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minister_for_hardship

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Everything posted by minister_for_hardship

  1. In the best tradition of giving nicknames to logos, I'll be calling the new one the 'Wiggly Worm'!
  2. Translink's is a boring generic logo, it could be any TOC beginning with the letter 'T', but it's still better looking (marginally) than this atrocity.
  3. Our hard-working decal manufacturers can't keep up at this rate of rebranding.
  4. Family Guy had a pop at Lance: Peter: I always wanted to be an astronaut, like Lance Armstrong. Chris: It's Neil Armstrong. Peter: He lied about his name, too?!
  5. Is this Irish Rails topical response to the Belfast 'flegs' dispute?
  6. http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/CIE-Bassett-Lowke-Model-Train-Maunsell-KI-Woolwich-Class-2-6-0-/261155148143?pt=UK_Trains_Railway_Models&hash=item3cce0f516f What price were these when they came out? For those kinda bucks, I'd prefer live steam and a less primitive valve gear.
  7. Thailand would have an added dimension of Japanese-built locos. Looking at a display of old b/w photos at Bangkok's main station a few years ago, there was American, German and a few British locos (possibly ex Federated Malay States Railways?) in evidence. Also never knew that they regauged from standard to metre gauge. Most towns on the rail network have 'stuffed and mounted' locos on display, including at Kanchanaburi, the place that inspired the Bridge on the River Kwai. They had a Garrett, a couple of NBL 4-6-0s, a Japanese (2-6-0 I think) and a Japanese railcar adapted from an army truck. Burma still had some nice old diesels on VERY rickety track and a red/white railcar that wouldn't look out of place on the wee Donegal! And Cambodia had Chinese cast offs with a few Franco Belge kettles either on display or stored in sheds. Some rolling stock was either Aussie built or had components from that neck of the woods, saw 'Sydney Aust.' on one wheel bearing cover. The one passenger train I was on was hauled by a Czech shunter still in Czechslovakian livery and company plates!
  8. It was an awful eyesore for visitors coming to the UFTM, like the previous poster I'm surprised the museum didn't make an offer for it as an admin building or something.
  9. Thanks lads, I'll be looking into those over the next week or so.
  10. What manner of bats**t is this?
  11. Is there a site/resource that deals with doing this? Something that would explain it in terms a 5 year old would understand. Ta.
  12. Wasn't the green Bandon tank the one that went 'foreign' (DSE section)?
  13. The DSER also used oval plates, but I don't think they built steel bodied vans(?) GSR/CIE as you say had a 'D' shaped one with flat side up. MGWR had either small brass ones or a cast iron 'D' shaped one. GNR vans usually had tiny little tonnage plates bolted onto the body rather than the solebar.
  14. still has own teeth, shame about the hair tho...
  15. On the first pic you can see an imprint of where an oval plate (about the same size as the GSWR Inchicore Works plate) was carried. Usually they were centred on the solebar, bit odd to see one bolted to it off-centre. The sligo leitrim railcar looks to be in limerick junction shed?
  16. What was the deal with the silver laminates? Were they trying to match them up with the silver locos or did they just run like that until they got a proper paint job? How long did they run like that?
  17. Hang on, didn't the Irish Woolwichs not get the front steps???
  18. +1 Mayner. The Sentinels look well, hopefully they won't have the same flaws as the other 0-4-0s, stalling and going at 120mph scale speed. There is still at least one or two steam Sentinels in everyday service in the 21st Century, somewhere in South America I think, undoubtably there would be a good few diesels still knocking about overseas. Wonder why the Irish (steam) versions had such a short innings. That LMS/BR van looks a bit like an NCC 'brown van', probably too long though.
  19. Thought it was India Pale Ale for a sec..
  20. Nice to see the preserved Pichi Richi Railway in South Oz getting some publicity in the pics, v. nice set-up they have too. Their numbersake to 'our' 186 featured in the movie 'Gallipoli' as No. 981 by the simple expedient of turning the numberplate upside down!
  21. Also, the 'Stand Behind Yellow Line' painted-on warnings are alternately in English and Irish. Can't remember exact wording right now.
  22. Putting the 'fun' into funicular.
  23. [video=youtube;3VMSGrY-IlU]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3VMSGrY-IlU Charlie on the MTA - Kingston Trio Hal and the 'Gentlemen Callers' did a version in Malcolm In The Middle! Heard a sh*t-hot band from Carlow do a cover of it in Kilkenny one night, surprised to hear it on this side of the pond.
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