john lewsey
Western Thunderer
Hi have you ever looked at Heroes of the foot plate .On Pete Armstrongs blogs he's built some nice models so of H R loco's probably not the period your modelling but nice to look at
Regards
John
Regards
John
John,Hi have you ever looked at Heroes of the foot plate .On Pete Armstrongs blogs he's built some nice models so of H R loco's probably not the period your modelling but nice to look at
Regards
John
....which happens to include part of the adjacent level crossing and railway line - very useful for getting contemporary details right.....
They won't be fully round, the Highland wasn't that primitive. I like the ballast covering the sleepers, as was common on most railways until it was realised that rotten sleepers couldn't be seen and replaced before they fell apart. The dirt filled ballast would also not provide good drainage so the pine sleepers probably didn't last too long even if they were creosoted.Like the half-round (or maybe even fully round) sleepers!
Mike,Hi,
You started this thread with a Jim Richards' photo of 4-plank No.2462. I assume you have a print of the only other HR wagon photo he took, No.1291?
Mike
No, the stakes seem to have been any suitable sized timber to hand when loading, and not necessarily completely straight. The Inverness photo shows stakes about 6' long. Not sure about the plate, I haven't noticed them on other wagons, but it certainly has a label clip on it and there also seems to be one on the Type L wagon at Kyle. I would expect all the wagons to have had similar label clips but they are not obvious in most photos.Just a couple of questions about the Type L:
Was there anywhere on the wagon to store the stakes? and what is the what is the plate just above the left hand end of the brake lever? It looks like as if it there is a label clip in the centre.
Yes, it probably is a Type S Luggage Van. The Mansell wheels aren't necessarily a sign of it being passenger stock though as there a number of photos of simple open wagons with Mansell wheels around the same period. Using the same wheel size for both passenger and goods stock made it easy to reuse part worn wheels and axles on goods stock. In the 1870s the use of Mansell wheels was not universal on passenger stock, for example on the Highland first class carriages had Mansell wheels while third class usually had split spoke wheels. Later, Mansell wheels spread to all carriage stock.Really enjoying this thread
My money is on your van being a variant of the luggage van, two out of your three pictures show it in a passenger train and one of them has Mansell wheels - that ain't no truck
Simon
Yes, it probably is a Type S Luggage Van. The Mansell wheels aren't necessarily a sign of it being passenger stock though as there a number of photos of simple open wagons with Mansell wheels around the same period. Using the same wheel size for both passenger and goods stock made it easy to reuse part worn wheels and axles on goods stock. In the 1870s the use of Mansell wheels was not universal on passenger stock, for example on the Highland first class carriages had Mansell wheels while third class usually had split spoke wheels. Later, Mansell wheels spread to all carriage stock.
No, the Highland didn't bolt disks onto spoked wheels. The disks seem to mostly appear on private traders wagons.Some Scottish wagons had discs over their spoked wheels to inhibit the use of sprags. Did the Highland do that?
Richard