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Vintage trains

GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,775
Location
New Forest
Beautiful!
Mike that engine was designed by one: Nigel Gresley. To be fair Gresley was part of a team.
But it was his genius that lead to the A1 Pacifics becoming the first steam locomotive to exceed 100mph. A1 Pacifics was the name of the class of engine that Flying Scotsman belongs to.

Gresley went on to design the aerodynamic A4 Pacific, of which, Mallard belongs to. Mallard set the world land speed record for a steam train on July 3rd, 1938. The train achieved 125.88mph (202.58kph) A record that still stands.

800px-Number_4468_Mallard_in_York.jpg
 
Mike that engine was designed by one: Nigel Gresley. To be fair Gresley was part of a team.
But it was his genius that lead to the A1 Pacifics becoming the first steam locomotive to exceed 100mph. A1 Pacifics was the name of the class of engine that Flying Scotsman belongs to.

Gresley went on to design the aerodynamic A4 Pacific, of which, Mallard belongs to. Mallard set the world land speed record for a steam train on July 3rd, 1938. The train achieved 125.88mph (202.58kph) A record that still stands.

View attachment 17263

You know, realistically, a steam locomotive has no top speed—just the speed at which no one would be brave enough to try to get it over. The engine would beat itself to death eventually but it would still go until it blew. :p
 

rocketeer

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,605
Location
England
Mike that engine was designed by one: Nigel Gresley. To be fair Gresley was part of a team.
But it was his genius that lead to the A1 Pacifics becoming the first steam locomotive to exceed 100mph. A1 Pacifics was the name of the class of engine that Flying Scotsman belongs to.

Gresley went on to design the aerodynamic A4 Pacific, of which, Mallard belongs to. Mallard set the world land speed record for a steam train on July 3rd, 1938. The train achieved 125.88mph (202.58kph) A record that still stands.

View attachment 17263

My everyday job as a wheel turner. Each of those six big wheels have to be within 0.25mm of each other over diameter. A right pain in the ar*e to work on but still a fantastic looking engine.
This A4 Pacific is 'Sir Nigel Gresley'. Mallard I believe is out of boiler certification, so, when Nigel Gresley is due for boiler inspection Mallard will probably be back in working order.

IMG_0697_zpsc86c1e80.jpg


IMG_0701_zpsca36ca77.jpg


Dirty, oily, smelly but a masterpiece of engineering, though you thought your wife or girlfriend was 'High maintenance' give, me a commuter electric any day.
 

Blackthorn

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,567
Location
Oroville
It is sad, what happens to some vintage trains:

part of the landscaping decoration for a local bar:

IMG_1823-1.jpg



This one became a beauty parlor:
IMG_1828-1.jpg


IMG_1827-1.jpg
 

buelligan

One of the Regulars
Messages
109
Location
London, OH
Some pics I took at the B&O railroad museum the other day.









One of my favorites:











Ignore the creepy kid, I kept trying to shake him but everywhere I went there he was. Cost me a lot of money at the gift shop to. lol



 

Quetzal

One of the Regulars
Messages
147
Location
United States
Some pics I took at the B&O railroad museum the other day.









One of my favorites:











Ignore the creepy kid, I kept trying to shake him but everywhere I went there he was. Cost me a lot of money at the gift shop to. lol




Have they repaired the locomotives and passenger cars that were destroyed by the Roundhouse Collapse? I went there a few years ago, and those neat passenger cars were still wrecked (you can see them and the boxcars in "The Great Locomotive Chase") along with a few engines. On that day, I also had a chance to watch the model trains crash (one, somehow, stopped, with another rear-ending it) and fall off the table! I've got to say, the Norris "Lafayette" replica (also a movie locomotive like the Mason) is probably my favorite along with the diesel in the Works. They should also try to repair the Reading "Freedom Train" and the streamliner (it is, after all, one of three steamers left in the U.S.).

-Quetzal
 

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