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Today's steam on S&C has all standard class mk2fs with the new modifications.
Happy.
Happy.
Today's steam on S&C has all standard class mk2fs with the new modifications.
Happy.
Looked like it when I saw it passing Preston.That's only two coaches isn't it?
That is pretty common with quieter railtoursLooked like it when I saw it passing Preston.
Although it might have only been two standard class coaches, the rest being first class
Today's steam on S&C has all standard class mk2fs with the new modifications.
Happy.
No. Just 5366 with Saphos, and 5453 with WCRC, have Central Door Locking. The Vintage Trains Mk2s are vacuum braked only. The other WCRC Mk2s don't have Central Door Locking, and some of those are also vacuum only.Out of interest, are there not some of the earlier mk2's with opening windows around anyway ?
No. Just 5366 with Saphos, and 5453 with WCRC.
As one gets older it becomes harder workHad railtours not always been early morning late night affairs? Im quite new to the scene
Had railtours not always been early morning late night affairs? Im quite new to the scene
Breaks/destinations are also part of the shift to (expensive!) Adex-style railtours.I began to notice that ordinary service trains to the destination in question were quicker and cheaper than the railtour's standard class fare!
Two Standard Class Mk2s with the opening windows on yesterday's tour, plus there was another in the rake of ex-Riviera's which were beside us at Carnforth when we swapped over to Tangmere. Asked a Pathfinder steward about it and he confirmed that those three coaches were the only ones that had been fitted before they were all sold to West Coast. Asked the West Coast fitter on board the tour about whether they planned to fit any more and got a very non-committal response. So I think those three will be it!That's only two coaches isn't it?
I haven't been on a railtour for more than a decade and it sounds like I'm not missing anything. The first class/dining market was becoming dominant as far back as the 2000s, and that was also the time I began to notice that ordinary service trains to the destination in question were quicker and cheaper than the railtour's standard class fare!
I've done maybe three per year since 2012. I'd say pre COVID you have missed quite a lot. I have had runs behind 25 locos visiting places from Aberdeen and Stranraer to Cardiff and Exeter, nearly all with no diesel, and only one or two where it all went pear shaped. But post COVID and CDL it has all changed, Saphos and Belmond are beyond my price range, WCR is air cons with diesel on the back. Last year there were only a couple of trains of interest to my type of enthusiast, both run by Vintage Trains. But the market has gone in a different direction and the cost base has totally changed. C'est la vie.
The ‘box on the back’ is a big issue with the steam boys in my friendship groups.I'm not sure what people's issue is with having a diesel on the rear.
The ‘box on the back’ is a big issue with the steam boys in my friendship groups.
They are mostly lads who chased steam to the bitter end in ‘68 and want an unfettered steam run and to be able to hear it.
Almost to a man, they have no time for diesels so to have one shoving away in rear and reducing the demands on the steam loco has no appeal to them. It’s a run that ‘doesn’t count’.
But, as others have said, all of this is of no consequence to those attracted by spending an entire day in the same restaurant and having all three daily meals bought to them without needing to move.
Yes. They’re a hardy bunch and veterans of years of Polish and East German overnights. Today’s hermetically sealed tours are as anathema to them as the box-on-the-back.Clearly these 'steam boys' would be happy to sit in the dark and the cold all day then, as long as they could hear the steam loco on the front. As you say, that's a fairly niche outlook and not one that would be held by the majority of passengers on board.
Lights usually powered by batteries on the coach so any loco could haul the stock and lights would work (definitely had 58s on air con stock with lights working).Clearly these 'steam boys' would be happy to sit in the dark and the cold all day then, as long as they could hear the steam loco on the front. As you say, that's a fairly niche outlook and not one that would be held by the majority of passengers on board.
Lights usually powered by batteries on the coach so any loco could haul the stock and lights would work (definitely had 58s on air con stock with lights working).
As for the cold, was a regular occurance in BR days when all they could find was a no heat 47 in the middle of December so maybe these people have no issue with lack of heat as already experienced it numerous times?!!!!! It was either haul with no heat loco or cancel train, back then former happened, now we know what happens in the 2020s!!!
They are little sliding windows. Mine was open all day.I suspect it's per-seat price and cost of travel to tour's pickup location, which has greater bearing on "go / not go" decision, rather than whether the stock is pressure vent or aircon.
The days of window hanging (my tours era was the 1980s and early 1990s!) have passed.
I did notice 15-Feb's "Verney Venturer" had one a/c TSO fitted with window hoppers - but they alll seemed to be closed.
I have to say that there were virtually no announcements on the two trips I have been on recently. Thankfully.I did a tour for the first time in ages recently. £140 and aircon stock.
Never heard the locos at all, only the organisers unwanted, unscripted PA wibble all day, including repeated reminders not to loiter in vestibules, not to open any window, summoning stewards to the doors, etc..
A soulless experience I’ll not repeat.
Or go for a ride on the Hastings diesel where the engines are inside the coaches.Maybe all railtours should just consist of a noisy loco and one coach - problem solved.![]()
Regarding this, I have often noted that halfway through the return run, people have either fallen asleep or started ranting about everything under the sun.(3) Too much beer (&other alcohol) sold on trains and/or at intermediate stops. Sadly a proportion of passengers cannot hold their beer without becoming verbally "loud" (or worse), and that makes it unpleasant for other passengers.
Certainly one made it from Birmingham to Paddington many years ago and all was working upon arrival.58s on air con stock was usually on short trips like the Nuneaton 'drags' so the batteries didn't have to last more than half an hour or so and of course if the batteries were a bit dodgy, they wouldn't power the lights for very long. I've certainly been on a set of Mk2s with a non-ETH loco on the front where the lights gave up pretty quickly and the CDL failed soon afterwards.
My solution has been to do railtours in other countries that don't fuss about opening windows and allow a common sense approach, added to which they are cheaper. Ok, there's a cost of getting there but there's often that cost in UK. It's worth it to have a proper experience without nanny state fussing and interference.
No. Look at the Six Bells Junction site for the 1960s, and you will see that many railtours started at around 09:00. Many, except the longest trips, finished between 18:00 and 20:00.Had railtours not always been early morning late night affairs? Im quite new to the scene
This certainly does make me more hopeful then, especially if it can allow for the loco to be heard more from the train itself. As I have said previously I don't mind as such what liveries the Mk2s are in as long as tours continue and there is a returning customer base to these tours.Here's a photo I took on a tour last year. Arlington Fleet Services at Eastleigh had fitted sliding windows in adjacent window panes of two of the Mk2 coaches that were then owned by Riviera Trains. Those coaches are now owned by WCR, so it remains to be seen whether they will continue with the fitment programme.
View attachment 175378
That definitely sounds like fantastic experiences, especially with a Duchess on a steep gradient.Of course, in that timeframe, the 9fs (Evening Star,Black Prince) were also available on the mainline, along with Mallard and the footage of them climbing the Settle and Carlisle is great.When I think of the "drama of steam" I enjoyed in the 1985-88 period, on the Scarborough Spa and the Cumbrian Mountain Express - City of Wells and Duchess of Hamilton gloriously full song and me leaning from carriage windows - I think the only comparable experiences in my more recent years, have been narrow gauge steam:
The Welsh Highland Railway - and, overseas, the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic Railway (USA, New Mexico into Colorado) and the Nilghiri Blue Mountain Railway (India, north Tamil Nadu).
No glass in the window frames on those...![]()
If there has been one thing I have appreciated more over time at heritage railways is the value of non corridor compartment coaches.Not going to happen mainline, but standard issue if you’re sat corridor side at a gala.
I’m immune to the sight of saggy Tesco jeans heading south as two hairy moons bulge northwards. My ears take over from eyes at times like that.