Western Sunset
Established Member
Anyone mention MoD sites like Marchwood and Ashchurch?
Oh yes it is! That's the C-C diesel-hydraulic super-shunter 'Cracoe', built by RFS Doncaster in 1994. To give it the necessary traction to haul a fully-loaded 2,500 tonne stone train up the rising gradient towards the quarry exit, it has massive bogies weighted with large concrete blocks and is too heavy to run on the branch from Skipton. As a result, it is confined to the quarry precincts and had to be delivered by road on three separate low-loaders - one for the body and one for each bogie - before being assembled on site using a heavy crane. When I was working at Skipton and travelling up to the quarry, there were also at least two - and possibly three - ex-BR 350 bhp diesel-shunters there....a class 08 (3088?), a class 11 (12100?) and a class 12 (15231?). I can't remember the exact numbers, but someone on here will probably know.That little thing is certainly not the enormous beast from the article!
It looks completely different from the one I remember in the article. Obviously my memory of that is the best part of three decades old so I shouldn't rely on it too much... but the loco photographed in the post I quoted looks far smaller than the big blue thing that was in the old magazine article.Oh yes it is! That's the C-C diesel-hydraulic super-shunter 'Cracoe', built by RFS Doncaster in 1994. To give it the necessary traction to haul a fully-loaded 2,500 tonne stone train up the rising gradient towards the quarry exit, it has massive bogies weighted with large concrete blocks and is too heavy to run on the branch from Skipton. As a result, it is confined to the quarry precincts and had to be delivered by road on three separate low-loaders - one for the body and one for each bogie - before being assembled on site using a heavy crane. When I was working at Skipton and travelling up to the quarry, there were also at least two - and possibly three - ex-BR 350 bhp diesel-shunters there....a class 08 (3088?), a class 11 (12100?) and a class 12 (15231?). I can't remember the exact numbers, but someone on here will probably know.
When delivered in 1994 the loco was painted in the smart maroon and blue Tilcon livery, but sometime after the takeover of Tilcon by Tarmac it was repainted in a boring all-white livery with the Tarmac logo in green (I think) on the cabsides. The photo linked to the above post was taken from some distance away and at a sharp angle....I think from the embankment where the B6265 road from Skipton to Grassington crosses the course of the old branch line just behind the bufferstops where the current branch and sidings terminate.It looks completely different from the one I remember in the article. Obviously my memory of that is the best part of three decades old so I shouldn't rely on it too much... but the loco photographed in the post I quoted looks far smaller than the big blue thing that was in the old magazine article.
I don't think it does. I went down a few years ago (to visit https://www.boulby.stfc.ac.uk/Pages/home.aspx) and didn't see any evidence of such things. Think it was trucks and possibly conveyors. But not 100% sure.Does Boulby have an underground internal system?
I know alot of the coal mines did.
Probably some temporary ones, e.g. on HS2 tunnelling work.Are there any narrow gauge industrial systems left anywhere? They were common years ago and even as late as the 1980s there were still several left, particularly in collieries.
The Bord na Móna system was operational until last yearAre there any narrow gauge industrial systems left anywhere? They were common years ago and even as late as the 1980s there were still several left, particularly in collieries.
I didnt see any when I visited a number of years ago. It was all truck based as you say.I don't think it does. I went down a few years ago (to visit https://www.boulby.stfc.ac.uk/Pages/home.aspx) and didn't see any evidence of such things. Think it was trucks and possibly conveyors. But not 100% sure.
No shunting loco since the Cement Works closed. The spoil trains loco does all the shunting. The points to the Light railway were renewed as part of the Foxton Level Crossing upgrade over the Christmas holidays. BW DCAnother example near here is the Barrington Light Railway, which may not count as a "system".
The spoil trains to Barrington leave the Network Rail "system" at Foxton exchange sidings and travel along the Barrington Light Railway to reach the unloading point, still hauled by a GBRF locomotive.
But I'm not aware of there being a shunting loco.
Tidworth is long gone, and I understand Bicester is no longer operational. The squadron which operated it has disbanded, as far as I know.Are there still military systems with main rail connections such as Bicester, Tidworth etc?
08054, 12083 (11) & 15231 (12), although the latter was scrapped in 1983. I photo'd the 08 & 11 on a couple of visits, the last time being in 1993. Purely for the record D3088 was only ever a NE Area NCB loco (post BR), which I met at Bates pit.When I was working at Skipton and travelling up to the quarry, there were also at least two - and possibly three - ex-BR 350 bhp diesel-shunters there....a class 08 (3088?), a class 11 (12100?) and a class 12 (15231?). I can't remember the exact numbers, but someone on here will probably know.
Back when National Grid were using one of the older single bores of Woodhead for cables, they had a narrow gauge line laid in there. Not sure if they transferred that system over to the 1950 bore when they moved the cables over several years back.Are there any narrow gauge industrial systems left anywhere? They were common years ago and even as late as the 1980s there were still several left, particularly in collieries.
The blue loco in the screenshot is HE (Hunslet) 6663 of 1969, an 0-6-0DH. It was rebuilt in 1999 by Hunslet Barclay (Kilmarnock) works no 6586, but it appears to largely still resemble its old self, as I remember the type as built - showing my age!I believe it's a old us one? Or looks American. Definitely something shunter sized parked there usually with tanks. It isn't a 08 or 09 shunter though.
This second screenshot shows TH (Thomas Hill) 267V of 1976, a 4wDH, another type commonly used throughout industry not so many years ago.Also visible at Robeston Puma on Google Streetview, image taken Nov-24:
Ludgershall still has an MOD shunter I think.Does shoeberyness still get traffic?
Thanks for that. My memory is definitely not what it was....although I suspect that you probably wrote a lot more things down than I did!08054, 12083 (11) & 15231 (12), although the latter was scrapped in 1983. I photo'd the 08 & 11 on a couple of visits, the last time being in 1993. Purely for the record D3088 was only ever a NE Area NCB loco (post BR), which I met at Bates pit.
Is Sheerness steelworks still operational in any form?....and, if so, does it still have an internal rail network? ISTR that there was also a scrapyard in nearby Queenborough which employed an ex-BR Andrew Barclay class 06 shunter.the second about ten years later in a Kent steelworks.
Yours is not the only one, believe me! I actually have serious gaps, notebook wise, and after having seen all I was interested in (BR wise) I must have travelled to the industrial locations I visited, taking pictures of everything I could, and any notes scribbled somewhere that is now lost - very frustrating looking back now. I know some people were in the habit of recording everything they saw, regardless if they had 'cleared' all that particular class, which will have helped to keep a record for the future, but for me, once seen, that was it. By the time things like Brush 4's started to be modified/renumbered (477xx/8xx etc) I'd long since seen the entire class, barring those four early casualties, and had lost interest in the 'spotting' side of things. I seem to be waffling on a bit......sorry!My memory is definitely not what it was....although I suspect that you probably wrote a lot more things down than I did!
As of 2019 MOD Ludgershall had two Thomas Hill 4wDH's. Although seriously depleted from years past, the MOD had/has a number of locations which use rail, and so their locos were from time to time reallocated to other places, exactly as BR locos were moved from depot to depot.Ludgershall still has an MOD shunter I think.
Still trains in and out of Bicester - there were MoD trains running as recently in April (and potentially after). There are also regular MoD workings from Kineton to Marchwood and Longtown with occasional other movements.Tidworth is long gone, and I understand Bicester is no longer operational. The squadron which operated it has disbanded, as far as I know.
All gone afraid AFAIK. They had one 03, D2051, the rest of the BR locos being 04's. On an occasion when I had a pass to roam (with limitations) they also had a HC (Hudswell Clark) 0-6-0DH and a Hunslet 0-6-0DH, plus a Robel rail-road crane, bit of a big boys toy type of thing! I believe Fords own Classic car collection is now housed within what was the loco shed, or was at one time.Are there locos at Ford Dagenham? They used to have ex BR 03s and 04s, but I guess they'd have gone by now.
That's a pity as it was a busy and interesting system in its day. We visited in 1985 and had a great time!All gone afraid AFAIK. They had one 03, D2051, the rest of the BR locos being 04's. On an occasion when I had a pass to roam (with limitations) they also had a HC (Hudswell Clark) 0-6-0DH and a Hunslet 0-6-0DH, plus a Robel rail-road crane, bit of a big boys toy type of thing! I believe Fords own Classic car collection is now housed within what was the loco shed, or was at one time.
It wasn't. Not sure if the old trackwork is still in there, but both the single bore tunnels have now been bricked up (certainly that's the case at the Woodhead station end).Back when National Grid were using one of the older single bores of Woodhead for cables, they had a narrow gauge line laid in there. Not sure if they transferred that system over to the 1950 bore when they moved the cables over several years back.
Fords , Dagenham ?
Are there locos at Ford Dagenham?
Not sure if anything still comes in or goes out by rail, but doesn’t the Liberty Steel Aldwarke/Roundwood/Thrybergh works complex in Rotherham have quite an extensive internal rail system?
I think Bardon Hill still has a loco and several sidings
On the same line, does Skinningrove have an internal network ?. Sidings appear to enter the works.
Skinningrove steelworks used to have shunters on site. Is it still going and are they still there?
Not clear why the photographer refers to it as a 'Pilot engine'!
It looks completely different from the one I remember in the article. Obviously my memory of that is the best part of three decades old so I shouldn't rely on it too much... but the loco photographed in the post I quoted looks far smaller than the big blue thing that was in the old magazine article.