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jhb171achill

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Everything posted by jhb171achill

  1. It IS possible, yes, but I’d sway towards early CIE. One thing can be taken as certain, though; IF it’s old GSR numerals, and cuts a very big “if”, the coach will indeed be badly faded maroon. The coach numeral at the far end is CIE style too, again suggesting green.
  2. The latest I’ve found evidence of, still operating and still in by now VERY badly faded GSR livery is about 1956/7 - one coach on the C & L; and an old bogie brake of some sort on the main line about 1951/2/3. This is in CIE green, but hasn’t seen a paintbrush for yonks. They’ve put new pale green later-era numerals on top of the badly faded predecessors. The faded numbers visible don’t have the elaborate gar style, so they’re early CIE eau-de-nil.
  3. At different times the GSWR, GSR AND CIE used both versions!
  4. That’s almost certainly what it is. It’s a conversion of a standard GSR cattle truck.
  5. I kept you one. There's a pint on for you....
  6. Much to think of there, folks. Mol, I'm intrigued by your 50ft coach; I would certainly take one of those etches if and when available from your supplier. Can I ask, will it be body on;y or will there be chassis, bogies, etc., with it?
  7. I must say, I like that!
  8. Bit like replacing the titanic with a rowing boat….
  9. The Hunslets absolutely DID haul those! They also were (albeit very rarely) seen in ballast trains, and I saw one with at least 7, maybe 9(???) bogies en route to Portrush - NOT Mk 2s; STEAM (ex-NCC & GNR) bogies - about six - with three de-engined AEC / BUT cars at the rear. All were in NIR’s non-Mk2-coach livery of all-over maroon with a 3” grey waistline. 7, let alone 9 bogies behind one of those things was a serious load.
  10. Those look extremely well, Darius.
  11. I've seen that website and pics of models made up - they look very well indeed. I think it would be more carriages I'd be looking for. Some LMS types were similar to those of the NCC, of course.
  12. Having arrived very late indeed to the party as far as brass is concerned, I see that manufacturers of this type of kit are becoming fewer and fewer, and those folks I've got to know in recent times who are old hands at this dark art tell me that they feel they're the last generation that will do such things, has me thinking. Worsley is packing up. They had a good range of Irish stuff. SSM have less available than they used to. Their Bredin thirds and composites seem to no longer be available - and just when the IRM 800 class is about to appear too! They'd have been ideal. There are an impressive number of manufacturers of brass kits over in Starmerland, but they are either too expensive or too complex for anyone but the experienced, or both. Plus, even there they seem to be thinning out. I found one website online - can't remember which - and it said they were taking no new orders and packing up due to retirement. Plus, in almost every case, the prototypes offered look no more like anything that ever ran in any corner of this island, than an ICR looks like the Lartigue. So - to the future. Many brassers that I know are already of the view that this medium is a dinosaur about to die out. I dunno, but simply to parrot-like repeat what they say, the feeling seems to be that 3D is absolutely the future, and indeed we've seen this medium going from completely unacceptably crude to very high-end in a very short few years. The future for 3D seems very much assured and when we see the excellent quality from the likes of CK Prints, who could argue that. So, my brass-ish thoughts. I spent a few evenings bumbling about on the internet to see what I could find. The answer was nothing whatsoever that even with considerable alteration and artistic licence would be the slightest use to any Irish modeller - other than the REMAINING Studio Scale kits, and this: https://mousa-models.co.uk/scales/4mm-scale/coaches/bck1671-4-nsr-family-saloon/?v=25400724d737 A very GSWR-esque design; would go well with SSM GSWR kits as a first class saloon, or with "Genesis" six-wheelers, as being a British prototype it would be the same "narrow gauge" width, as all things from that area. They do many other kits from the same era, but they are of Midland (England) prototypes, so they are far too long and have curved ends - not remotely like anything here. Personally I am not interested in attempting a locomotive. I won't live long enough to finish it at my rate of output. As for wagons, British wagon design has always been quite unlike any company here, with the exception of many standard OPEN wagons, and I suppose much modern container stuff. Even British Rail 1960s palvans weren't like ours. So I have therefore drawn a blank regarding wagon stock. With the superb output of Provincial / CK Prints, SSM, IFM and of course IRM, I don't think there's any point in pursuing wagons in brass, but as for carriages - I wonder does anyone know of any brass kit etch makers who produce anything that would suit any pre-CIE / UTA Irish company? And finally, any thoughts on getting etches MADE for some sort of prototype HERE? Doubtless the market would be minute, with a production run possibly of less than ten items. Can things like this be done? Thoughts?
  13. I’ve warned them accordingly…..
  14. Yes. I have pictures of this in the book. As well as the fact that had the line survived, the Gs were going anyway, another thing that ended that year in any case was cattle, and yet another was mixed trains. While right to the end, the timetable still officially showed services operating as mixed, in practice the midday goods did the job, usually with 616. By this stage, inward goods consisted typically of one or two vans mostly containing supplies for McInerney’s supermarket. In late autumn / early winter beet pulp too. Incoming general goods, beer, oil (in cans) fertiliser and all the other normal stuff had slowed to a tiny trickle. OUTWARD goods was virtually non-existent and has been for years, bar a few parcels in the guards van. Cattle traffic halved between the 1930s & 50s, then halved again by about 1963. After 1968 or 9 another steady drop. Passenger figures were usually single figures with one exception - daily school traffic Dunsandle - Loughrea and back. With cattle traffic finishing in 1974, the most optimistic pro-rail folks still couldn’t have made a case to retain the line. Moreover, the entire track would have needed to be ripped up and replaced, the ballast too, and even the lineside drainage.
  15. Yes, an IRRS jaunt.
  16. That pic is Fenit, not Foynes, and yes, the G611s (while delivered green) were repainted before turning a wheel and were always either black and white or orange, black and white in use.
  17. True! That’s exactly as they looked in the weathered maroon!
  18. * bodywork by jhbSeniorx2!! (also cars C & D of the Drumms) Woohoo!!!!! Yes!!!
  19. Yes to all !!!!!!
  20. Absolute shame. Hope somebody gives it the attention it deserves.
  21. That is a quite outstanding layout! The scenic detail is the absolute best I've seen. The middle shed on the right is a masterpiece. I can just imagine that green door flapping about in a strong wind on a stormy night and banging against a wall outside and being flittered - with the wall (to the left) damaged too, and replaced by those rusty corrugated iron sheets - or, a loco with poor brakes or a rookie driver walloping it when it was shut and transforming it into lighting-up wood for the steam engines!
  22. The final livery of 102 with black round the windows and the darker blue was short-lived, and she only wore it in her last days shunting Adelaide yard. Many of the fittings had been removed from the front by then, as well as the nameplates. So no trains were ever hauled by that livery, which was designed by the then loco engineer in York Road. I saw it daily at that time. At this stage, two trains came in from Dundalk each morning, with "pairs" up front usually, sometimes a single 141. One was cement, the other Guinness. I think the fert stopped in the latter days. As far as I recall, but I'd need to check, one of the "pair" shunted the yard at least to some extent, while newly-painted 102 sat forlorn at the back; while the other went back to Dundalk. I recall a pair of 121s struggling there with what for those days was an uncharcteristically heavy load one day. Mind you, I also recall steam locos shunting in that general area too! (GVS, Lisburn)...
  23. On the basis of the above, and turning to modelling, a reasonable background for a small-space model railway could be a terminus with a single passenger coach (green six-wheel passenger brake or brake laminate of 19XX series, a "G611" class loco (or two!), and if ever available a good RTR "C" class too, a CIE brake van (CK Prints) and some goods vans and beet trucks. Perhaps a very good starter set might be sold, with a "G", coach, and half a dozen wagons and a van!
  24. Yes, a couple of IRRS specials indeed. The pic above at Attymon showing a Park Royal and two tin vans would be on a day when the regular coach was away for servicing in Galway. When that happened, once every two weeks or so, they sent something like this. More usually it was a laminate with a heating van. Park Royals were extremely rare beasts indeed at Loughrea; the only time you'd be likely to see one usually was in the consist of one of the Mystery Trains from Dublin. Even GAA and pilgrimage trains often consisted of (standing room only, no doubt) the branch train, one coach with possibly a Galway-based laminate as well, trundling up to the junction and adding its people to a main line special! In other news, I spent all of yesterday with Barry Carse going through hundreds of slides with our next project in mind. He has amazing shots of all sorts of specials with consists that nobody would ever have thought of.
  25. Yes, a reasonable conclusion! Had the 800s lived a FULL life, they’d probably have lasted to maybe 1985! Doubtless like that - but - “Supertrain”???
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