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Niles

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Posts posted by Niles

  1. 2011 last time it was out I think. The is a video on youtube of an 071 hauling down Newcomen Junction from Connolly.

     

    Actually it was 073 in 2010.

     

     

    Do the RPSI still have the older maroon rake of coaches, don't what they are exactly I've only even seen photos of them. They look like LMS style coaches.

     

    There's some LMS NCC stock at Whitehead, some of which is used on train rides within the site. 68 was overhauled not long ago http://www.steamtrainsireland.com/photonews/110608/index.html#68

    They also refurbished diner 87 recently. Whitehead has other vehicles of GNR(I) and GSWR origin.

     

    The Dublin based Heritage set is a mixture of 2 CIÉ Laminates, 2 CIÉ Park Royals, a CIÉ 24xx series diner, a GNR(I) diner, a GSR Bredin side corridor, a GNR(B) Brake 3rd, a GSWR side corridor and also obviously GSWR State Saloon 351.

     

    Last outing of a Heritage vehicle so far was Park Royal 1419 on the 2010 Santas.

  2. Interesting,thanks for the update. By the sound of the Rail Express snippet it looked like Heuston would be the new RPSI base in the Dublin area. Be interesting to see how it pans out.

     

    Haven't seen Rail Express recently but no it's a temporary storage solution for the RPSI heritage rake. As members will know from RPSI newsletter there is a committee looking towards the goal of establishing a proper base in the Dublin area but obviously easier said than done!

     

    So if anybody is looking to give away large a rail accessible site in the Dublin area I'm sure the RPSI would love to hear from you!

  3. [ATTACH=CONFIG]11033[/ATTACH]

     

    [ATTACH=CONFIG]11034[/ATTACH]

     

    [ATTACH=CONFIG]11035[/ATTACH]

     

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    A couple of Aerial shots of Inchicore..

     

    You can explore yourself at this link http://www.bing.com/maps/#Y3A9NTkuNjkxMzE1fi0xNS44MjYxMTQmbHZsPTUmc3R5PXImcT1pbmNoaWNvcmUlMjUyQyUyNTIwZHVibGlu

     

    I reckon those pics were taken 2007ish, judging by the Cravens awaiting scrapping and A39 being in the midst of its repaint from silver to black. Not a black 071 to be seen.

  4. I wonder where these locos will be going now that the RPSI will be moving their coaching stock out of Inchicore?

     

    It's only the Heritage set that's going to Heuston for storage. Cravens will still be based at Inchicore for time being.

  5. I remember when I was about twelve watching what to my eyes seemed to an enormous train arriving in Dundalk from Belfast, a 201 hauling a combination of kegs, cement bubbles and containers, shunting the keg flats off on arrival. Different times indeed.

  6. Sorry meant the regular mk3s with regard to the aircon. As for keeping a rake of coaches just for the two 141s, you wouldn't make enough money to keep it going. The enthusiast market isn't big enough to sustain more than at most 2/3 enthusiast trips a year, I recall that when the ITG went for mainline running with A3r and A39, they found support dwindled after the first tour, and it wasn't sustainable for a second year. Far easier to run the 141s with Cravens/Mk2/Heritage stock which can earn its keep on the steam trips (which the general public will support).

     

    There's also the matter of volunteers, the RPSI have barely enough volunteers to keep its existing fleet going, never mind an additional mk3 rake.

  7. Didn't those liners run up to Dundalk yard and Belfast. I remember seeing the liner on Friday afternoons between Howth Junction and Killester heading for Northwall. Sometimes towards the end they would have a few bubble cements attached, I assume picked up in Drogheda.

     

    I seem to remember the Dundalk liner outlasting the Belfast one, remember it used to get into Dublin circa 16:00. Used to be an interesting afternoon freight procession on the northern line with the up and down Taras, the liner and a cement. Used be a regular 141 turn in it's later days from memory, sometimes only a few wagons.

  8. But we can't even manage to preserve the most comfortable rolling stock we ever had, the Mk3s. It would have been nice to save a push pull set for 124 to haul on future rail tours. Too late now though.

     

    Would be hard for a volunteer group to maintain though, esp with air-con. I don't who could have taken them either, no good to RPSI as they're airbraked.

     

    Would have been nice but at least there's mk3s a plenty in the UK. Thankfully some of the distinct Irish stock, Laminates, Park Royals, Cravens, got preserved. But there's always ones that got away...

     

    there was suppost to be a push pull mk 3 going to Moyasta...now that was a while ago mind!

     

    6105 is still around (6105 was the last carriage to assembled in Inchicore) so maybe there's a chance for it go to Moyasta. Be nice to see it preserved, but wouldn't be of much mainline use. Imagine trying to run enough enthusiast trips to fill a 6 piece mk3! Demand just wouldn't be there... and half some would just gricer it without contributing to ticket sales.

  9. I don't know, I find the 22000s quite comfortable. Certainly a far more efficient operation than that of old, much as I miss the locos and carriages. But sure that's what preservation is for at the end of the day!

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