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Ian Hamilton
Великобритания
Добавлен 12 апр 2012
steamlibrary.co.uk an online resource for Great British steam train images and videos.
Steam Library video: WEST COUNTRY DVD TRAILER
This DVD portrays Great Western locos hauling special trains in the territory in which they operated until the end of regular steam, and covers the famous banks of Whiteball, Dainton, Rattey and Hemerdon. The period covered is 1998 to 2013, filmed in digital 4:3 and high definition widescreen. Locos featured : 3440, 4936, 4965, 5029, 5043, 5051, 6024. Running time : approx. 110 minutes.
Available in the New Year
Available in the New Year
Просмотров: 191
Видео
Steam Library video: 'Duchess of Sutherland' & 'Princess Elizabeth'
Просмотров 7788 лет назад
Although LMS Pacifics could have been seen on Hemerdon Bank for a brief period in 1956 to replace 'Kings' which had been temporarily withdrawn due to bogie problems, and additionally once or twice in the preservation era, such a sight is rare, yet two took place within 7 weeks of each other. Ex-LMS 'Duchess' Class 4-6-2 46233 'Duchess of Sutherland' storms the Bank with the return Railway Touri...
Steam Library video: Ex-LMS 'Duchess' Class 4-6-2 46233 'Duchess of Sutherland'
Просмотров 7328 лет назад
Ex-LMS 'Duchess' Class 4-6-2 46233 'Duchess of Sutherland' storms the 1 in 42 Hemerdon Bank with the return Railway Touring Company 'Royal Duchy' from Par to Bristol.
Steam Library video: Great Britain IX trailer
Просмотров 1038 лет назад
Available from steamlibrary.co.uk as DVD priced £12.00, or as Bluray priced £15.00 In Blu-ray or DVD format with extensive coverage of all nine days of GBIX filmed in high definition from 26th April to 4th May 2016. Contents: Day 1 : 46100 Victoria - Reading - Newbury - Exeter - Plymouth Sonning Cutting, Crofton, Whiteball (2), Exeter SD, Newton Abbot, Dainton, Rattery Day 2 : Penzance - Plymou...
Steam Library video
Просмотров 1058 лет назад
On Saturday 28th May 2016, Steam Dreams ran a trip for Paddington to Salisbury, via Reading and Westbury, with ex-LNER A3 Class 4-6-2 60103 'Flying Scotsman'. Whilst at Salisbury, 60103 operated a circular trip to Southampton, prior to returning on the former SR mainline to Basingstoke, then Reading and back to Paddington.
Steam Library video: Great Britain IX - video 6 of 6
Просмотров 1508 лет назад
Ex-LMS 'Jubilee' Class 4-6-0 45690 'Leander' making a very smoky departure from Hellifield. Wednesday 4th May 2016. On the final day of the trip, the train returned from Grange-over-Sands to London, Kings Cross. Ex-LMS 'Jubilee' Class 4-6-0 45690 'Leander' worked via Hellifield and Leeds to Doncaster, where diesel took over for the run down the East Coast mainline to London.
Steam Library video; Great Britain IX - video 5 of 6
Просмотров 1108 лет назад
Wednesday 4th May 2016. On the final day of the trip, the train returned from Grange-over-Sands to London, Kings Cross. Ex-LMS 'Jubilee' Class 4-6-0 45690 'Leander' worked via Hellifield and Leeds to Doncaster, where diesel took over for the run down the East Coast mainline to London. Having just passed through Gleneagles Station.
Steam Library video: Great Britain IX - video 4 of 6
Просмотров 458 лет назад
ex-LMS Class 5 4-6-0 4487. With a shorter train and weight restrictions for the diesel, 44871 made the return run from Inverness to Kyle of Lochalsh unassisted. After stop for water and to allow a service train to pass on the otherwise single line, the train is climbing past Loch Gowan towards the summit at Luib.
Steam Library video
Просмотров 938 лет назад
Friday 29th April 2016. Whilst 44871 ran light engine to Edinburgh, the train was hauled from Grange-over-Sands to Edinburgh via Whitehaven, Carlisle and Beattock by ex-LMS 'Jubilee' Class 4-6-0 45699 'Galatea', again with diesel on the rear, due to some earlier delays, the train had to be hurried up the 1 in 75 bank from Beattock to prevent delays on the busy London to Glasgow mainline, here c...
Steam Library video
Просмотров 658 лет назад
Thursday 28th April 2016. This leg of the trip used ex-LMS Class 5 4-6-0 44871 from Bristol via Hereford, Shrewsbury, Crewe, Preston and Carnforth to the overnight stop at Grange-over-Sands. All stops had been pulled out to get the engine repaired, and it was able to run down to Bristol on the Wednesday evening. Throughout much of the rest of the trip, 44871 had been due to be assisted by 'clas...
Steam Library video: Great Britain IX-video 1 of 6
Просмотров 3338 лет назад
ex-LMS 'Royal Scot' Class 4-6-0 46100 'Royal Scot', crossing East Largin Viaduct between Bodmin and Liskeard in Cornwall.
©Steam Library video: ex-LMS 'Coronation' Class 4-6-2 46233 'Duchess of Sutherland'
Просмотров 2578 лет назад
On a cold, still, misty late afternoon, the sound of ex-LMS 'Coronation' Class 4-6-2 46233 'Duchess of Sutherland' can be heard from a distance as it storms up to Ais Gill summit with the 'Winter Cumbrian Mountain Express' on 07/02/15. This is a clip from 'Steam over the Northern Fells'. steamlibrary.co.uk/shop
©Steam Library video: ex-GWR 'Hall' Class 4-6-0 4965 'Rood Ashton Hall'
Просмотров 1748 лет назад
On 07/03/15, ex-GWR 'Hall' Class 4-6-0 4965 'Rood Ashton Hall' hauled Vintage Train's 'Red Dragon' from Tyseley to Cardiff and return. It is pictured alongside the River Severn - at Purton on the outward journey and Woolaston on the return.
©Steam Library video: ex-LMS 'Royal Scot' Class 4-6-0 46115 'Scots Guardsman'
Просмотров 1598 лет назад
The 3-cylinder beat of ex-LMS 'Royal Scot' Class 4-6-0 46115 'Scots Guardsman' can be heard distinctly as it thrashes up Beattock bank at Harthope with Day 4 of the 'Great Britain VII' on 29/04/14. This is a clip from 'Steam over the Northern Fells' steamlibrary.co.uk/shop/
©Steam Library video:Ex-GWR 'Castle' Class 4-6-0 5043 'Earl of Mount Edgcumbe'
Просмотров 1978 лет назад
On 16/10/10, Vintage Trains ran their 'Pride of Swindon', out and back via the Settle & Carlisle line. Ex-GWR 'Castle' Class 4-6-0 5043 'Earl of Mount Edgcumbe' is pictured passing Selside on the outward journey. This is a clip from 'Steam over the Northern Fells' available at steamlibrary.co.uk/shop
©Steam Library video: ex-LMS 4-6-0 5690 'Leander' (VNTH4)
Просмотров 1028 лет назад
©Steam Library video: ex-LMS 4-6-0 5690 'Leander' (VNTH4)
©Steam Library video: Ex-LMS 'Jubilee' Class 4-6-0 5690 'Leander'
Просмотров 1238 лет назад
©Steam Library video: Ex-LMS 'Jubilee' Class 4-6-0 5690 'Leander'
©Steam Library video: 'The Fellsman' Ex-LMS Class 5 4-6-0 45231
Просмотров 2478 лет назад
©Steam Library video: 'The Fellsman' Ex-LMS Class 5 4-6-0 45231
©Steam Library video: 'City of Truro' (Record Breakers)
Просмотров 7188 лет назад
©Steam Library video: 'City of Truro' (Record Breakers)
©Steam Library video: 4472 'Flying Scotsman'
Просмотров 5618 лет назад
©Steam Library video: 4472 'Flying Scotsman'
©Steam Library video: 3440 'City of Truro' 001
Просмотров 1678 лет назад
©Steam Library video: 3440 'City of Truro' 001
©Steam Library video: Ex-GWR Castle Class 4-6-0 5043 'Earl of Mount Edgcumbe'
Просмотров 549 лет назад
©Steam Library video: Ex-GWR Castle Class 4-6-0 5043 'Earl of Mount Edgcumbe'
©Steam Library video: Ex-SR 'Merchant Navy' Class 4-6-2 35028 'Clan Line'
Просмотров 1609 лет назад
©Steam Library video: Ex-SR 'Merchant Navy' Class 4-6-2 35028 'Clan Line'
©Steam Library video: 'Royal Scot' Class 4-6-0 46115 'Scots Guardsman'
Просмотров 799 лет назад
©Steam Library video: 'Royal Scot' Class 4-6-0 46115 'Scots Guardsman'
©Steam Library video: Ex-GWR 'Castle' Class 4-6-0 5029 'Nunney Castle'
Просмотров 909 лет назад
©Steam Library video: Ex-GWR 'Castle' Class 4-6-0 5029 'Nunney Castle'
©Steam Library video; Isle of Man Steam Railway
Просмотров 2,9 тыс.9 лет назад
©Steam Library video; Isle of Man Steam Railway
©Steam Library: Ex-GWR ‘Castle’ Class 4-6-0 No. 5029 ‘Nunney Castle’
Просмотров 39 тыс.9 лет назад
©Steam Library: Ex-GWR ‘Castle’ Class 4-6-0 No. 5029 ‘Nunney Castle’
©Steam Library: Ex-GWR 'Castle' Class 4-6-0 No. 5029 'Nunney Castle'
Просмотров 1909 лет назад
©Steam Library: Ex-GWR 'Castle' Class 4-6-0 No. 5029 'Nunney Castle'
He did it! I’ll do it!
Great to see steam on the western in form l m s
Did Plymouth men sign Paddington back in the day? The poor old fireman must have been cream cackered before he got to Newton Abbot. I know most trains were doubled headed but it's still blooming hard work.
Beutiful castle sounds just digs in gets in her grove and slogs!! Not one slip!! A bullied southern rubbish would have to be pushed up by a 47!!
@user-4tx5qc2e) Yes, you'd think so but that is a long way from what actually happened. I have a log which shows a West Country (34023) taking 9 (330 tons) up the bank at a steady 23 mph from a stop at Plympton. This needs a huge steam rate and must have been a case of full gear and full regulator. The previous day 34081 took 6 up at a steady 25 mph. The source of this info is "Bulleid's Pacifics" by D.W.Winkworth. I have no reason to doubt the figures because the author is sceptical about the whole class and one chapter is titled "How Bad Were These Engines?"
Beautiful sound
Ex WGR castle is really the champion 🏆🏆🥇 of ♥️🍒 hauling a huge load nice 👍🙂 video 📷 nicely filmed and capture with Fabolous timing
Now I am diesel fan, but that is impressive, so do we know on larger trains back in the day, did they attach a banker at North Road or stop near Laira for an assist? Anyway, a great video that I am annoying the neighbours with as much as possible. very impressed.
They would insert a pilot loco between the train engine and the carriages if it was a diesel hauled train, say a Warship, or in front of the train engine if it was steam hauled, to avoid the pilot engine inhaling the soot - often an NBL type 2 was used as pilot.
One wonders whether 8 coaches of this more modern stock - even heritage stock - weight more than 8 typical coaches in GWR/BR steam days. It certainly looked a slow hard slog.
She was running well under 225 psi boiler pressure here, for whatever reason. Not even the smallest wisp coming from the safety valves even when she was down to 10 mph. Should have been blowing off furiously by that point with the demand from the front end Decreasing.
Defo in big valve!
I wonder what percent cut-off they're in to come up hemerdon?
Full gear, 75%, almost without question. And full regulator. This was a close-run thing and in preservation days drivers like to show off but this was just a case of keeping going. In steam days a Castle with 9 would have needed 55-60% or possibly full gear with the regulator not quite fully open. The load limits for all types on the South Devon banks were pretty high and demanded that the boiler pressure was well up.
I wondered that. 50% probably with boiler pressure down
What is the grade she’s climbing? Pls
The gradient is 1 in 42 up to the curve near the top where it changes to 1 in 51. You can hear the slight acceleration.
@@Rosie6857 cheers , yes I noticed the exhaust note change,👍
@@johnjackson1106 Probably a great relief to the crew because this was a close-run thing. Foot-on-the floor in bottom gear, in motoring terms.
@@Rosie6857 Yes indeed. It was a little bit nail biting just watching. Never mind firing it .
In my tarinspotting days in 1963 to 1965 Nunney was a very regular visitor to Plymouth Laira, despite being allocated to OOC. So its not that it hasn't had practice.
Look in the tender at 4:25/4:26. That's not what you feed a main line steam engine on!
It’s coal. What do you think you feed a mainline steam locomotive on?
@@harryrobinson2901 I agree. However what I saw loaded on the tender when coming back from Kingswear had a greater affinity to porridge than a tidy load of coal. Think they kept the good stuff for their own engines.
Came back from Kingswear behind 5029 a few years ago. She was compromised all the way due to the porridge put in the tender at Paignton. We eventually were forced to stop at Weston-S-Mare to rebuild the fire before reaching Bristol TM about an hour late. Have had some other runs behind her when she has behaved impeccably.
So where does this dire coal come from??
The same thing happened to 4930 Hagley Hall in 1985 in the GW 150 when she was coaled with rubbish at Bristol Bath Road to work a Bristol-Plymouth train with 5051 Earl Bathurst. The end came on Dainton bank where 4930's fire turned into a solid lump and with 600 tons behind 5051 she slipped to a stand and a following class 50 had to push the train over the summit to Totnes where it terminated. It was the second run west over the south Devon banks for the first with 7819 Hinton Manor and 6000 King George VI both failing at with hot axles boxes. That run was saved by 4930 coming straight off SVR workings and running to Plymouth light engine overnight. After that only east bound runs were made and only with 5051 and 7029 Clun Castle. The closure of Swindon Works made GW 150 a bit of a fizzer.
4:46 her whistle is just brilliant, so high pitched yet powerful nonetheless
Looks like Hamerton Bank
Which is louder single or double chimney? She sounded awesome.
Single.
I live in Newcastle Australia and we have steep climbs as well. My opinion is that this grade reminds me of how steam locomotives should sound like. Thank you. Love this type of action.👍
I have watched this multiple times and still not bored. It's sound's so awesome too skip past.
I'd have preferred the trip behind Lizzy!! She is so much louder compared to the duchess and sounds so much more sure footed to boot.
ruclips.net/video/Vsab1OhIJcc/видео.html What can be done.
Stunning! the harder she works the better she looks! She makes everything look so easy!
How many coaches can a 9f take up that bank?
(JB) My guess is that they'd be allowed 11. Kings routinely took 11 up the South Devon banks and they have roughly the same tractive effort and steaming capacity as a 9F. I have a log which shows a steady minimum speed of 18 mph with 11 on. This needs a huge amount of steam.
@@Rosie6857 I thought 9fs could take maybe 20 coaches up that bank because it has 10 driving wheels, I did see a 9f pull a 2198 ton stone train on a video.
In that case Castles have 4. Someone has obviously nicked the rear coupling rods. Also it would mean an LMS 2P 4-4-0 could get 8 up the bank whereas in reality I doubt if one of those dreadful things could get itself up the hill, let alone pull a train. In 1906, apparently, a 28XX hauled a 2000-ton train Swindon to London.
@@jamesbradford4550 What???? 20 up Hemerdon? You're having a laugh aren't you? That 2198 ton train pulled by a 9F was on level track, not the 1 in 42 for 2½ miles of Hemerdon!
@@Rosie6857 And yet....appearance can be deceptive. The 2Ps worked over the Somerset and Dorset for many years and were the principal motive power for passenger services before the war. According to S&D fireman Peter Smith, they regularly worked 6 bogies over Masbury summit - a notorious seven-mile slog in either decoration, much at around 1 in 50. At the other end of the line, they would haul 240 tons unassisted up Parkstone bank, including a stop in the middle at Parkstone station. Stalling was apparently unheard of!
Bet that fireman is working hard
It isn't struggling son. It's normal working on Hemerdon!
It's in full gear; you can hear the sharpness of the exhaust. With the full BR-allowed load of 9 it would have stalled as it would have done on Dainton West later in the run. In steam days drivers may well have allowed the speed to fall as low as this one but this is the preservation era and drivers like to show off a bit where they can. With full pressure a speed of 15 mph is quite feasible.
Rosie6857, you talk so much shit it’s unreal.
That's a bit rude isn't it? Two can play at that game, you'll find.
Rosie6857, you slam every locos performance and suggest it’s bad coal or firing, just be quiet.
This is a poor performance - no question about that. As a GWR fan I find it embarrassing. Another half mile and it would have stalled. Bad coal or bad firing is exactly the problem, not the engine, so I don't understand your reaction. Maybe you're just a thicko or maybe you should go back to reading Thomas the Tank Engine. Either way you seem to know absolutely fuck all about the performance of steam locos. There you are - I told you two can play at the game of rudeness. Not nice, is it.
Did anyone notice the forest fire???
5043 would have slotted this bank at a far greater rate
not an ex GWR loco ,it is a GWR loco running in BR guise
It's an ex-GWR loco. They built it about 1932.
A wonderful moment
Wow wee what a performance she done well up that grade
Castles (and Counties) were allowed 9 on the South Devon Banks and there is a lot of photographic evidence to prove it. Halls and Granges were allowed 8 which leaves little to spare. I have personally witnessed a Hall taking 8 up Dainton East. I've got the picture but alas not the sound. With the present run with Nunney the only conclusion I can come to is that pressure was well down (guess 175 psi) instead of 225. From the sound of it the loco is in full gear from about 1:20 onwards and the driver can do no more. There's not a wisp of steam from the safety valves. Why the steaming was so poor I have no idea. Probably one of the usual reasons. Nunney has done really well more recently.
Probably not fed the Welsh steam coal her firebox was built for and which was used by the Western region up to the end of steam (hence the unique tarry smell that marked Paddington from all other London terminals) although by then the quality was deteriorating. The black smoke suggests that either the coal or the firing techniques were unsuited to the fuel.
@@andrewdarley8988 On test, GWR locos did pretty well with non-Welsh coal. I think the problem here is an inexperienced fireman, always a problem in preservation days because they simply don't get the day-to-day practice that BR fireman got. A well-practised fireman would have adjusted his technique according to the fuel. Maybe the coal was no good. There is such a thing as crap Welsh coal and I say that as someone of 100% Welsh ethnicity (if that doesn't sound too pompous) although actually a suburban Londoner. Nunney Castle lives to fight another day - just about.
It’s interesting to compare this run with last weekend’s ascent by 45596 ‘Bahamas’ with an extra coach and (from speaking to the driver at Plymouth) imported coal of ‘dubious’ quality at best. The double chimney turns the nominally LMS Class 5XP loco into something considerably better - I think the steaming output is thought to be improved by up to 30%? Interesting that BR never distinguished between single and double chimneyed locos in its loading book calculations.
@@limeyfox The double chimney certainly improves the steaming of a loco but mainly at a high rate of evaporation/steaming. In steam days a single-chimney Castle was rostered for 9 up this bank and never failed , to my knowledge, but of course it would have had an experienced fireman. The actual steam rate on climbing Hemerdon is not particularly high but the pressure must be kept right up. With Nunney the steam rate was not high but the pressure was down to about 175 psi (my estimate) and the loco was absolutely flat out. Hate to say it but the fault was the fireman. I really hope he gains experience from this daunting task
Excellent, that brings back memories.!
Can I use this footage please:)
+Will & Co. Yes you can, provided it is for non-commercial purposes. We ask that you credit steamlibrary.co.uk
+Ian Hamilton aye sure thanks
how did she end up failing?
Great shot... going at max power!!!!!