PaxmanValenta
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- Joined
- 11 Apr 2015
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- 159
The class 46's were built in the early 1960s but almost all were withdrawn by 1984 having served not much over 20 years. Was there any reliability problems and what replaced them?
On that basis, logic would say that they should have been chosen for converting to ETH, rather than 50 of the 45s.
The HSTs were coming on stream at the time; we were also still in the railway downturn era - a simple cascade effect saw them made redundant as one of the least efficient and least standard fleets around.
Bear in mind that the 46s had more in common inside with the 47s than with the 45s, and we still had about 500 of the standard 47s running around at the time.
I suppose also that with the 46s being steam heat only they would have lost work when the mk1 sleepers were withdrawn?
Though were there many sleeper workings with a 46? Midland to Glasgow obviously but other than that? Not enough to make a significant difference.
I'm not sure. Did they do some of the ECML ones? I thought some were based at Gateshead.
I think they did the Bristol to Birmingham leg of the North East - South West Sleeper, along with the 45s? After the Mk3 Sleepers arrived, of course, that duty was turned over to the 47s.
were they not just knackered after a hard life?
were they not just knackered after a hard life?
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The 1972 ER casualty stats (taken from the 4 weekly casualty statements) gives an idea of their reliability. For the ER fleet in 1972 their class 45 locos had a miles per casualty (mpc) of 12397 where as the ER class 46 locos had an mpc of only 7421. The ER class 45 loco did an average of 80582 miles a year but the ER class 46 loco did a lesser average of 70439 miles a year. Average time between casualties was 56 days for a cl.45 and 38 days for a cl.46.
The ER class 47 fleet had an mpc of 13090, an average annual mileage of 68314 and an average time between casualties of 70 days. But their duty cycles fluctuated wildly between being thrashed on the ECML and pottering around on freight work, where the casualty threshold was much greater than 5 minutes delay. So it's not quite comparing apples with apples.
As a contrast the 14 ER Deltics did an average of 152420 miles that year with a mpc of 14616. They achieved an average time between casualties of 35 days.
Conversely, as there were almost three times as many 45s as 46s, it would make sense to get rid of the smaller fleet and have better standardisation.
Though were there many sleeper workings with a 46? Midland to Glasgow obviously but other than that? Not enough to make a significant difference.
were they not just knackered after a hard life?
What "hard" life? I mean, in what way was it any harder than for Cl 45s or 47s or even 40s?
If the decision was taken to ETH the Cl 45s in c 1969 (at a guess), I assume that it was already clear that the 46s were an inferior locomotive. In view of this, it is possible that the 46s were given lighter overhauls, I suppose. If so, then yes, I suppose they might have been more 'knackered' - but that would be by design, rather than by any extra-hard workings.
Not in 1972. The two classes were on the same overhaul regime and both classes on ER were steam heat fitted.
Something not yet mentioned; while it is true that the 46s bore a certain amount of electrical resemblance to 47s, those 47s were only the "Generators" (D1500-D1519, later 47401-47420). These 20 locos had originally been intended to be additional 46s. Had they not been fitted with ETH equipment from new they would likely have been withdrawn from service much sooner than they were and even then they were amongst the first 47/4s to be withdrawn.