You lot may knock the Renfe stuff for it's looks in Spain, but they are great - 320km/h while drinking complementary baso de vino tinto
:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D
Chat Forum
Trains
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Posted 1 year ago #
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I'm so loving this thread.
Posted 1 year ago # -
difference between the class 37 and 40?
The 37's just worked...
Many years ago I went on a tour of the Doncaster Works - I love engineering.
Posted 1 year ago # -
I had to go and look what a class 47 Thunderbird looked like.

Next week's thread - planes
Posted 1 year ago # -
trains are crap, awful, and expensive.
only slightly less rubbish than buses, but much more expensive.
Posted 1 year ago # -
H-t-S - That's before the dellner couplers where fitted, and possibly before the exhaust velocity was increased so that carbon dioxide didn't drift out of the top of the loco and directly into the Pendolino air conditioning intake.......
ahwiles - is that a road over rail bridge you live under?
Posted 1 year ago # -
For those that are interested, the "47" thunderbirds are actually 57's. Also nicknamed bodysnatchers as essentially they are 47 bodyshells and bogies, evertyhing else has been replaced.
They are currently in use with Virgin, Arriva, First Great Western , West Coast Railway Company and DRS. IIRC 34 in total.Posted 1 year ago # -
Lovin' this thread.
I heartily appreciate the effort train spotters put in so that when I want to find out astonishingly geeky details about trains, it's all there for me on wikipedia, though I would vehemently deny being a train geek
Also: have a strange OCD habit of HAVING to count the number of cars being hauled by freight trains...
Posted 1 year ago # -
bigyinn - Member
For those that are interested, the "47" thunderbirds are actually 57's. Also nicknamed bodysnatchers as essentially they are 47 bodyshells and bogies, evertyhing else has been replaced.
They are currently in use with Virgin, Arriva, First Great Western , West Coast Railway Company and DRS. IIRC 34 in total.Posted 1 hour ago # Report-Post
But to us rail enthusiasts, they will always be class 47 or type 4, s, because they where born that way after they changed to the tops code 47 from the 1600 series..
Posted 1 year ago # -
Another more serious point, why do preserved railways charge so much, went to a really well run one today, they wanted £14, per adult, £12 per
child and children under 3 go free.I went and took pictures, and departed, to pricey for me.
Posted 1 year ago # -
trains are crap, awful, and expensive.
only slightly less rubbish than buses, but much more expensive.
Is that right? Beginning of the month I travelled up to London by train, first time in best part of thirty years. Nice and comfy, I could sit, listening to music and reading the ebook I'd bought that morning, and it cost me £28 in total. To do that in my car would use just under half a tank of diesel, 200 mile round trip, so approximately £28/30, then there's the £15 to park at Kings Mall, Hammersmith. I could also sit in the bar at Paddington and have a couple of pints before catching the train back. Maybe you prefer to sit in a car for two hours, and pay more for the privilege. I don't.Posted 1 year ago # -
count the number of cars being hauled by freight trains...
goods train man, you're not a merkin!
Posted 1 year ago # -
project - Member
bigyinn - Member
For those that are interested, the "47" thunderbirds are actually 57's. Also nicknamed bodysnatchers as essentially they are 47 bodyshells and bogies, evertyhing else has been replaced.
They are currently in use with Virgin, Arriva, First Great Western , West Coast Railway Company and DRS. IIRC 34 in total.Posted 1 hour ago # Report-Post
But to us rail enthusiasts, they will always be class 47 or type 4, s, because they where born that way after they changed to the tops code 47 from the 1600 series..
1500s.....
Posted 1 year ago # -
CountZero :
Posted 1 year ago # -

This looks like a very capable loco.
Russian freight fleet from French train builders Alstom.
Posted 1 year ago # -
Grabbed my camera and took a pleasant Sunday morning stroll around the Colorado Railway Museum.
EMD F9 Diesel Electric 1750hp Built 1955
317 ton Burlington locomotive Built 1940 (really massive)
Rotary Snow Plow Built 1935
Built 1890
SW8 Diesel Electric Switch Engine Built 1938 Sold to Coors Brewery in 1981
Built 1880 in Philadelphia
Posted 1 year ago # -
www.youtube.com/watch?v=lQz-5OqiPk8This is a baby over here - not something you want to see coming when you're in a rush at a level crossing...
Posted 1 year ago # -
Jeeze! Imagine a locked axle on that (and doing a rotational test)! And no tail light!
Posted 1 year ago # -
These engines are making mine look kinda crap.
Posted 1 year ago # -
Looking at those enormous shunters, I've just tried to find a photo of the little diesel shunter my schoolmate's dad drove, and this is the only one I can find of a real engine, most are models:
Posted 1 year ago # -
Another underground train.
Posted 1 year ago #
Topic Closed
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