LC. Somebody, who I will not mention, had quite a stack of them back in the late '80s which he had personally removed.

  2. Another WD&LR sign sold for €70 in Keighery's, Waterford, this week - I was almost tempted but without being able to physically view the sign I didn't bid. As I think I mentioned previously in this thread there were still quite a lot of WD&LR signs still in place in the 1980s so this could be the genuine item.

     

     

    WDLR.png

  3. A cache of Northern station signs, wagon plates etc. went for serious money at auction today - along with Michael Collins hair (£4,400) and his walking stick £16,000.

    Most of the signs looked like they had been stored since being taken down in the 1960s with the highest price being paid £480 for a Strabane sign.

    https://www.the-saleroom.com/en-gb/auction-catalogues/bloomfield/catalogue-id-bloomf10113

     

     

     

    3.jpg

    • Like 4
  4. 19 hours ago, jhb171achill said:

    Shillelagh, mid 1930s.

    (H C A Beaumont)

    415944522_img115(2).thumb.jpg.e6e5cc552993b00a3eccb6b144904883.jpg

     

    I was last in Shillelagh in the mid/late 1970s and the only thing missing was the signal cabin. The stone built goods store was in good nick and the massive timber loco shed was intact but the doors were bolted so I didn't get to see inside. A wagon loading gauge survived sticking up in the meadow that then existed in the area behind the signal cabin.

    • Like 2
    • Informative 1
  5. On 21/11/2021 at 7:25 PM, Rush and Lusk said:

    Hello,

    Any advice on obtaining a map/illustration of the Irish railway network at its most populated/developed period. I have located a rather small (A4 size) map produced by the Viceregal Commission on Irish Railways in 1906, but not expandable to facilitate easy and leisurely reading - the detail is just too small !.

    Thank you in advance.

     

    PM sent.

  6. The power station is Portarlington and the photograph came with a souvenir booklet for the opening in April 1950. However, the date of the photograph and the railcar details are what puzzles me. What does REC on the railcar indicate and can anyone make out the number.

     

    PORT.jpeg

  7. Here's a later view of the Turfburner on the occasion of the IRRS Works Visit - September 1974. Pic is for sale on eBay.

    1166673033_Turfburnerundeframe.jpg.07a96c4d11cd97630c19195e125090d7.jpg

     

     

    And here's a recent acquisition. I'd be interested in comments on this one.

    PIC .png

    • Like 1
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  8. 20 hours ago, airfixfan said:

    Yes indeed that coach was at Fintown and only used once at its lunch event! Had been bought from Alan Keef for the Shane's Castle but never ran there to my knowledge. Similar to another Alan Keef coach built for and used at Dromod.

    The Alan Keef carriage at Dromod was specially commissioned based on drawings by Nicky Wakeford and has little in common with the Lullymore carriage save its gauge.

  9. Fintown is a pretty location but far, far too remote to ever be sustainable. I also had a run on it way back shortly after it opened - in the ex.Shane's Castle tramcars if I remember correctly - but never felt the urge to return.

  10. Spotted this on eBay tonight. At first glance with tired eyes I thought it was an old sandite machine but no it's definitely a standard gauge Wickham railcar. I've never seen it before and never came across it in my travels down the years. I'm sure it's long been scrapped but I would be interested to know its identity and fate.

    NTH WALL WICKAM 1983.jpg

  11. On 22/7/2021 at 11:18 PM, bufferstop said:

    187 - Dundalk, Newry & Greenore cast iron railway sign

    Some poor bollix paid €320 for this classic last week in an auction in Cork. When you add in auctioneers fees and delivery, you're talking well over €400.😳

    This is the twentieth example of this sign that I've seen auctioned, someone is pumping them out, mind you it's a masterpiece, compared to this one that's regularly appearing................

     

    Whatever fool paid that deserves precisely what they got - a few kg of cast iron scrap. No sympathy - be informed or don't bid.

    • Like 2
  12. @ Wexford70

    The first shed in your opening post is poor old G601 - its main claim to fame is that it was used to restore freight services on the Banteer/Newmarket branch on the 1/6/1956. It was a big deal and there was an official piss-up in Newmarket on reopening day with toasts to CIE and all - there are menus from the event in the IRRS archives.

    Like most innovations in CIE the reopening experiment was short-lived. The loco was finally stopped on the 22/7/72. Latterly it was dumped on the scrap bank in Inchicore. I (not the Irish Narrow Gauge Trust or anybody else) paid for it and was physically involved in recovering it from Inchicore on the 25/7/92 to temporary storage at Bord na Mona (Littleton) and then to Dromod on the 4/9/93.

    Like so many other things it was sold to keep things at Dromod going - the Irish Traction Group being the buyer. Cosmetically restored it returned to Inchicore  for the Works "Open Weekend" in June 1996 - see attached pic. Hopefully, it will run again one day!

    G601.jpg

    • Like 4
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