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Melbourne Tram

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Saturday, November 11, 2017 12:27 PM

 Scenic beauty.

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Saturday, November 11, 2017 12:23 PM

 In the days of steam.

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Saturday, November 11, 2017 12:21 PM

 Breathtaking!

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Saturday, November 11, 2017 12:18 PM

 Over the high bridge.

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Saturday, November 11, 2017 12:16 PM

 QR diesel on the point.

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Saturday, November 11, 2017 12:13 PM

 Train to Kuranda. 1982.

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Friday, November 10, 2017 8:15 PM

O.k. Thank you ! Every country develops their own operating standards. In the old days, here in the U.S., different railroads had unique operating standards, and sometimes their own style of signals. Sometimes you could look at a picture and identify the railroad by the signals, and the color of the ballast. Chicago and North Western was known for left hand running on double track. Some railroads preferred to wait until they could assemble one massive train, others believed in short, frequent trains. Some railroads used "searchlight " signals, Pennsylvania used position light signals, N&W color position light signals.

And then there's the steam locos. In steam days, every road had their own unique style. Some preferred to build their own,some prefered to purchase. Nowadays, after many mergers, we have but a handful of Mega railroads, that have absorbed so many roads of the past. So, the unique personalities of the past are no more. And railroading itself has changed. It used to be every company and factory had their own railroad spur,now most spurs are gone. But railroads move enormous trains of containers and such. Mostly terminal to terminal, not so much to individual shippers.

 

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Posted by M636C on Friday, November 10, 2017 7:23 AM

So, my question is: is there a whistle sequence in Australia, for the driver to communicate with the crew ?

I don't think there is a standard whistle sequence used in Australia, except the three short whistles are used for reversing. However, I think even ships use three whistles to indicate backing out from a wharf, for example.

A single whistle can be used to indicate starting, or as a warning at a station, crossing or tunnel.

While not directly related, there was a system of bell signals between guards and drivers of suburban electric trains in Sydney. When a train was due to leave, two rings of a bell meant "clear to go" and one meant "stop". I've heard two rings followed by one if a passenger arrived late and ran for a train (when trains still had manual doors that were left open) followed again by two when it was safe to go. Now of course there is a voice connection.

I think there may have been defined whistle signals between lead and "bank" (pusher) locomotives. I'm not sure where I'd find them.

In the first of the videos covering the NSW Northern line, coal trains with small hopper wagons were shown. The private wagons usually had only hand brakes so the guard was expected to apply hand brakes on his van when required, and this was indicated by whistle from the locomotive. This might have been a series of short whistles. There is probably a reference for this somewhere....

Peter

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Thursday, November 9, 2017 10:11 PM

Great explanation of how the staff system operates ! I know what I wanted to ask you next:

I have noticed in these 2 great films"Passes", and "Passed", the 38's seem to blow an occasional  single blast of the whistle. The " Sherlock" in me awakened, because in the U.S., the whistle has a complete dictionary of signals to communicate with the train crew. An abbreviated list would be :

2 longs, 1short, 1long.   Standard whistle sequence for approaching, and passing through a grade crossing.

2shorts.  Starting in forward direction.

3 shorts.  Starting in reverse.

1 short. after train has come to complete stop, and brakes are applied.

I bring this up because when I was running the D-51 simulator in Japan, I was blowing the grade crossing sequence. That has no meaning in Japan, I think they use the whistle more as a warning. We Americans can forget that this is Not a worldwide standard, just North America. We have so many whistle signals, more than I can name. This probably goes back to the days before radios, and when a Brakeman was just that: a whistle command from the engineer to tighten the brake wheel.

So, my question is: is there a whistle sequence in Australia, for the driver to communicate with the crew ?

Paul

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Posted by M636C on Wednesday, November 8, 2017 11:39 PM

I had a bit of a shock today. I visited an office, and they had a picture of their Brisbane office on the wall. It showed tall skyscrapers along the river in Brisbane. That's just not what I remember ! And so it goes, it's been 35 years, I would probably be shocked if I go back.

My memories of Brisbane date back to early 1970. I was able to score a university vacation job building diesel locomotives in the Rocklea plant of English Electric.

The trams had been gone a bit over a year, so I rode around on buses to get an idea of the city and suburbs. It is totally unrecognisable now. As i recall there was only ONE restaurant open on a Sunday in the CBD. No shops were open on Sunday.

Townsville is pretty much unrecognisable from a railway perspective. The old station is closed, rplaced by one that actually spans the river directly on the main line. It is possible that Townsville had rod-operated signals, but there would be nothing to show for that now. The big workshops closed some time ago.

In New South Wales, the "staff" looked the same whether the interlocked machines were used or not and the system was called "staff operation" with or without the machines. With the machines it was called "electric staff" operation.

Without the machines, there was only one staff, of course. If two trains had to run in the same direction, a "ticket" was issued. The first train ran under authority of the "ticket" a written document from a book with carbon copies, only after the crew sighted the actual staff upon which the "ticket" was issued. The second train was allowed to start, usually after the first had reached the other end of the section, as confirmed by telephone, and it carried the real staff.

If the staff ended up at the wrong end, one of the station staff had to drive a car with the staff to get it to where it was needed and drive back.

So this "staff and ticket" operation was confined to branch lines with little traffic.

Peter

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Wednesday, November 8, 2017 11:14 PM

So, thinking about the screw type reverse ( some Pennsylvania K-4's  had this, also), reminds me of:

Our trip to Japan last year. Many great train museums in Japan. The D-51 Mikado is probably the most famous steam engine in Japan, with many preserved in parks, museums, and they have one in operating condition in Kyoto. So, last year we went to the train museum in Oomiya, just outside Tokyo. I have never actually run a steam engine, but they have a very realistic simulator in the museum.It is the cab of a D-51 Mikado, and all the controls are functional. In front is a movie screen to show the progress. Driver sits on the left, screw type reverse, with calibration numbers on the reverser.

From what I understand, there are different methods of operating a steam engine. The old timers run " by the seat of your pants", which means they listen to the stack, and how hard the engine is working. Then make adjustments to the valve travel for maximum speed, and efficiency.

Technology started to creep in when they started to manage the back pressure in the cylinders.

Eventually came the " valve pilot" that through cams and such, would display to the driver the optimum setting for the valve gear.

Back to the simulator: I was running this D-51 simulator, pulling back the throttle, and there was an instructor working with me. The point was to keep the numbers displayed on the reverse wheel at around "70", I assume this was optimizing the back pressure in the cylinders.

Yep, blew the whistle, too !

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Wednesday, November 8, 2017 10:20 PM

I had a bit of a shock today. I visited an office, and they had a picture of their Brisbane office on the wall. It showed tall skyscrapers along the river in Brisbane. That's just not what I remember ! And so it goes, it's been 35 years, I would probably be shocked if I go back. Also, what was the "Train to Kuranda", with a Queensland Railway diesel up front is now the " Kuranda Scenic Railway", and looks quite upscale. I saw a show on television, and I recognized the water front in Cairns where I had stayed, and they showed a high rise resort. So, it doesn't surprise me at all that the semaphores are gone. The rod plant that I saw ( I am 90%sure it was Townsville), was to actuate switches, but they did have semaphores,operating electrically.

I like both of those videos " A Steam Train Passes", and "A steam Train Passed". I like the grey livery almost as much as the green. What I like about the second film is they get a close up of one of the semaphores. That makes me happy.

I am still learning. I realize the operation on the "Bellarine Peninsula Railway", in one of my videos, is more of a "token" operation. The " staff" operation in a "Steam Train Passes" takes this concept a step further with an electrical interlocking component. Would this be correct ? The second video " A Steam Train Passed" shows a close up of the staff, with the station name engraved on it, as you had mentioned before. It's interesting to learn about operating practices in other parts of the world ! 

I have seen the " token" operation in one of my videos from another country, but I can't recall where that was. Anyway, it's a great way to guarantee only one train is on the line.

The scenes inside the cab are great ! The " driver" sits on the left in Australia, the " engineer" sits on the right in the U.S.  Also, most U.S. engines have a " Johnson bar" reverse lever. The 38's have a screw type reverse.

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Posted by M636C on Wednesday, November 8, 2017 8:01 AM

The initial documentary was not completely correct.

The first five 38 class were built by Clyde Engineering at Granville, not by the Eveleigh workshops.

The cast steel beds were indeed General Steels castings. However, also imported were the Boxpok driving wheels and the Delta trailing truck (and its Boxpok wheels) and from Sweden the SKF roller bearings on all axles.

The 1929 built 57 class 4-8-2s also had GSI cast steel beds, but these didn't include the (three) cylinders. I'm told that the order for 25 cast steel beds for the 57 class was the largest single order placed with GSI for engine beds up to that time.

The 60 class Beyer Garratts each had two cast steel beds including the cylinders, cast by GSI in the USA. The 59 class Baldwin 2-8-2s also had cast beds including the cylinders.

I believe that the cast bed for the PRR S-1 6100 was the longest single casting ever made. Remember that 6100 with tender was as long as a Big Boy with tender.

I think the T-1 will have to have a fabricated bed made. It could be made to look like a casting, but there is nowhere such a casting could be made now.

There is also this video,

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6pTNpWX3pwM

made in 2006 and 2007, I think.

They have replicated a scene from "A steam train passes" but not nearly as convincingly in my view. They do identify the location, however. Unfortunately, the scenes intercut views of the locomotive in wartime grey (applied after an overhaul) and the normal green.

In your earlier post, you mentioned semaphores in Queensland.

I visited Queensland in 1994, and again in 2002. The signals were semaphores north of Rockhampton in 1994 but these had all gone by 2002.

I worked as a mechanical engineer for Queensland Railways 45 years ago. I clearly remember tripping over a signal wire in Rockhampton yard (hidden by long grass)  and fell down an embankment. Fortunately the long grass extended down the embankment and softened my fall. But as a result I can assure you that QR used wires for signal operation, but rodding for switches. The Workshops Manager, who was with me at the time wasn't impressed by my carelesness.

Peter

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Tuesday, November 7, 2017 7:17 PM

Also, at the beginning of " A Steam Train Passes", there is a short clip of vintage footage about the 38's. I did not realize the 38's had a one piece cast frame. This is a feateature of the most modern steam engines. They mentioned all of the 38 was built in Australia, except the frame, although they did not mention where it was cast.

On a related note, there is a group in the U.S. building a new Pennsylvania T-1. They are building everything new from scratch. I am a PRR fan, as well as everything else that rolls on rails. If you know anything about the T-1's, they had a one piece cast steel frame, with 2 sets of cylinders cast in. I believe they came from General Steel Castings. I am curious in 2017 who would have the facilities to pour such a casting? Not to cast any doubt on the project, but the U.S.  probably had more heavy industrial capability in 1942 than today. That's a 50 foot casting !

Any way, I am very impressed with the 38's.They're beautiful machines!

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Monday, November 6, 2017 11:32 PM

Peter,

 thank you ! " A Steam Train Passes" is breathtaking. The camera work, the people riding, and the 38's. I really like the 38's. I like the scene where the enginemen make bacon and eggs in the engine fire. I developed a taste for toast, with butter, a little Vegemite, and a piece of bacon when I was over there. And a good cup of tea ! The background scenery in all these videos transports me back...

I had a feeling the semaphores would be gone. It's funny how things in memory seem to live that way forever ! Looking at my pictures, I see semaphores at Perth station, in front of commuter trains. And in Townsville, with Queensland Railway diesels. Unless my memory has slipped a cog ( which is entirely possible), I recall those semaphores in Townsville as being rod actuated, or, at least the switches were rod actuated. This area had a small yard, and engine facility. The road engines were cream and tourquoise, and the switchers(shunter) had green highlights as well. 

I am familiar with the "staff" operation from one of my videos, which I think is the Bellarine Peninsula Railway. This seems to me a very foolproof way to operate a single track line, as only one train crew can possess the staff, which gives the authority.In this country, we had timetable operation in the earlier years. The train crew knew they had to be " in the clear" at a certain time. I have heard some harrowing stories of a frieght train having but a few minutes to set out some cars, and clear the Main before the express comes through. There is no margin for error. I think if you possess the staff, you have very few worries.

I am enjoying these videos, all of them ! I've watched the Garratts videos twice, and find myself going back through the 38's. This new one  has great photography, and it deserves another look !

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Posted by M636C on Monday, November 6, 2017 3:45 AM

Paul,

I don't think there are any semaphore signals on main lines anywhere in Australia now, not for at least five years. The last ones I was familiar with were the automatic semaphores on the Sydney Melbourne line. These were power operated upper quadrant signals controlled by track circuits and had been installed around 1917 along with the double track. These were set up around stations like the old wire actuated lower quadrant signals and could be locally controlled in some locations or switched to track circuit control at other times.

In the big yards at Cootamundra and Junee there were big gantries at each end of the yard, where the main line signals were upper quadrant that would switch back to track circuit control when convenient, while all the other signals were wire actuated lower quadrant signals. A loose 40 foot container took out the north end gantry at Junee about ten years ago.  The north end gantry at Cootamundra lasted until the resignalling and is preserved (at right angles to the track) just north of the station building.

I was out taking photos about five years ago at Goondah, a double track horseshoe curve and I was taking photos of a semaphore near the sharp part of the horseshoe when a crowd of railfans arrived at great speed, followed shortly by one of the last (empty) oil trains from Wagga hauled by two EMD hood units with blower engines. So we followed that north instead. I think the semaphores were removed the next week.

A different aspect of single line train working was the electric staff system. A "staff" was a metal rod that was the permission to enter a section of track. The "staff" had the station names stamped on it, and the crew were supposed read the staff before entering the section of track. The staffs were stored in machines at each end of the track section and these were interlocked with eachother electrically so that only one staff could be in use at a time (hence "electric staff").

This video

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-uFJs-xoTMM

shows the operation of electric staff machines towards the end of the video, including the "hoops" used to transfer them from signal box to train.

The video, "A Steam Train Passes" was made by the government's National Film Unit which was located at the end of the street that was my childhood home. The National Film and Sound Archive is only a couple of miles from my present home.

This is a professional film in every respect. The train hauled by 3801 was similar to that which it hauled as the last steam haled passenger train on the southern line in 1969 of which I have my own still photographs.

Peter

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Saturday, November 4, 2017 10:10 AM

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zV8rA3UE-lc&ebc=ANyPxKq_kfEN0lvGUHZXq59L4KJGDxvyIdUUnHt-om9Y06xc2vqSeZNZy04FH3ZxU5nk7lEQ9YSHfIxovYE4F3v55cf6qGBF3QLet me try to share this link...

This is the N&W stuff I spoke of.

Watched the "Steam in Darling Harbour" video last night, it was great! All the NFSA videos are top notch. Just finding the time...

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Friday, November 3, 2017 8:23 PM

Peter, 

 there are no train videos that are too hard to watch ! They just don't exist ! Especially when it comes to steam.Once again, I appreciate it very much !

 This operation looks very similar to the Norfolk and Western here stateside. Lugging heavy coal trains with mammoth steamers, down to tidewater for shipment. If you are not familiar with N&W, they were a coal hauling railroad, and built many of their massive engines. They had 2-8-8-2's, and 2-6-6-4's, and kept steam way beyond most other roads. 

Now, I love semaphores, and I see many in this clip. I have semaphore pictures in Western Australia, and Queensland, but that was 35 to 37 years ago. Have all the semaphores been replaced, or are there still places a railfan might be able to work one into a picture ? Time marches on, so things I remember may have changed drastically.

Another thing I wanted to mention: I went back to your link from the Centennial Event, and they keep posting more stuff. There was a silent film from the completion on the last 1000 miles, showing Camels, and giant stacks of ties ( sleepers). It was really interesting, and it highlighted the importance of this event. I really enjoyed it.

Once again , Thank You ! It's funny how much time you can spend on videos, and with You Tube, they just keep queuing up !

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Posted by M636C on Friday, November 3, 2017 4:00 AM

Paul,

I've found another video, from the same cameraman, but with significantly lower technical quality. However, it includes a trip in the cab of the second Garratt of a double headed coal train from the Newstan Colliery to the wharves at Port Waratah, including dropping the first Garratt at Broadmeadow and the second locomotive returning to Broadmeadow loco depot.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V-Vj0E0GODc

It starts at Gosford, then the end of electrification, and includes a ride on the passenger train from Gosford to Fassifern. If you can overlook the technical quality, the content is amazing (at least, to someone familiar with the area today). If it is too hard to watch, I apologise in advance.

Peter

 

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Wednesday, November 1, 2017 10:38 PM

Peter, thank you for your explanation of the " Alphabet " coal wagons. I am looking at my book on the South Maitland Railway. It also shows these lettered coal wagons, but no explanation is given. So I appreciate the info. There is a caption referring to a train with coal wagons that contain" best", and "small" coal, so two different grades. I know that over here they do separate coal by customer requirements. Power plants may prefer smaller pieces that can be blown into a furnace. And huge chunks? I recall watching the man fire the " Earnslaw", the lake steamer out of Queenstown on New Zealand's South Island. The man was using a hammer to break down massive chunks of coal to stoke Earnslaw's double boilers. So, different sizes and grades of coal are available, but lettering for the various collieries never occurred to me ! Makes sense, though !

On Australian music of the '80's, it was wonderful! So much so that I packed a suitcase with records to take home. But, it was Of That Time. Tastes change,styles change, and people change. I was making the point that the records held the most value to me Then, the train books hold the most value to me Now. Never saw that coming!

These books are priceless, at least to me !

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Posted by M636C on Wednesday, November 1, 2017 5:36 AM

I have a question about the coal wagons : do the letters on the sides ( A, B,CC) refer to lump sizes or grades of coal? Just wondering what that signifies.

The wagons were privately owned by the collieries and the letters are abbreviations of the colliery or the owning company names.

I think "A" was Abermain Seaham Colliery, "B" stood for J & A Brown, the operator of one of the two large private railways and later part of Coal and Allied Industries. I think CC stood for "Cessnock Colliery" but I'm not sure of that one. Originally all the wagons in a train would have belonged to a single colliery but by 1968 mergers and takeovers meant that many of the collieries had a single ownership and the wagons were used interchangeably.

I have Durrant's "Australian Steam". It was the first book to illustrate steam locomotives of the Midland Railway of Western Australia. I met Durrant. He spent a number of years in Australia before returning to South Africa. He wrote a fairly complete book on Garratt locomotives.

Many of the  songs of the 1980s by Australian artists are regarded as classics in Australia at least.

There is a 1951 set of instructions for coal traffic in the Newcastle area which can be found at 

http://coalstonewcastle.com.au/appendix/003/document/

although this is excruciatingly detailed.

Peter

 

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Tuesday, October 31, 2017 11:02 PM

That is fantastic footage ! Thank you again ! The Garratts are enormous, and look to be 4-8-4+4-8-4. I have books, but I really enjoy seeing them in action, and to hear the whistles. I like 38's distinctive whistle. Some railroads used a chime whistle, but that single note has a sense of urgency. Pennsylvania K-4's blow a single note, and it sounds like " get the heck out of my way - now "! I hear that urgency with the 38's.

I have a question about the coal wagons : do the letters on the sides ( A, B,CC) refer to lump sizes or grades of coal? Just wondering what that signifies.

Funny story: so I came back from Australia in '80 with a suitcase full of records, bands not heard in the U.S. I really thought I had something unique, and special.Oh, and there were a few train books in there, too.Now, 37 years later, I could care less about the records( even if I had a means to play them), but the train books are like gold !

Here's what I brought back:

Steam Maryborough

Autralian Steam, by A.E. Durrant

Australian Preservation of Narrow Gauge Railways, by Roger Sallis

Along the Line in Western Australia

To Cessnock and Beyond, by Bob Driver ( about the South Maitland Railway)  this book reminds me of the operations in your video link

also brought back railway magazines

I like all things railroading, and this is the Australian corner of my book collection, and I'm sure I could never find them here.

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Posted by M636C on Tuesday, October 31, 2017 8:01 PM

Penny Trains

Those Garratts are fascinating machines.  Watching them in tandem is twice as fascinating!  Big Smile  Thanks for the link!  YesBig Smile

 

Quite apart from it being exactly 49 years ago, I have been to every location in the video. Sometimes at that time, often much more recently. This is really good quality amateur footage. I suspect that sound would have to have been recorded separately and dubbed in later. I think this was taken with German or Swiss 16mm movie cameras. Colour was of course available but cost more and might have had lower resolution.

But the video shows where much of my long lost youth was wasted.

Peter

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Posted by Penny Trains on Tuesday, October 31, 2017 6:47 PM

Those Garratts are fascinating machines.  Watching them in tandem is twice as fascinating!  Big Smile  Thanks for the link!  YesBig Smile

Trains, trains, wonderful trains.  The more you get, the more you toot!  Big Smile

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Posted by M636C on Tuesday, October 31, 2017 7:14 AM

cnw1995

Wow, what a great thread - I'm enjoying the photos and videos and learning more about these engines and lines. Peter and Paul, thank you very much! Like Penny, I was intrigued by Australian railways after seeing that show on PBS years ago.

This reminds me of my own toy-train-related regret - passing on some locally made O gauge engines whilst browsing hobby shops in Hong Kong and Kowloon back in 2001. 

 

I found this by chance tonight...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ePpG4tVHSMQ

Taken exactly 49 years ago (assuming I got the link right)

The double Garratts climbing from Newstan colliery at Fassifern at about 10:00 minutes in is as serious as steam power got in Australia.

I visited there about then and have similar still photos.

The photos at Thornton show the coal trains with 2-8-0s hauling wooden hopper wagons of ten tons capacity without air brakes, on tracks installed in 1915 to separate these slow trains from faster passenger and freight trains.

The tracks are still there, still dedicated to coal trains, but these have three 4400HP AC diesel locomotives and eighty wagons with ECP braking each carrying 100 tons.

The double 38 class running alongside double R class was in Easter 2000. At the last minute I was called to Melbourne for a meeting on Maundy Thursday, and was able to catch a train to Wangaratta and follow the trains with a friend who drove south from Albury.

The valve gear of the leading 38 class, 3801, failed at Seymour, about 70 miles from Melbourne and it all became very complicated.

Peter

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Monday, October 30, 2017 8:18 PM

Isn't that amazing? Many brands overseas that are not carried in the U.S. You never know what you'll find ! 

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Posted by cnw1995 on Monday, October 30, 2017 8:30 AM

Wow, what a great thread - I'm enjoying the photos and videos and learning more about these engines and lines. Peter and Paul, thank you very much! Like Penny, I was intrigued by Australian railways after seeing that show on PBS years ago.

This reminds me of my own toy-train-related regret - passing on some locally made O gauge engines whilst browsing hobby shops in Hong Kong and Kowloon back in 2001. 

Doug Murphy 'We few, we happy few, we band of brothers...' Henry V.

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Sunday, October 29, 2017 3:12 PM

Also, I saw on one of the videos that 6029 is a Beyer Peacock machine from '54. This would make it a relatively new machine in the world of steam engines. I saw the Pennsylvania 1361 in York, and she was already 70 years old when I was there in '88!

 

One more thing :

I'm going through your video link. There's one that came up with double headed 38's, running parallel to double headed VR class R hudsons.

It doesn't get any better than that !

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Posted by Postwar Paul on Sunday, October 29, 2017 12:19 PM

Thank you for that background information ! 

She's real Beauty !

I very much enjoyed the videos of the 38's, too !

 

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Posted by M636C on Saturday, October 28, 2017 10:17 PM

Postwar Paul

Thank you so much ! Those videos are great ! There are so many, I've only scratched the surface. I saw the NM25, and then got stuck on the 38's for awhile.

Still working my way through Garratt 6029 videos.

What a beautiful machine. We never had any Garratts, but it's a cool design, and makes sense to spread the weight like that. They worked in many countries around the world.

Different locomotive designers came up with alternate concepts to tackle the same problems. An example would be Shay, Climax, and Heisler  in the logging world. They each put a different spin on the concept.

6029 is a very lucky locomotive as the last of its type in working order. It was working in the late 1970s, having been taken out of service in 1973 and it was selected for a new National Museum. The Museum took years to set up and it passed to a preservation group that used it until the boiler needed repairs. I was taking photos of it in 1980 when a main steam pipe failed inside the smokebox. The last photo shoewed white steam instead of grey smoke. It was much more noticeable in the cab which filled up with steam. That was fixed quickly but the boiler needed work and it only got running again a couple of years ago.

It is literally polished with car wax and looks amazing. Sadly the owning organisation went broke and the 6029 is in need of a home. It is safe, only suitable organisations can bid for it.

The design is based on a locomotive sold to Iran in 1938. This was replaced by Alco RSD-1s during WWII.

Peter

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