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Ernies Massive Irish 1930's to 2005 Photo Archive

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Posted
11 hours ago, Galteemore said:

As @leslie10646will confirm, the 171 pic was on an historic day. This was a mammoth RPSI tour, which involved the only ever UG working to Portrush  - and the last steaming of 207. So a sad photo in many ways but very precious. 

Yes, indeed, although I was timing Bulleid Pacifics on the Bournemouth line that day!

When I published a history of the first 25 years of the RPSI Steam's Silver Lining, I noted in the caption of the photo of 171 piloting No.207 Boyne - "The saddest photo in the book" - as it was No.207's last run. She was condemned by her 21 ton axle-loading, which would have restricted her usefulness on tours (Belfast - Dublin - Cork). Yet No.85, with the same loading has been almost everywhere - modern diesels, unthought of in 1965, are so much heavier!

 

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Posted
7 minutes ago, leslie10646 said:

....When I published a history of the first 25 years of the RPSI Steam's Silver Lining, I noted in the caption of the photo of 171 piloting No.207 Boyne - "The saddest photo in the book" - as it was No.207's last run. She was condemned by her 21 ton axle-loading, which would have restricted her usefulness on tours (Belfast - Dublin - Cork). Yet No.85, with the same loading has been almost everywhere - modern diesels, unthought of in 1965, are so much heavier!

207's tender survived, though

Posted
10 minutes ago, leslie10646 said:

Correct, Ivan. Not used now - does it still exist?

Indeed it does - tender no 31. Don’t think it has any future - the Mogul if and when finished will apparently use one of the ex U tenders.

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Posted
22 minutes ago, Galteemore said:

Indeed it does - tender no 31. Don’t think it has any future ....

Anyone fancy funding a replica 207 Boyne? Only the engine portion to worry about.....!

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Posted (edited)

LOL Ernie. Those are basically the two locations that define my childhood railway memories. I grew up in earshot of the Larne line and made regular visits to my grandparents in SLNCR-land. On one memorable occasion, we had to rush a parcel of my grandfather’s fresh caught salmon (which had travelled by railcar pre 57) over the mountain to catch the last train from Sligo….

Looks very like the Glenfarne shot shows the 2pm goods out of Enniskillen in mid-shunt.

Edited by Galteemore
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Posted (edited)
On 10/10/2024 at 8:09 AM, Irishswissernie said:

CIE 1964-06-09 Limerick 2627 on curve to North Kerry line yj175.

  yj175 CIE 1964-06-09 Limerick 2627 on curve to North Kerry line yj175

 

If this is 1964, it must be a special of some sort? Passenger service to Tralee finished a year earlier.......... or is it just parked?

 

Edited by jhb171achill
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Posted

A fascinating view across Waterford yard. All those cattle wagons (and a few horseboxes)! I think I can see a few cattle wagons without rooves?

It's 1956 and wagons with the Bulleid triangulated underframe are a tiny proportion of what we see in this photo.

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Posted

I'll be showing some remarkable views of Waterford station and yard when I present a show of the late David Soggee's slides by Zoom to IRRS London on 6 December. I'll post the Zoom code nearer the time.

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Posted
7 hours ago, Irishswissernie said:

CIE 1955-08-04 Dublin Harcourt St. D14 89 KCorig 249005.

CIE 1955-08-04 Dublin Harcourt St. D14 89 KCorig 249005  

 

There's all sorts of things going on in that D14 - it looks like two or three different designs in one.

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Posted
9 hours ago, Patrick Davey said:

The superb views continue!  Didn't realise the silver livery was still around in 1961.

The odd coach and loco had it until 1963 or 4 - a handful of vehicles went straight from that to black'n'tan.

They had stopped turning anything out fresh in silver after only a few years, 1955-57. By 1958, the last "C" class locos entered service in green.

Obviously not everything was repainted overnight, hence the above. Same with the green; while it was superceded in late 1962, there were still a handful of green coaches to be seen as late as 1967. And as I've mentioned before, you'd still see the odd "H" van with a snail on it right to the end of loose-coupled goods in 1976.

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Posted
3 hours ago, Paul 34F said:

The D14 has been updated.  
Belpaire firebox, new cab and rebuilt footplate.  It then becomes a lovely curiosity due to the very old tender.

Looks like it was superheated as well, owing to the extended smokebox

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Posted
On 13/11/2024 at 7:43 AM, Paul 34F said:

The D14 has been updated.  
Belpaire firebox, new cab and rebuilt footplate.  It then becomes a lovely curiosity due to the very old tender.

Paul

The GSR/CIE rebuilds of the D14s is somewhat complicated.

The GSR rebuilt 3 of the 15 D14s 62, 88 & 89 with new frames, running boards and canopy cabs in the mid-20s 62 & 88 were re-built with extended smokeboxes retaining the original saturated boiler. 89 was rebuilt with a saturated Belpair boiler (later used in the 700 Class 0-6-0s) and re-classified as D13 from 1925-33

65 was rebuilt with a 700 Class boiler and a canopy cab but retained her existing frames and curving running board in 1931!

62,88 & 89 were later re-built with Z Superheated boiler same as used on the J15.

61 & 65 appear to be the only members of the class that were not superheated.

D14s like several ex-GSWR classes locos ran with tenders with diffent 

https://transportsofdelight.smugmug.com/RAILWAYS/IRISH-RAILWAYS/CORAS-IOMPAIR-EIREANN-STEAM/i-FWNJ8dc/A

62 Inchacore Superheated boiler high capacity Type C Tender

https://transportsofdelight.smugmug.com/RAILWAYS/IRISH-RAILWAYS/CORAS-IOMPAIR-EIREANN-STEAM/i-bKSrFvc/A

The ugly duckling 65

https://transportsofdelight.smugmug.com/RAILWAYS/IRISH-RAILWAYS/CORAS-IOMPAIR-EIREANN-STEAM/i-TTc9HH8/A

88 Superheated boiler small Type A Tender

https://transportsofdelight.smugmug.com/RAILWAYS/IRISH-RAILWAYS/CORAS-IOMPAIR-EIREANN-STEAM/i-L8CzXDF/A

89 Early CIE days being prepared for the road Superheated boiler medium capacity Type B tender.

 

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Posted (edited)

CIE 1961-06-06 or 07  ca where 125 yj191. You can just see the back of that distinctive (or should it be ugly?) headboard of the IRRS Tour. This is either 6 June Limerick-Roscrea-Ballybrophy or 7 June Limerick - Ennis -Athenry - Attymon. (Six Bells Junction Tours website). EDIT Confirmed as Nenagh 6 June 1961

CB&SCR 1954-09-04 Baltimore KC ref 249022.

yj181 CIE 1982-03-14 Ballina 058 yj181.

yj191 CIE 1961-06-06 or 07  ca where 125 yj191 CB&SCR 1954-09-04 Baltimore KC ref 249022 yj181 CIE 1982-03-14 Ballina 058 yj181

 

Edited by Irishswissernie
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Posted (edited)

In the first photo, as well as the ubiquitous vans, there's a nice tar/bitumen tank in the background. These were numbered 23801-23890 and delivered in 1953/54. They had a 'British' underframe length of 17'6" rather than the Irish standard of 16'11".

Also the flat wagon in the left foreground is interesting, with its low sides, some of these are seen in this photo from the National Library of Ireland on Flickr, mixed in with other types of flat wagon:

Cars from Cork

 

Edited by Mol_PMB
added second sentence and image link.
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Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, leslie10646 said:

....But, eemmm ..... if it had new frames, in some peoples' books that's a new engine? ...

Not if you're a railway accountant. If you look at what the LMS did when creating the first two "Rebuilt Claughtons" (i.e. leading directly to the "Patriot"), the engines were to all intents and purposes new, with only the Claughton driving wheels, bogie wheels and maybe the bogies being reused.

Doing it that way seems to mean the capital account is unaffected, as you count it as repairs instead. 'Tis all creative accountancy.

Edited by Horsetan
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Posted
53 minutes ago, Horsetan said:

Not if you're a railway accountant. If you look at what the LMS did when creating the first two "Rebuilt Claughtons" (i.e. leading directly to the "Patriot"), the engines were to all intents and purposes new, with only the Claughton driving wheels, bogie wheels and maybe the bogies being reused.

Doing it that way seems to mean the capital account is unaffected, as you count it as repairs instead. 'Tis all creative accountancy.

Far from limited to railways

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Puritan_(1864)

The US navy took a very liberal approach to 'rebuilds' of some of their ironclads to deal with Congress penny pinching on naval expenditure. 

Literally built a new battleship, slapped the old nameplates and bell of the old civil war ironclad on it and called it a rebuild

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Posted
5 minutes ago, Irishswissernie said:

I have a hunch that the first  shown again below photo could be at Nenagh.

yj191 CIE 1961-06-06 or 07  ca where 125 yj191

 

Definitely. 'Rails Through Tipperary' page 24 shows a later view from the same angle.

Posted
11 hours ago, leslie10646 said:

Thanks for the very informative post, John.

But, eemmm ..... if it had new frames, in some peoples' books that's a new engine?

I wonder how much of the original remained?

Indeed. We look at 90, 184 & 186; while they technically date from 1875, 1880 and 1879 respectively, they're classic Trigger's brushes. There is virtually nothing on any of the trio much before 1915, and later in some cases.

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Posted
20 hours ago, leslie10646 said:

Thanks for the very informative post, John.

But, eemmm ..... if it had new frames, in some peoples' books that's a new engine?

I wonder how much of the original remained?

Not a lot different from Dundalk's 1937 'heavy overhaul' of the S & S2 Class incl. 171 as virtually new locos complete with new deeper frames 🤣

The GSWR appears to have started the trend in 1918 by beginning the re-build of its large 321 Class 4-4-0s with new stronger frames and raised running boards (retaining original saturated  tapered boiler and Coey Cab) , MGW picked up the trend in 1925 by re-building 3 (half) of its Celtic Class 4-4-0s with superheated boilers, piston valves, new frames with raised running boards and canopy cabs. 

Its alleged that the 321s were re-built with frames cut but not used for additional members of the 341 Class following Richard Mansell's resignation as CME  and move to the South Eastern.

One of the theories behind the rebuilding of 62,88-89 in 1925 a contemporary styling was that it was intended to use the locos on a fast Dublin-Cork Newspaper Train and the 60 Class had a reputation as a fast reliable fast passenger loco.  

I must get the finger out and assemble the set of parts I have had in stock for a D14 since February.

 

 

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