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Everything posted by jhb171achill
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The Official Irish 'Might Have Beens' Thread
jhb171achill replied to minister_for_hardship's topic in General Chat
And people who could work all three gears on a SLNCR bus, and steer bald tyres as well, were even more valuable...........! -
The Official Irish 'Might Have Beens' Thread
jhb171achill replied to minister_for_hardship's topic in General Chat
This is about as perfect a set-up as possible for a small layout of the various different versions of your excellent takents, david. It combines realism with maximum use in minimum space, operational challenges in shunting to maximise interest, and all this without making it look too cluttered. A track layout like that, or with little variation, would suit any of your projects, plus those being discussed. -
The Official Irish 'Might Have Beens' Thread
jhb171achill replied to minister_for_hardship's topic in General Chat
I'm surprised he retained ANY career with them at all! -
The Official Irish 'Might Have Beens' Thread
jhb171achill replied to minister_for_hardship's topic in General Chat
The Lough Swilly timetables showed that for years…… obviously the CDR only did buses when the railway was closing, but a nice “imaginary” CDR line might have been Killybegs - Kilcar…. On a similar vein, a little to the south the SLNCR had a respectable network of bus routes on which their ancient scrapyard buses (16th century vintage) skipped across potholes…. -
The Official Irish 'Might Have Beens' Thread
jhb171achill replied to minister_for_hardship's topic in General Chat
Yes, very much so - and indeed - the British military authorities made that very case when the scheme was being discussed! On the other hand, their seafaring arm preferred Bantry owing to issues about servicing warships…. -
The Official Irish 'Might Have Beens' Thread
jhb171achill replied to minister_for_hardship's topic in General Chat
It was. I'm researching the Kenmare line at the moment. There was a proposal to extent it some 30 miles to Castletownbere. Along that entire route there is, and was, zero industry, almost no population; and it would have ended at a tiny, isolated sleepy little fishing village, having struggled its way through probably the most difficult terrain any railway would have encountered anywhere in Ireland. They were STILL smoking that pot well into the 1900s....! The reason was an imaginary huge transatlantic port, which was considered utter pie in the sky by anyone and everyone with even one hour's basic tuition in economics*, mail transport, geology, or climate knowledge of local seas....... (* We're talking here about those capable of counting to ten......) From north Donegal to south Cork, I can think offhand of twelve such schemes, some seriously promoted as late as 1920-ish, which would have vyed with each other for the greatest waste of money (public or private) in world history. In all reality, very much the antecedent of the crass self-publicity-serving undersea tunnel ideas of a deeply odious 21st century orange coloured man with a piece of yellow carpet on his head in Brexitstan......................! -
The Official Irish 'Might Have Beens' Thread
jhb171achill replied to minister_for_hardship's topic in General Chat
Yes, the amount of “crackpot” schemes at least equally the mileage of those built! Places of 150-200 people miles and miles from anywhere with three separate schemes each… The big narrow gauge one you’re thinking of - and probably the most inane proposal ever, anywhere - was the 3ft gauge Ulster & Connaught from Clifden to Greenore. It wouldn’t have involved the Donegal lines but it WOULD have involved new lines from Clifden and Galway meeting up about Shrule, then by studiously avoiding any population of more than a couple of hundred people, and crossing hundreds of acres of empty turf bogs, ended up at the Dromod end of the Cavan & Leitrim. Then onwards to almost the other end of that line, up to the Clogher Valley, along that and eastwards through an area with big engineering difficulties, down into Newry. At that point, the Greenore line would have become dual gauge. I dunno what they were smoking….. -
Indeed - all it needs is a tablecloth over it and a teapot............. (and choccy bikkies) And this is.........a MODEL??????????????????????? WOW!!! You've surpassed yourself (and most of the rest of us!)
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It would be BCDR, rather than BNCR, to Ballynahinch Junction. The BNCR stock was of a very distinctive design, with flat sides. Unlike anything else in Ireland, and (like, it must be said, six-wheel stock of most companies) no more like the Hattons design than a Pendolino. In any event, by the time the NCC took over the BNCR, they had much fewer six wheelers left, as they were early advocates of bogies. What few they had probably ended their life on the Larne or Derry Central, of mouldering in sidings awaiting the next orangeman’s or Sunday school outing. The Hattons stock is close enough to several GSWR designs, but not really other Irish companies. Design wise they’re different too, from DSER of BCDR designs - but would suit them better than, say, GNR, MGWR or BNCR /NCC.
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Indeed it was, though I’m not 100% sure of the shade. Probably not unlike a darker version of LMS maroon.
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Not a black one; the black livery was arriving just as the last six-wheelers were departing! So, to go with any passenger-carrying six-wheelers, the following: - Any steam - Silver A, B101 or C - Green A, B101 or C - Grey & Yellow B121 By the time the B121s, A, C & B101 were repainted black'n'tan, and LATER black, and by the time the B141s were first introduced the only six-wheelers left were about six full brakes, 2 or 3 of which became black'n'tan and were to be found mostly in Galway mail trains. That's why Hattons are only offering the full brake in black'n'tan - no passenger carrying six-wheel stock survived long enough to be painted thus. They all ended their days in green. Don't know how many they are making, but let's just say that they are in possession of a list of several number options for each type! So, we all buy this run up, and I'm sure that might prompt more..........
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Me too. Getting to the stage I'd need to be content with what I have. In an ideal world and if I was 20 years younger and not living on a pension, I would have some sort of early NIR set up with hand-made Jeeps, MEDs, AECs, and MPDs (Lambegman would love it!) on a layout based on the Lisburn - Banbridge bit having survived the attentions of thye UTA (or is it NTA; I get these two vehemently anti-rail groups mixed up....) Next room would be Dugort Harbour, but a generation earlier in GSR days, then grey'n'green, then black'n'tan. 1980s Java at the end of steam, with brand new GM diesels vying with 1870s wood burning 2.4.0s for space on weed-strewn tracks. In the West Wing, I've 1960-80 South Africa, with 19Ds, 15CAs, 12Rs, and 6Js, and a Garrett or two. Beyond that in another room, BR blue-era rural England with Metro-Cammell railcars, 24s, 25s, 26s, and 31s all over the place. And then it would be time for my cocoa.
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His analysis is not without some degree of foundation, but that particular description of what he suggests was actual policy - official or unofficial - is simplistic and exaggerated to a pretty inaccurate degree. See Mayner’s detailed analysis in his answer….. If ever there was an anti-rail mode in government, despite the greens being in government it’s more recently, with some quite vehement anti-rail lobbies within the NTA.
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Is NSFW an American or Australian railway company........?
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Worth remembering too that the length will have changed over the years, so the length you want depends on the era you’re modelling.
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I wonder how many of us got a train set for Christmas!..........
jhb171achill replied to LARNE CABIN's topic in General Chat
Ah! “Thomas”-style stuff….. looks interesting! -
I wonder how many of us got a train set for Christmas!..........
jhb171achill replied to LARNE CABIN's topic in General Chat
A 9F in maroon? That would look quite interesting........... -
American visitors to Tara Junction.
jhb171achill replied to ttc0169's topic in US / Canadian Railway Modelling
You'd need the entire fleet of 21 x 071s (yes, including the NIR ones!) to haul some USA goods (sorry, "freight") trains! -
“Off with ‘is head! Off with ‘is head!”
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There needs to be a model priest with confessional “customer” with a soundtrack. ”Father, forgive me, for I have sinned”. ”Yeah…. I saw it on Facebook……”
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Even ordinary local services could have them occasionally, maybe one mixed in with other bogie stock, until the very early 60s. They were in general use in Ireland for decades after Britain got rid of them; right until closure in 1950, the entire BCDR system had little more than about a dozen bogies - six-wheelers were absolutely standard. CIE used them on branches, main line locals anc excursions - and for extra short-notice accommodation on main lines, until the very start of 1963. In suburban use, the Harcourt St line and the Cork-Cobh line had them until the end, while you’d get one occasionally tagged onto the back of a modern AEC railcar set on the Cork - Tralee and Cork - Bantry services, and even Dublin - Rosslare, into the early 60s.
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N Scale Ballywillan, Co Longford.
jhb171achill replied to Kevin Sweeney's topic in Irish Model Layouts
“Cultivate patience”…… wow. That plus your other stuff is absolutely outstanding. By far the best “N” scale stuff I’ve ever seen anywhere. Makes you think, too - that was a very substantial station for a place the size of Belturbet, even allowing for the C & L connection. -
Me too - I had a holiday job on the FR in the summer when I was 17…. almost fifty years ago….happy days.