What the layout really needs is several Austerity 0-6-0STs and a project was started many years ago to scratchbuild two. Ready to run and kits of these locos have been produced in the past, although none really impressed me as being a good basis for producing an accurate model of the prototype. Maybe with the current interest in 0 Gauge some enterprising manufacturer will produce an accurate ready to run Austerity 0-6-0ST in 7mm scale.
The two prototype Austerities chosen to model were the Walkden Railway locomotives WARRIOR and WITCH, the former in red with a Giesl ejector chimney and the latter in black with the standard chimney.
WARRIOR was built new for the NCB by Hunslet and despatched via BR on 2nd September 1954, apparently arriving at Walkden on the same day, which suggests that it was delivered in steam over BR. It stayed on the Walkden Railway based at Walkden Yard loco shed until the closure of the system in 1970. Between 1959 and the late 1960s the NCB carried out various modifications to locomotives mainly intended to reduce smoke emissions following the introduction of the Clean Air Act in 1956, although increases in power and reduced coal consumption were also claimed. Details of the modifications and locomotives affected were covered by an article in the Industrial Railway Society's RECORD magazine No.196 of March 2009 by authors Steven Oakden, Dave Holroyde and myself. The Walkden Railway had a particular problem with smoke emissions because much of the output went up a steeply graded line close to Walkden town centre. The first attempt to solve the smoke problem was to burn a mixture of coal and coke, and some Austerities were fitted with extended bunkers divided into separate compartments for each fuel. WARRIOR received an extended bunker in 1959, as seen here outside Walkden Yard loco shed in 1964:
The coal/coke experiment was not a success and most extended bunkers were later removed. Various other methods of reducing smoke were introduced and the locomotives regularly used on the line through Walkden received a combination of Giesl ejector and Hunslet underfeed stoker. WARRIOR was so fitted late in 1966 and at the same time the livery was changed from black to red. It was proposed to build the model representing this stage of the prototype.
WARRIOR with Giesl ejector at Ashtons Field shortly after bringing up a train from Astley Green Colliery in 1970
After closure of the Walkden System WARRIOR was stored in the loco shed and steamed only 3 or 4 times a year on the limited track remaining in the works yard to shunt locomotives arriving by road transport in or out of the workshops. When I saw it in August 1976 it was in relatively poor external condition, but the following year it was repainted in a lighter shade of red and sent minus the underfeed stoker to Bickershaw Colliery where it worked regularly until replaced by diesel locomotives in 1979.
WARRIOR at Bickershaw Colliery in 1978
After arrival of the diesels WARRIOR was retained as spare and steamed occasionally if required. In September 1984 it was sold for preservation and moved to the Dean Forest Railway.
WITCH was likewise built new for the NCB by Hunslet and despatched via BR on 12th April 1956 "dead on own wheels" (i.e. not in steam and as part of a BR freight train), arriving at Walkden two days later. Until 1962 it seems to have worked mainly at Sandhole Colliery on the Walkden Railway, but then moved away to work at Chanters Colliery before returning to the Walkden System late in 1964 or early 1965. In 1967 it was stationed at the site of the closed Brackley Colliery to work the Cutacre Waste Tip, where I photographed it on a Saturday in the loco shed, by then the only remaining building left at the site. In 1968 it was working at Astley Green Colliery but by the end of that year it was withdrawn and stored minus plates alongside Walkden Yard loco shed. It was sold for scrap in April 1969 after a relatively short working life of less than 13 years.
WITCH at Astley Green Colliery in 1968