Mol_PMB
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Thanks for pointing out that they are different, so I definitely need one of yours! The Provincial Wagons version is this type (Brian Flannigan photo on Flickr): Whereas the IRM version is this type (Kieran Marshall photo on Flickr): The same at first glance but when you look closely there are a whole host of differences in the doors, the ribs, the fork slots...
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GNR/CIE 'bagged cement' box vans - dimensions?
Mol_PMB replied to Mol_PMB's question in Questions & Answers
I have applied to (re-)join the IRRS but my membership details are taking a while to come through. Once that's happened, it's still not clear whether I will be able to access such documents readily. I was hoping someone might have a copy of the relevant page handy! -
Mol_PMB started following CIE 20' Tank containers , GNR/CIE 'bagged cement' box vans - dimensions? , From the Catacombs and 3 others
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I'm planning to make a model of one of the GNR/CIE 'bagged cement' box vans based on the Parkside kit for a BR plywood van. I know this is a well-trodden path! It will be 21mm gauge so I'll need to move the solebars and buffers out. But I'd like to check whether there are any other dimensional adjustments needed. For example, are the body dimensions the same or do I need to widen the body slightly too? Can anyone point me towards a dimensioned drawing of one of these vans? I assume such a drawing appears in one or both of the GNR(I) diagram books listed as in the IRRS archives: WD 001 GNR(I) Wagon diagram Book rev 1948 Y Y 35 Very clean original, does not include any of the later wagons WD 002 GNR(I) Wagon diagram Book rev c. 1959 45 From Dundalk works,Well used, annotation including numbers and build dates for many later wagons Cheers, Mol
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Found elsewhere on the forum, a 10' container on a road vehicle, with mail being transferred to/from the train. The container is still quite new and clean in this 1970s photo by jhb171achill: From the same source, a shiny new pair: I must have a root through this thread for more!
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The 4-wheelers were delivered in silver. Remember, you don't need one if there's a steam loco on the front, or if it's summer time. Only diesel-hauled in trains in winter need the steam. Also about half of the AEC railcars had built-in boilers so they don't need a steam van either. From Ernie on Flickr, it's August so there's no need for heating: The early 4-wheel vans were delivered in silver: They were later green, as seen here in one of Ernie's photos: And finally black and tan, at which point they seem to have lost some windows: The 6-wheelers were delivered new in black and tan, as seen here in one of Ernie's photos: They ended their days in 1983 confined to Dublin suburban services, as seen here in Neil Smith's photo:
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It's important to note that there was a change in policy around 1970, relating to the electrical supply on carriages, and this influences which type of heating van is appropriate for a train. From steam days, carriages with electric lighting had dynamos and batteries, with steam heat provided from the loco. When diesels were introduced from 1955, steam heat vans were required to provide the heat, but the lighting still came from the dynamos and batteries. So... The 4-wheel heating vans 3101-3152 built 1955-1960 just had a boiler, no electric generator. The 6-wheel vans 3153-3156 built in 1964 (there were only ever 4 of them) had 2 boilers but still no electric generator. Around 1970 there was a move to convert the passenger fleet lighting from dynamos and batteries to supply from a generating steam van. Converted carriages had a TL suffix added to their number, indicating Train Line lighting. This required additional through wiring of the lighting power circuits. I'm not sure whether the dynamos and/or batteries were removed at the same time, or if there were changes to the voltage etc. So... The 10 'Dutch' vans 3157TL-3166TL built in 1969 were the first to have a generator. In 1972, the 22 ex-BR MK1 vans 3167TL-3176TL and 3177TL-3192TL arrived, also generator fitted. Gradual conversion of the whole fleet proceeded through the 1970s and early 1980s, with the carriages used for express trains generally prioritised over those on suburban duties. As the conversion programme progressed, more BGSVs were needed, so... Former brake standard coaches were modified with boilers and generators in 1977-1978 - these were numbered in the 3201TL-3218TL series and there were several varieties. By 1981 almost all trains were on the TL system; just the four 6-wheel vans were still in use on Dublin suburban trains with non-TL stock. Of course they were swept away by the DART. Getting back on topic for this thread, you'll notice that the Park Royal carriages offered by IRM include those with and without a TL suffix to the number. So... If you have carriages without TL, then they ought to be paired with a 4-wheel or 6-wheel heating van. If you have carriages with TL, then they ought to be paired with a Dutch, BR or 3201 series heating van. Doubtless there were mixtures during the transition period even if that meant going without lights!
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"Voiding the Warranty" - Mol's experiments in 21mm gauge
Mol_PMB replied to Mol_PMB's topic in Irish Models
Many thanks, that’s really helpful and plenty for me to think about. I will need to have some pointwork, but not sure what approach to use at present. Buffer spacing is 6’3” for the CIE wagons, whereas GB standard gauge is 5’7.5”, a 7.5” difference, similar to the track gauge increase. -
This is on the Chemins de fer du Jura, and it’s also a waste train. Click on the photo to take you to my Flickr album for more details, and many more photos. The CJ has a couple of street running sections, the more impressive one is at La Chaux-de-Fonds but I haven’t uploaded a photo of that - I’ll try to find one later. They also operate freight on rollschemels: The RhB Chur-Arosa route is another place where you can see metre gauge freight/mixed trains running in the street. The biggest Swiss user of rollbocken for carrying standard gauge wagons on narrow gauge is the MBC: Again, there are more pics in the Flickr album. Mol
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"Voiding the Warranty" - Mol's experiments in 21mm gauge
Mol_PMB replied to Mol_PMB's topic in Irish Models
I have done the deed with the buffers, and I think it looks satisfactory. It's very hard to get buffers perfectly straight, but I take comfort from the fact that the factory-fitted ones aren't 100% perfect either! I have enough of these buffers to convert another wagon, so I might do that tomorrow or Friday. The buffers I've used are X6495 Hornby Sprung Tender Buffers for Class B1. They're not a perfect match to the CIE self-contained buffers but they're about right. Photo of the real thing from Neil Smith, showing the larger type buffers and how near they are to the outer edge of the headstock: -
OK, here's a thread for the tank containers:
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Some from Flickr. From Fred Dean, one of the Ammonia barrier tanks: From Jonathan Allen, a photo dated 1989 with stacks of tanks carrying different branding. Two are Shell, three are Cold Chon (Galway): A photo in Doyle&Hirsch shows two of these tank containers with similar branding panels for Cationic Road Emulsions. From Jon33040 on Flickr, here's the 'wrong' end of the coal&oil train, with the tanks just visible in the distance.
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CIE had a fleet of 20x8x8 tank containers, mostly used for fuels and other oils. Latterly they were used on the Foynes to Ballina coal and oil train, and the barrier wagon tanks used on the Ammonia trains were also very similar. Here are a few detail photos that I took of dumped survivors.
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Ernie included some of the stacks at Ennis in his photos, this is where I got most of my closeup pics but from different angles. Far right in this first photo is a grey one with UNILOAD branding - yet another variant!
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This photo from Brian Flannigan on Flickr shows the Wexford liner in 1982. Two 10' containers are in very clean, plain tan livery with black roundel, while the most of the rest are in grubby UNILOAD. That suggests that the plain tan livery came later than UNILOAD. My impression of the earlier photos that show both gray and UNILOAD containers is that the grey ones are dirtier, so the grey livery probably came first. There's no doubt that the majority carried UNILOAD
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Great, that would be wonderful. I'll definitely have 4 of the next batch, unpainted. I'll probably add a few other bits and pieces too as it looks like you have a good range of bits. Cheers, Mol