Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding Neat! I'll have to try and find that on terraserver. Liskeard is the name of the town? I take it that's in England,not Scotland? Thanks Murphy: If you find it please post the link. It sounds like an interesting layout possibility! [:)] Here's a good link for UK maps: http://www.multimap.com/map/home.cgi?client=public&lang=&advanced=&db=GB I'm searching.[:)] I'm not smart enough to post a link, but if I find it, maybe I can get nanaimo73 to link it for me.[:)] When you find the website its http//www address should appear in the address bar of your internet browser bar. Using the usual edit routine swipe over the complete address and copy it to the clipboard. Then paste the address from the clipboard wherever you want in the message being posted. Voila, link posted! [:)]
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding Neat! I'll have to try and find that on terraserver. Liskeard is the name of the town? I take it that's in England,not Scotland? Thanks Murphy: If you find it please post the link. It sounds like an interesting layout possibility! [:)] Here's a good link for UK maps: http://www.multimap.com/map/home.cgi?client=public&lang=&advanced=&db=GB I'm searching.[:)] I'm not smart enough to post a link, but if I find it, maybe I can get nanaimo73 to link it for me.[:)]
QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding Neat! I'll have to try and find that on terraserver. Liskeard is the name of the town? I take it that's in England,not Scotland? Thanks Murphy: If you find it please post the link. It sounds like an interesting layout possibility! [:)] Here's a good link for UK maps: http://www.multimap.com/map/home.cgi?client=public&lang=&advanced=&db=GB
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding Neat! I'll have to try and find that on terraserver. Liskeard is the name of the town? I take it that's in England,not Scotland? Thanks
QUOTE: Originally posted by nanaimo73 This site as a bloody map of yer horseshoe. Just look down a bit. http://www.paulcorinmusic.com/ You might like this as well laddy http://www.networkrail.co.uk/
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding Aye![oX)] There it is! (it's difficult to talk with a British accent on a message board)[(-D]. Thanks. Is there an international terraserver site?
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding cogload: Thanks for the geograpy lesson.[:)]. It sounds like the relationship between Cornwall and England is perhaps similar to the relationship of Quebec and Canada? It sounds like a lot of people there get around on the trains. Is the lack of freight trains because lots gets moved by truck, or because there is not much freight to move? Thanks
Isambard
Grizzly Northern history, Tales from the Grizzly and news on line at isambard5935.blogspot.com
QUOTE: Originally posted by nanaimo73 QUOTE: Originally posted by nanaimo73 This site as a bloody map of yer horseshoe. Just look down a bit. http://www.paulcorinmusic.com/ You might like this as well laddy http://www.networkrail.co.uk/ QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding Aye![oX)] There it is! (it's difficult to talk with a British accent on a message board)[(-D]. Thanks. Is there an international terraserver site? A Norwegian Dakotain meets the Pirates of Penzance. I think this is it. I don't know how to zoom with this service. http://www.terraserver.com/imagery/image_gx.asp?cpx=-4.4538608875281165&cpy=50.45413182311072&res=30&provider_id=340&t=pan Thats the best a United supporter can do. This site has a picture of a Scottish steamer that came through Nanaimo when I was a wee lad. http://www.fortsteele.bc.ca/business/main/railway.asp
QUOTE: Originally posted by Tulyar15 QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard I'm surprised that sleeper trains are still run in the UK. What is the schedule for London Penzance? Great Western presumably? How about other overnights out of London? [:)] As well as the "Night Riviera" from London Paddington to Penzance, which is operated by Great Western (but may be axed next year when GW's franchise comes up for renewal, though there's a lot of opposition), there's also the sleeper trains to Inverness, Aberdeen and Fort William which run from London Euston and are operated by ScotRail (with locos hired from EWS). These also serve Edinburgh and in the case of the Fort William one, Glasgow too. Murphy Siding - there are some horseshoe bends on some of the lines in Scotland and Wales. The steepest gradient on the national network is 1 in 27 (3.7%) which is in the Mersey Tunnel between Liverpool (James St) and Birkenhead. One line which has two 180degree bends is the Liskeard - Looe branch in Cornwall. It starts at Liskeard where the branch platform is at 90 degrees to the main line ones (Liskead is on the main line from Plymouth to Penzance). It then goes round the first 180 degree bend, under the main line then another 180 degree bend to get it to Combe Junction. According to the locals if you miss the branch train after its left Liskeard you can run down the hill and catch it at Combe Junction. There it reverses and carries on down to Looe but there's also a freight only line which carries straight on at Combe and goes under the main line again. This has been upgraded so that class 66's can now run on it but they must screech a lot going round the sharp curves, especially the one which connects the branch to the main line. I should also add that the junction at Liskeard is still controlled by an old fashioned mechanical signal box ("control tower") with semaphore signals. If the Looe branch did not exist and someone made a model it would be dismissed as unrealistic. But this is one example of reality stranger than fiction!
QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard I'm surprised that sleeper trains are still run in the UK. What is the schedule for London Penzance? Great Western presumably? How about other overnights out of London? [:)]
QUOTE: Originally posted by Tulyar15 Isambard - Looe is the name of a town
QUOTE: Originally posted by cogload Quick rundown. The Uk is split into two kingdoms (England, Scotland); one Principality (Wales) and one Province (Ulster or Northern ireland). Attached are various Islands (Isle of Man and the Channel Islands) which are self governing and have their own ways in various degrees - i.e. the Channel Islands have a lower and differing tax system then the rest of the UK. The Kingdom as a whole is split into counties which have in many cases thier own identity (although sadly this is trying to be extinguished) and in some cases language and culture. Cornwall is the county which occupies the peninsular in the far South West of the United Kingdom. It has four basic industries - tourism; farming; fishing and china clay. it is the poorest county in England as a result. The indigenious residents of Cornwall (the Cornish) are a very anti England bunch in some respects. This is because the Cornish, uniquely I think in ENGLAND (emphasis here) have a language; patron Saint and culture (they would argue) then the bunch the other side of the River Tamar. If you are from Cornwall you are Cornish. That is the term. The County town (administrative centre) of Cornwall is Truro (City of) - incidentally you are only allowed to be a city in the Uk by a) havaing a Cathedral and b) by having a Royal Charter. It is relatively isololated in terms of transport from the rest here. The ruling line speed on the Main Line (the only line really) from Penzance to London thru the county is roughly 65 MPH. There are various branches which serve seaside towns like St Ives (famous for its artists); Falmouth (for its boats); Looe (as ealier); Newquay (atlantic surf resort) and Gunnislake ( a branch which a trip on basically tkaes you back 50 years in time). There are various freight branches which serve the China Clay industry as well. Apart from a few isolated pockets of lights; the signalling system is absolute block and semaphore. This is not because we are technologically backward; this is because it is a) cheap and b) will cost far too much to replace and never make a return. Roughly 65 trains per day passenger and 5-10 freight depending on where you are. I my part of the world I see two freight trains per week.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding In my part of the world, "loo" is the name for a little building OUT behind the farm HOUSE.[;)]
QUOTE: Originally posted by Railroading_Brit The railways in Wales, Scotland and England are all run as one pretty much. Northern Ireland is a little different as (I think) they may have a different gauge - certainly the railways in the Republic of Ireland (south of the border) are broad gauge. There's no bridge or tunnel across the Irish Sea so any interchange involves either sea or air travel.
QUOTE: Originally posted by nanaimo73 Thanks Murphy. First of all, I'm wondering about the Groupings that took place (1948 ?). From what I understand there were over 100 different companies operating until the 1920s when a bunch of mergers brought the number down to about 30 or 40. I believe after WW2 the Government forced the strong railways to take over the weak resulting in 4 railways. I think they were the Southern, the Great Western, the London, Midland and Scottish and the 4th up through Newcastle. Could someone please tell me the rough geographic areas each covered ? I am also wondering about how these railways aquired their steam locomotives. In the United States most of the railways designed their own locomotives (along with the builders) and told one of the three builders (Lima, Baldwin or ALCo) what to build. Did the railways in the U.K. build their own steam or were there builders, and who designed the locomotives ? When did the 4 railways stop acquiring steam, and did they stay with Belpaire fireboxes till the end ? Thanks. Murphy Siding, My laziness results from spending 1 or 2 hours a day with this mess- http://www.trains.com/community/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=44086 Hopefully I'll be done this week.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Tulyar15 QUOTE: Originally posted by Railroading_Brit The railways in Wales, Scotland and England are all run as one pretty much. Northern Ireland is a little different as (I think) they may have a different gauge - certainly the railways in the Republic of Ireland (south of the border) are broad gauge. There's no bridge or tunnel across the Irish Sea so any interchange involves either sea or air travel. The Northern Ireland Railways is still a state owned, vertically integrated company, as is Iarnrod Eireann, its counterpart in the Irish Republic. The Irish standard gauge is 5' 3" which was chosen as a compromise between the 4' 8.5" of the Dublin and Kingstown (now Dun Laoghaire) Railway and the 6' 2" of the Ulster Railway. (An official from the Irish Office of the then UK Govt rounded these figures to 4' 6" and 6' and took the average, which is 5' 3". The only other countries where this gauge is found are certain Australia states (Victoria I think) and Brazil, where Irish builders were employed. The political border between Northern Ireland and the Republic is the border between the two rail companies but the Belfast - Dublin service is operated jointly with NIR crews working thru to Dublin and IE crews to Belfast. Nowadays the two companies not only use the same stock and locos but the stock used is painted in the same livery. The NIR have a large fleet of DMU's used on Belfast commuter services, these also run across the border to Dundalk. Sometimes when a major sporting event takes place in Dublin, particularly a 6 Nations Rugby match, these DMU's will be pressed into service for extra trains and IE sometimes borrow them to put on extra local services.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Townsend . GWR fans generally have a chip on each shoulder and say things like "there are two ways to do something, the GWR way and the wrong way"
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding How did the Government go about nationalizing the railroads? Did they buy out the private owners,or maybe the railroads were in bankruptcy anyway? Thanks
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding QUOTE: Originally posted by Tulyar15 QUOTE: Originally posted by Railroading_Brit The railways in Wales, Scotland and England are all run as one pretty much. Northern Ireland is a little different as (I think) they may have a different gauge - certainly the railways in the Republic of Ireland (south of the border) are broad gauge. There's no bridge or tunnel across the Irish Sea so any interchange involves either sea or air travel. The Northern Ireland Railways is still a state owned, vertically integrated company, as is Iarnrod Eireann, its counterpart in the Irish Republic. The Irish standard gauge is 5' 3" which was chosen as a compromise between the 4' 8.5" of the Dublin and Kingstown (now Dun Laoghaire) Railway and the 6' 2" of the Ulster Railway. (An official from the Irish Office of the then UK Govt rounded these figures to 4' 6" and 6' and took the average, which is 5' 3". The only other countries where this gauge is found are certain Australia states (Victoria I think) and Brazil, where Irish builders were employed. The political border between Northern Ireland and the Republic is the border between the two rail companies but the Belfast - Dublin service is operated jointly with NIR crews working thru to Dublin and IE crews to Belfast. Nowadays the two companies not only use the same stock and locos but the stock used is painted in the same livery. The NIR have a large fleet of DMU's used on Belfast commuter services, these also run across the border to Dundalk. Sometimes when a major sporting event takes place in Dublin, particularly a 6 Nations Rugby match, these DMU's will be pressed into service for extra trains and IE sometimes borrow them to put on extra local services. Another case of American ignorance on my part[*^_^*]: I didn't think the two Irelands got along with each other. It appears the area has settled down somewhat. Thanks
QUOTE: Originally posted by RPRiebe Gents: This is my first day, technically due to the clock, second, here and I am hoping that you may have some information as to railroad books. Are there any books, that deal with, other than the U.S., British or France, singular, Diesel locomotives from the fifties world-wide; especially the carbody passenger units. There seems to be a fair amount of info on English speaking countries early Diesels, but sporatic, info on the export units, or early units built in non-english speaking countries. Even the internet seems to be lacking on info on most countries first diesel beyond the very early box units. Sorry if this is a too general enquiry, but whilst one can find a great deal of books on steamers, the diesels that followed do not seem to be to heavily written about, at least not in books still available. Thank you for your time, Bob
QUOTE: Originally posted by nanaimo73 Murphy, Have you looked at these ? http://www.rrpicturearchives.net/locationList.aspx?Level=3&ID=UK
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