• Our new ticketing site is now live! Using either this or the original site (both powered by TrainSplit) helps support the running of the forum with every ticket purchase! Find out more and ask any questions/give us feedback in this thread!

Are there too many ‘preserved’ diesels and how could they be thinned out?

Status
Not open for further replies.

randyrippley

Established Member
Joined
21 Feb 2016
Messages
5,383
Given the OP mentioned Westerns, and given the number of 47s languishing across the country, I can't help thinking Falcon Mk2 ;);) In fairness it's about the only half decent reason to lose a Western, though it may be there's more than enough MD655s for them all.
Falcon had German built engines, not Bristol-Siddeley so authenticity would be a problem, as might peripheral parts availability
 
Sponsor Post - registered members do not see these adverts; click here to register, or click here to log in
R

RailUK Forums

Richard Scott

Established Member
Associate Staff
International Transport
Railtours & Preservation
Joined
13 Dec 2018
Messages
4,073
Falcon had German built engines, not Bristol-Siddeley so authenticity would be a problem, as might peripheral parts availability
Not sure that would matter particularly, they sound the same.
 

Ashley Hill

Established Member
Joined
8 Dec 2019
Messages
4,052
Location
The West Country
Well yes perhaps some classes are over represented in preservation,20s,37s,47s and 50s for example but the same could be said for Halls,9Fs etc. I don't condone scrapping preserved locos be it steam or diesel. At least a static exhibit could be made from a demic and recieve basic maintenance. How about the 83 recreating being dragged on a Sunday diversion.
 

47827

Member
Joined
3 Mar 2020
Messages
591
Location
Middleport
I guess it's one mostly just for the owners and/or the sites/lines the locomotives are intended to be used on. Personal value upon a locomotive type will often win the opinion argument here too as bias will form for many of us naturally. With the challenge of finding parts, adequately skilled volunteer (or occasionally paid) labour and funds to keep them running that will often dictate the viability of how many preserved diesels last. Large numbers will succumb to becoming static exhibits or meet the scrapman in time (possibly surrendering parts to the others that live on) so we don't overly need a pre meditated cull of massive numbers as the more represented examples will simply fade away in time (and probably before their steam equivalents for now as the steamers are marketable and family/tourist friendly in the main be it in the Lake District or on the Severn Valley).
 

bluenoxid

Established Member
Joined
9 Feb 2008
Messages
2,520
What may save some diesels is the ability to pull the power unit out and stick a large electric motor and battery raft in. A few loud speakers and you’ve got your locomotive type recreated.
 

DarloRich

Veteran Member
Joined
12 Oct 2010
Messages
31,048
Location
Fenny Stratford
A steam loco like 43106 is different in that parts and repairs can be provided by an experienced engineering workshop. The spares can be made,
But if a conrod goes on a diesel, who is going to machine a new crankcase?

No idea who could make one. Sounds hard.

Oh hang on yes i do: an experianced engineering and fabrication company. Perhaps even the same one making your puffer parts.

Must try harder.........
 

Bevan Price

Established Member
Joined
22 Apr 2010
Messages
7,804
Although they don't really count as "preserved", I can imagine some more of the "West Coast" 47s at Carnforth might eventually be cannibalised to keep the others running.
 

Alanko

Member
Joined
2 May 2019
Messages
641
Location
Somewhere between Waverley and Queen Street.
Although they don't really count as "preserved", I can imagine some more of the "West Coast" 47s at Carnforth might eventually be cannibalised to keep the others running.

I saw photos of their setup at Carnforth earlier today. They have a vast collection of derelict 47s. I can only assume these are parts donors rather than candidates for restoration.
 

Cowley

Forum Staff
Staff Member
Global Moderator
Joined
15 Apr 2016
Messages
17,148
Location
Devon
I saw photos of their setup at Carnforth earlier today. They have a vast collection of derelict 47s. I can only assume these are parts donors rather than candidates for restoration.

This is where the lines get a bit blurry. To me the West Coast diesels are a main line operational fleet and as you say those locos are a source of spares.
I’d probably consider their steam locomotives to be ‘preserved’ though as I can’t see a situation where they’d be in danger of being scrapped.
 

reddragon

Established Member
Joined
24 Mar 2016
Messages
3,192
Location
Churn (closed)
Even the preservation section places a 'value' on an old loco. If a diesel loco is common, knackered, full of useful spares for better preserved locos, it will get scrapped. GWsR did this with a class 20.

Same with steam! The last Barry GWR locos have become parts donors for new builds such as the Saint, Grange & County et al. Those locos will no longer exist.
 

theblackwatch

Established Member
Joined
15 Feb 2006
Messages
10,777
This is where the lines get a bit blurry. To me the West Coast diesels are a main line operational fleet and as you say those locos are a source of spares.
I’d probably consider their steam locomotives to be ‘preserved’ though as I can’t see a situation where they’d be in danger of being scrapped.
I realise I am drifting off topic a bit, but the situation is even more complex as I believe the WCRC locos are in fact owned by several different, but related, companies. One of their kettles (Galatea) belongs to a charity, so is definitely 'preserved' (to me!).
 

Cowley

Forum Staff
Staff Member
Global Moderator
Joined
15 Apr 2016
Messages
17,148
Location
Devon
I realise I am drifting off topic a bit, but the situation is even more complex as I believe the WCRC locos are in fact owned by several different, but related, companies. One of their kettles (Galatea) belongs to a charity, so is definitely 'preserved' (to me!).
That’s a good point though.

I wonder what the average railway charges for storage outside on a siding? Do any of them charge for it?
 

alexl92

Established Member
Joined
12 Oct 2014
Messages
2,302
That’s a good point though.

I wonder what the average railway charges for storage outside on a siding? Do any of them charge for it?
Many do; some which previously didn’t charge (or charged very little) have recently been evicting rotting rolling stock from their sidings as the owners were paying little more than a peppercorn rent and unwilling to contribute more.
 

Andrew1395

Member
Joined
30 Sep 2014
Messages
623
Location
Bushey
when the government bans the use of diesel fuel (and coal) every preserved loco will have to be rebuilt as battery or hydrogen powered anyway. Best to let them sit until the guts have to be replaced.
 

xotGD

Established Member
Joined
4 Feb 2017
Messages
6,782
when the government bans the use of diesel fuel (and coal) every preserved loco will have to be rebuilt as battery or hydrogen powered anyway. Best to let them sit until the guts have to be replaced.
Biodiesel* and torrified wood briquettes solve that problem.

*Or Fischer Tropsch diesel produced via biomass gasification.

Back on topic: Too many preserved 47s, not enough 37s.
 

Darandio

Established Member
Joined
24 Feb 2007
Messages
10,890
Location
Redcar
when the government bans the use of diesel fuel (and coal) every preserved loco will have to be rebuilt as battery or hydrogen powered anyway. Best to let them sit until the guts have to be replaced.

That won't happen.
 

Cowley

Forum Staff
Staff Member
Global Moderator
Joined
15 Apr 2016
Messages
17,148
Location
Devon
Back on topic: Too many preserved 47s, not enough 37s.
:lol: Ouch.
It was interesting seeing all the beautifully restored class 37s like 37025 and 37057 end up back out on the main line earning revenue a few years ago.
There’s not too many 37s (apart from a couple of christmas trees at Carnforth) that won’t ever turn a wheel again I think?
 

D1537

Member
Joined
11 Jul 2019
Messages
947
Well yes perhaps some classes are over represented in preservation,20s,37s,47s and 50s for example

Back on topic: Too many preserved 47s, not enough 37s.

Looking at classes with significant numbers in preservation ...

Class 47s preserved: 31/512 = 6.0% of class
Class 25s preserved: 20/327 = 6.1% of class
Class 20s preserved: 22/228 = 9.6% of class
Class 31s preserved: 29/263 = 11.0% of class
Class 37s preserved: 35/309 = 11.3% of class
Class 33s preserved: 29/98 = 29.6% of class
Class 50s preserved: 18/50 = 36.0% of class
 

43096

On Moderation
Joined
23 Nov 2015
Messages
16,709
Looking at classes with significant numbers in preservation ...

Class 47s preserved: 31/512 = 6.0% of class
Class 25s preserved: 20/327 = 6.1% of class
Class 20s preserved: 22/228 = 9.6% of class
Class 31s preserved: 29/263 = 11.0% of class
Class 37s preserved: 35/309 = 11.3% of class
Class 33s preserved: 29/98 = 29.6% of class
Class 50s preserved: 18/50 = 36.0% of class
I'm sure there's 51 Class 50s preserved...

You can also add:
Class 55s preserved: 6/22= 27.3% of class
 

Alanko

Member
Joined
2 May 2019
Messages
641
Location
Somewhere between Waverley and Queen Street.
Looking at classes with significant numbers in preservation ...

Class 47s preserved: 31/512 = 6.0% of class
Class 25s preserved: 20/327 = 6.1% of class
Class 20s preserved: 22/228 = 9.6% of class
Class 31s preserved: 29/263 = 11.0% of class
Class 37s preserved: 35/309 = 11.3% of class
Class 33s preserved: 29/98 = 29.6% of class
Class 50s preserved: 18/50 = 36.0% of class

These figures are interesting! The number of 37s seems low, but I assume this might be because there are still some of them out there in service. 37099 and 610 were up in Scotland only a few days ago on a departmental train of some sort, and I've seen photos of a lovely matching pair of 37/4s in York on RHTT duties as well. 37610 looks extensively reworked and remodelled to keep it running in the modern world!

Some locos also seem to flit between the two worlds. 37403 was extensively overhauled at Bo'ness, then DRS used it for a while. It is now back at Bo'ness. I gather 37025 has a similar ping-pong arrangement? It's a Bo'ness loco but seems to spend most of the down south.

It seems like there is a grey area between pure preservation and locos that see some mainline use. I gather LSL don't own all their locos, but presumably they contribute towards crossing the final hurdles that means a loco can go from pottering around a heritage line to hauling charter services on the mainline? This Is my understanding of the two 40s they recently ran up to Edinburgh.
 

Ashley Hill

Established Member
Joined
8 Dec 2019
Messages
4,052
Location
The West Country
I'm sure there's 51 Class 50s preserved...

You can also add:
Class 55s preserved: 6/22= 27.3% of class
50051 Miserable (old joke from the 80s).
You can never have enough Deltics!!!

Looking at those figures makes you wonder how many locos will have fallen by the wayside in 20 years time.
Looking back to early preservation buying a loco (steam or diesel) meant a major fundraising scheme even into the 80s. From the late 80s onward times were more affluent where even an individual or small group could buy one at scrap value outright from BR hence the large number of popular classes preserved today. It’s great when it works but becomes a problem should it go bang,can one afford to repair it or does it join that linear scrapline.
 
Last edited:

Irascible

Established Member
Joined
21 Apr 2020
Messages
2,226
Location
Dyfneint
And in 200 years? 500 years? when accidents have happened/mismanagement means something's rotted etc. If there's too many of something nature will take it's course & eventually a sustainable number will be settled on.
 

Iskra

Established Member
Joined
11 Jun 2014
Messages
8,956
Location
West Riding
And in 200 years? 500 years? when accidents have happened/mismanagement means something's rotted etc. If there's too many of something nature will take it's course & eventually a sustainable number will be settled on.
I don't think it is nature that will take its course, it's 'the market' that will. If they become astronomically expensive to keep going, that's when there will be a reckoning for those with niche interest or dubious business cases. However, I hope as many continue on in preservation as possible of course.
 

Worm

Member
Joined
13 May 2020
Messages
94
Location
Manchester
By the same logic, you could argue that the majority of preserved locos are steam engines which take 20 + years to preserve, maybe a bunch of those should be scrapped as we already have hundreds saved.
 

Alanko

Member
Joined
2 May 2019
Messages
641
Location
Somewhere between Waverley and Queen Street.
I don't think it is nature that will take its course, it's 'the market' that will. If they become astronomically expensive to keep going, that's when there will be a reckoning for those with niche interest or dubious business cases. However, I hope as many continue on in preservation as possible of course.
At some point the specialist knowledge required to keep heritage diesel locos running might get a bit scarce.

Perhaps a controversial thought, but maybe some of these locos weren't built especially well to begin with? The 26s and 27s I've seen in preservation appear to be battling corrosion issues. The two 26s at Boat of Garten seem especially grim. Wasn't there an issue with cracked bogies on a 40 that limped around in early preservation?

This technology matured over time, whereas early diesel locos were built to steam-era tolerances
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Top