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minister_for_hardship

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Everything posted by minister_for_hardship

  1. It's called a ducket, with little windows the guard can look out of to keep tabs on what's going on outside.
  2. https://www.facebook.com/#!/203146879726646/photos/a.789110141130314.1073741840.203146879726646/789110194463642/?type=1&theater
  3. Reminds me of one of those play centre yokes with Matchbox cars for kids.
  4. Interesting going through the different styles on that site, the Victorian era had a few OTT poorly proportioned uglies but 60's/70's designs had little in the line of redeeming features, imho. The 'Unbuilt Ireland' section is worth a look. One of the more bizarre proposals...http://archiseek.com/2012/1942-new-capital-city-for-ireland-at-tara/
  5. Probably just as well, ugh. The Great Train Robbery would have to be filmed elsewhere...nice model though. http://archiseek.com/2014/1970s-proposal-heuston-station-dublin/
  6. Wagon number suffixes; gather that ex GN wagons carried an 'N', presume all ex MGW had an 'M', ex CBSC had a 'B', DSE had a 'D', ex Macroom Direct 'R', ex T & Courtmac 'J' and GSW/GSR/CIE generally didn't have a suffix....was that observed religiously or were there oddball suffixes?
  7. Full broadside builders' photo on IRRS 'Railways Of Co Cork' booklet with red/white cover. Some scant info available online on the saint himself. http://www.earlychristianireland.org/Counties/cork/labbamolaga/ http://www.corkpastandpresent.ie/history/irishbuilder/labbamolaga-churchruins/ http://homepage.eircom.net/~stmolaga/stmolaga.html
  8. Probably printed for publicity purposes, weird the way they included the oil lamps and not the electric headlights! IE were handing out fold-up cardboard 201s as promotional items a good few years ago, have 2 of them somewhere. They were (roughly) 00 scale.
  9. They're not the same. 'Train spotter' is a cover all term used by the general public and the mass media...even if number-taking isn't your bag at all. People like to taking photos, making models (garden railways/layouts/live steam/model engineering), researching history, travelling over different lines or line bashing if you will, haulage bashing, volunteering on heritage railways, collecting memorabilia...all this can't be pigeon-holed into 'Train spotting'.
  10. If anyone has seen 'The Railway Man' film, the Colin Firth character takes umbrage at being called a 'Train Spotter'.....'I'm a Railway Enthusiast!'
  11. RMS Olympic as HMT Olympic in dazzle colours. Near identical sister ship of the better known Titanic. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RMS_Olympic#mediaviewer/File:Olympic_WWI.jpg Gives an impression of what the Titanic might have looked if it dodged the iceberg, made it to New York and served in WW1.
  12. Interesting that bankrupt and even developing countries have better transport museums than we have.
  13. One of the coaches looks to be in middling condition, pity the damp got at the rest. I'd say most of it would be of use to guys looking for spares, or to repaint, but repainted stuff doesn't have anywhere near the value of an untouched example.
  14. Hardly a contest of equals there, express passenger loco vs. loco designed for goods work. No 4 vs. Merlin would be more interesting, in a hypothetical Top Gear type challenge.
  15. 'C202' aka C227, the loco that just refuses to die. Whether that's a good or a bad thing is a matter of personal opinion....
  16. Originally Posted by Dierdre Power ...is premised on the need for social change by promoting dialogue between public agencies and citizens. The work engages with the complexities of spatial planning and development, working towards an understanding how we use and live in social space.... What? I still don't get it.
  17. Quite the oddest premise for a railtour yet, but if it brings in a bit of business...how bad?
  18. Think you may be confusing the Duke of Devonshire (Cavendish) with the Duke of Sutherland (Leveson-Gower). Two different families. The 1st Duke of Sutherland was infamously connected with the Highland Clearances, the 3rd Duke had interests in local Railway companies, operated and subsequently absorbed by the Highland Rly...and the private station and private loco 'Dunrobin' still exist. Since Devonshire was main shareholder and chairman, seems reasonable to think he should get his moneys worth, ie a station building matching his ancestral pile.
  19. The Aussies had something called a FRED (Field Ration Eating Device) more popularly called by the Diggers the 'F**king Ridiculous Eating Device'.
  20. Slightly OT but anyone remember the name of an RTE programme dealing with Irish architecture, maybe screened about 15-20 years ago, there was an episode featuring the 1939 World's Fair Irish Pavilion by Michael Scott? There was an earlier series dealing with mainly Irish church architecture even further back.
  21. Some West Cork locations got red/cream shortly before CIE called it a day. The 70's / 80's a lot of places were plastered in acres of depressing grey with windows picked out in white.
  22. ITL was certainly better than RTE's more recent offerings of a railway nature. The theme tune sung by the late Ronnie Drew with just about every railway cliche in the world was the one thing that stuck in my craw.
  23. CIE and IR had Railway Police, but they were more glorified security guards for Inchicore etc. Think network is a bit small for a dedicated force, targetting 'troublesome' services with privarte security is prob best that can be done with limited resources.
  24. I hear you. Whoever thought these yokes would somehow pass for Irish outline was definitely on illegal substances. My 9 y/o former self would have turned his nose up at these atrocities...there's some things only a mother (or a collector) could love.
  25. Must be part of the 0.00001% of the male population that is immune to World Cup fever. Makes for awkward pub chat, esp since I can't discuss the goal that zsa zsa gabor scored for Tanganika.
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