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jhb171achill

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jhb171achill last won the day on December 13

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    Here, where I'm sitting

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    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. Two acquaintances of mine (neither on here to my knowledge) are planning / slowly putting together smallish layouts based on fictitious branches on the CIE system in the 1960-75 period. Both had asked me what’s likely to have been on it, knowing that on a British equivalent a Beeching survivor would probably have a staple diet of single-car or 2-coach railcars (DMUs over there), with the terminus is done cases being a single set of points. But railcars (AEC sets) in Ireland were the stuff of main lines and Dublin suburban, not branch lines, the few of which survived having remained entirely loco-hauled until the early 2000s. While Beeching was learning his spellings, rural closures were well under way here, and between 1959 and 1963, all but a few of our branches breathed their last, often (Foynes, Kenmare etc) with six wheel coaches and steam engines which actually bore-dated the line itself. But, what if there were still trains in the 1960s or early 70s to Killeshsndra? Or Mountmellick, Ballinrobe, Shillelagh, Banagher, Valentia, Clonakilty, Kinsale, Ballaghaderren or Achill? ”Ah”, I hear you say, “just model it on Loughrea”. Well, yes and no. The fact that Loughrea retained cattle and mixed trains into the 1970s doesn’t mean other lines would have done. Cattle volumes across CIE in 1968 were but a tenth of the equivalent a decade earlier; when even that was only half what the late 1930s would have produced. Also, there were only 7 of the G611 class, and at least two of these spent much of their time at Inchicore, despite being only a few years old. Even with 20 functioning branches, it’s hard to see Gs going anywhere else. Even at Loughrea, as I’ve found through recent research, more often than not a C or a B141 was allocated, even a B181 or A class, before and after re-engining. And therein lies the answer. An Irish 1960s branch will have an almost staple diet of 141s and Cs. If there’s a functioning turntable still, a 121 could appear. Wagons would obviously be standard types, mostly standard CIE “H” and plans, and ex-GNR vans too; with a mix of Bullied corrugated opens and older timber-buried ones, the latter of either GSR, CIE or GNR origin. Coaches - a set of one or two laminates, Park Royals or Bredins. Cravens would be rare and usually limited to visiting specials or excursions. So, at entry level, a layout like that can be convincingly put together with a Murphy 142, a pair of IRM Park Royals, a SSM or other tin van*, half a dozen IRM Bullieds (no, I’m not on commission) several Provincial timber-bodied vans, a Provincial or SSM guards van, and maybe a dozen GNR or CIE goods vans of Provincial or IRM origin. (The “Provincial IRM”?….!!!!) (* Any post-steam or pre-ICR middle passenger train MUST have a guards van & generator vehicle. Sticking two Cravens behind a loco and nothing else is like operating a passenger train without a locomotive! Pity there isn’t a credible RTR Genny van, but it’s needed!)…. I have a long term interest in the Achill line. Had that survived, you’d have been looking at two passenger trains a day, and a goods…. and 141s.
  2. If it’s of any help, livery details for CBPR carriages were - mud grey roofs, black chassis, dark green sides, probably with yellow lining but lining colour not reliably documented anywhere I’m aware of. Ends almost certainly green too. From looking at pigments, I believe the green was probably something like what British Railways had onnsteam engines in the 1950s. Locos were black, with red lining. On takeover by the GSR, the four locos were painted grey pretty quickly, and the carriages painted in full GSR maroon livery. Even many of the station signs were quickly replaced by standard GSR bilingual enamels. On the subject of GSR coach B livery, while the standard was black coach ends, I’ve found quite a few instances of the dnds being maroon as well, often on narrow gauge types. With several Passage coaches having observation ends, I wouldn’t be surprised if all stock on that line was like that.
  3. The NIR publicity pic at the container yard looks very futuristic!
  4. Now you’re making me drool. SLNCR “B” roaring and labouring its way round the mountainside above Bellacragher Bay, or on the long climb from the Owengarve river bridge up to Mulrany!
  5. The big issue, of course, would have been what would have happened when the British companies were nationalised. It might have brought nationalisation here (1950) ahead by two years.
  6. Interesting concept. Had the NCC and MGWR been physwically connected, you'd have had one owned by the (English) Midland Railway, and the other by the LNWR, up to 1923, but they would have had become one system after that. This, in turn, would have limited the GSR to little more than the GSR and the narrow gauge lines, and possibly resulted in the subsuming of the CDR into the LMS. But the GNR was in the middle between the, and was itself at one stage contemplating amalgamating with the DSER. Given all that, any supposition as to what might have happened has far too many variables to be anything other than pure fantasy, but certainly an interesting one. The Fishguard company became in operational terms part of the GSR, so a British owned Irish company wholly within the Irish Free State might also have been operated like that. As an aside, it's equally interesting to wonder whyat way our railways would have developed had Ireland never been divided into two separate political jurisdictions....
  7. Absolutely superb and invaluable piece of work, Mol!
  8. Ghastly!
  9. Fry built from official drawings where he could get them (usually the Chief Draughtsman’s office in Inchicore). I’m unaware of any he just guessed at, so I’d say this thing had a prototype as shown.
  10. As a big fan of Austrian narrow gauge, I'm watching this one with great interest!
  11. “Ye put a SHILLING on that thing? Sure it’s as lame as hell! It came second last at Ascot, did ye know that?” ”Listen, Sally’s brother says it’s a guaranteed winner, an’ I only had a shilling - I’d have put a pound on it if I could!” ”Jaysus. Lucky the Grand National’s only once a year. Have you the sandwiches from Bridie?” ”Yes, they’re in the van here. And there’s tea in the two red flasks. But we can’t leave till Gerry comes back with the messages….”
  12. “So will you be back to help me with the cows?” ”I’m back on the 8.30 in the morning. Whos buyin’ them?” ”Yer man up in Listowel who comes to the mart” ”Big fella with the red face?” ”Yeah, that’s him. Looks like Jackie’s brother but he’s fatter….”
  13. A quiet day at Dugort Harbour in spring 1963. One of the last three passenger-carrying six-wheelers has but one week to go before withdrawal, while the bogie composite will soldier on for another year or so. A12 arrives with the midday connection off the Tralee train. The stock is shunted off the platform line as a ballast train is arriving before the afternoon mixed departs….
  14. As it was, with green, it's in the standard GSR & CIE colours. While station "liveries" on most lines did not necessarily bear any relationship to those of their trains, i wouldn't be surprised if the CBSCR used green too - BUT - there's an exception to some rules, and this is one; around 1959/60, several West Cork stations were repainted a new way, along with several on other lines too - RED! So had Ballymartle survived until the end of the Wisht caark system, buy; it may well have ended up red! Up de rebels, boy!
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