Western 52
Established Member
Class 124? Nice enough units, but I remember them as rather run down and scruffy towards the end. Mixed with class 123 eventually, also rather past their best by the early 80s!Hull to Liverpool.
Class 124? Nice enough units, but I remember them as rather run down and scruffy towards the end. Mixed with class 123 eventually, also rather past their best by the early 80s!Hull to Liverpool.
Agreed the , but these were specials not normal service.Didn't they also operate the 'Six Lochs Land Cruise' (in up to 9-car formation) which I think travelled via Dunblane-Crianlarich-Craigendoran and vice-versa, including the Killin branch? There are photographs and some description in Trains Annual 1963.
Fully remember the Mexican bean but was not a great distance for a 1st gen. Always wondered why the Swindon Intrercity units displaced from The Edinburgh Glasgow service couldnt have been deployed on the far North or WHL. After all a 5 car unit would have had 1200hp without the added weight of a locomotiveWasn't sure if they were ever regulars on the Far North tbh, I was just throwing random lines to the wall lol
The one I had in mind for the West Highland was the Mexican Bean 104 from the mid/late-80s, though IIRC that only ran during the summer between Crianlarich & Oban.
Scarborough-Llandudno was I believe a thing at one time, 170 miles, joining Manchester-Scarborough with Manchester-Llandudno.Hull to Liverpool.
Indeed. The units were withdrawn when replaced by the Push-Pull in May 1971, whereas the similar Class 120 Swindon cross-country units that followed them off the production line lasted for another 10-12 years, almost double the life. The Scottish units were not scrapped immediately, they were still stored on sidings at Polmadie at the end of 1973, two and a half years later, covered in snow.Always wondered why the Swindon Intrercity units displaced from The Edinburgh Glasgow service couldnt have been deployed on the far North or WHL. After all a 5 car unit would have had 1200hp without the added weight of a locomotive
I remember seeing that one at Polegate about 1977. Imagine if it had gone to Plymouth over the south Devon banks....Could I add Mk1 DEMU's to this?
I'll start it with a Saturdays only jaunt in the 1970's.
The unit(s) involved were the 'Hastings 6B / 6L's' (B's having a Buffet Car)
All year round it was a 6B, with a 6L added in the Summer, although there was no corridor between the two units.
ECS St Leonards West Marina Depot to Brighton platform 2 via Eastbourne (change ends),
Brighton platform 7 (change ends), Preston Park (change ends), Hove (change ends)
Then a service train to Exeter St Davids via Southampton.
Service train back from Exeter St Davids to Brighton.
Then ECS back to St Leonards, via Hove, Preston Park, Brighton & Eastbourne.
Which trains on the Glasgow-Carlisle route were DMUs?
My guess, from the working timetable, is that this would be 1L82 06:50 Manchester-Yarmouth via Stockport and the Dore curve .... D385 SO UNTIL 1 OCT in the 16/5/88-14/5/89 timetable, and presumably no stock available at the start of the timetable hence DMU as you say.
No, 1L82 was hauled throughout the summer. The train I'm referring to had reporting number 1L68.
1L83 09:55 Manchester-Yarmouth D2 SO UNTIL 1 OCT via Stockport and Sheffield.
My post 16 links to 1976 BBC video by Martin Young featuring that train, about 2 minutes in. Here it is again, how we were; https://www.bbc.co.uk/archive/a-fair-fortnight/zmg7cqtAnother one I can recall is a summer Saturday timetabled service from Glasgow Queen Street to, of all places, Whitley Bay. Apparently there was a holiday tradition, although pretty much disappeared by this time. That's the best part of 200 miles. It was run by a Gosforth Met-Cam unit with 3+2 seating, leaving Whitley Bay at breakfast time and returning from Glasgow early afternoon. Must have been about 1974 I saw it at Queen Street, handful of elderly couples boarding with suitcases. It was pathed between Glasgow and Edinburgh via Falkirk Grahamston to let the following express Push-Pull go past on the Falkirk High line. Is that our longest one so far for a low-density unit? I don't know if it would have fuel for 400 miles, or need to refuel in Glasgow.
Definitely not when compared to some of the other examples cited here, but worthy of mention nonetheless I thought.Fully remember the Mexican bean but was not a great distance for a 1st gen.
When the Edinburgh-Glasgow class 126 units were superceded in 1971, after only 14 years' service, there was still a requirement for a considerable amount of parcels and newspaper van space - plus the Fort William sleepers and seating carriages - on the West Highland, Kyle and Far North lines....hence the necessity to continue using loco-hauled trains. Also these units were riddled with large quantities of blue asbestos insulation - quite a lot of which was exposed and dissipated in the Castlecary collision in 1968, when class 24 no. 5122 collided heavily with the failed class 126 unit which it had been sent from Eastfield depot to assist....sadly killing both the driver and secondman.Always wondered why the Swindon Intrercity units displaced from The Edinburgh Glasgow service couldnt have been deployed on the far North or WHL. After all a 5 car unit would have had 1200hp without the added weight of a locomotive
The displaced class 126 units were stored at both Polmadie and Millerhill yards pending the establishment of a specialised asbestos removal facility at Glasgow (St Rollox) Works. IIRC, once this was operational, the units could only be dealt with one vehicle at a time....prior to being either scrapped or refurbished and sold to the LAMCo iron-ore mining company in Liberia, West Africa, for use as staff trains on their lengthy mineral line.The Scottish units were not scrapped immediately, they were still stored on sidings at Polmadie at the end of 1973, two and a half years later, covered in snow.
Mention of Weston-Super-Mare reminds me of what I think is one of the most noteworthy long distance DMU workings. On 1979 summer Saturdays there was a 0900 Birmingham to Weston-Super-Mare and 1158 return, booked for a pair of Tyseley low density 3 car DMUs. The return was booked non-stop Bristol Temple Meads-Birmingham New Street, possibly the longest non-stop run for a 1st generation DMU. It was allowed 2 hours for this, I don't know if that's enough to avoid the Lickey incline.
I also remember a pair of these units on a railtour in South Wales. We visited Hirwaun and Maerdy with some impressive noise going uphill. I think the tour was called the Cymru DEMU. Quite a high mileage day on a DEMU
I was on both of those. The S&C one was called “The Long Thin Drag” and was formed of 2x6-car units plus two extra power cars. Refuelled at Leeds where we were all turfed off while it went to the depot. I’ve posted photos over on the rmweb forum somewhere.Towards their end a railtour with Hastings demus ran from Hastings, via Victoria, and to Carlisle via the S&C, and back via the WCML. I believe it took the best part of 24 hours, and must surely be the longest traditional diesel trip of all.
Thank you, that makes sense; there was no 1L68 in my working timetable (well, I looked for it and couldn't find it anyway) so it seems that it was an unused headcode which was therefore available to be used by the replacement service from Liverpool.I think I can shed some light on this. If I remember correctly, 1L83 was indeed DMU, but was then changed to loco-hauled after a few weeks. However, at that point it was also started back at Liverpool (because that's where the stock was), as the 0908 Liverpool-Yarmouth, with the headcode changed to 1L68. I remember the first time it ran (with one of the Stanlow 47/0s) and took everyone by surprise, however it was pretty much a solid 47/4 (from Liverpool to Norwich) for the rest of the summer.
Was that the one where seats in the power cars were sold at a premium (for the thrash) or a discount (for lack of access to toilets)? I forget which.I was on both of those. The S&C one was called “The Long Thin Drag” and was formed of 2x6-car units plus two extra power cars. Refuelled at Leeds where we were all turfed off while it went to the depot. I’ve posted photos over on the rmweb forum somewhere.
Thanks for the headcode explanation. It is clearly a genuine change not some sort of error.I think I can shed some light on this. If I remember correctly, 1L83 was indeed DMU, but was then changed to loco-hauled after a few weeks. However, at that point it was also started back at Liverpool (because that's where the stock was), as the 0908 Liverpool-Yarmouth, with the headcode changed to 1L68. I remember the first time it ran (with one of the Stanlow 47/0s) and took everyone by surprise, however it was pretty much a solid 47/4 (from Liverpool to Norwich) for the rest of the summer.
DMUs worked both routes, but hitting the bottom of the Lickey at 70 mph would have been unusual!As in go via Kiddy? No, it wouldn't have been. It's not a quick way round, and Old Hill bank is itself a bit of a struggle - to be sure not as bad as the Lickey, and it was a lot less common for DMUs to just give up on it as they sometimes did on the Lickey, but on the other hand it would take longer to get assistance if they did.
I suspect that after running such an intensive service since 1956, the units would have been fairly knackered!Agreed the , but these were specials not normal service.
Fully remember the Mexican bean but was not a great distance for a 1st gen. Always wondered why the Swindon Intrercity units displaced from The Edinburgh Glasgow service couldnt have been deployed on the far North or WHL. After all a 5 car unit would have had 1200hp without the added weight of a locomotive
DMUs worked both routes, but hitting the bottom of the Lickey at 70 mph would have been unusual!
Curiously there was a photo in Modern Railways in the 1960s of a Peak-hauled express coming nonstop through the centre roads at Shrub Hill (in the snow, I think), which long made me think, not being familiar with there, that this was the normal route for Birmingham-Bristol main line trains.Very nearly everything running between Bristol and Birmingham went straight up and down the main line. Very little even looped off between Stoke Works and Abbots Wood to call at Worcester (a long-standing complaint), and nothing ran through Worcester non-stop whichever way it was going.
This got me thinking about other opportunities for a 1st generation DMU to charge a steep incline.
It made a mess of the 47, to the extent that it was written off, cannibalised for parts and scrapped: http://www.class47.co.uk/c47_zoom_v3.php?img=1544020148000On 18/01/86 there was a rather serious accident at Preston when a Class 104 2-car DMU passed three signals at danger and collided with locomotive 47111 which resulted in 44 injuries. The DMU was operating the return leg of a football charter from Carlisle to Accrington which had been routed via Shap. The cause of the accident was attributed to the fact that the charter organiser had been riding in the cab and distracting the driver who hadn't realised that the brake valve had been placed in the 'Lap' position which gradually destroyed the vacuum in the brake pipe. The report states about the organiser: "On this particular journey he made timings of the journey because, as a railway enthusiast, he considered the running of a DMU over Shap was unusual."
https://www.railwaysarchive.co.uk/documents/DoT_Preston1986.pdf
Climbing the 1 in 42 Cowlairs Incline from a standing start at Glasgow Queen Street.This got me thinking about other opportunities for a 1st generation DMU to charge a steep incline.
I suspect that may have been an engineering or bad weather diversion.Curiously there was a photo in Modern Railways in the 1960s of a Peak-hauled express coming nonstop through the centre roads at Shrub Hill (in the snow, I think), which long made me think, not being familiar with there, that this was the normal route for Birmingham-Bristol main line trains.