The black and maroon livery was that of the Post Office, not the LMR. It was applied to all horse-drawn mail coaches long before rail carriage started. The 'coachman' is an armed guard, employed by the Post Office rather than the railway, and his sole duty is to protect the mails being carried; he has no responsibility for the train or its contents. However, this is the origin of the 'guard' in the railway sense. The mailbags were stowed in the cupboard-like box -- known as a 'boot' -- underneath the guard's seat. In those days there were only a few bags of mail to be carried in each shipment. I don't know what Hornby have collectively been smoking to produce this mess, but it seems to be pretty heady stuff and I sure would like to try it.
Even though I am Norwegian, I watch your videos with great interest. As a former newspaper editor, I appreciate that you are independent and honest. You say what you think, even if it may not make you popular in all circles.
I don't laugh very much, but that thumbnail of Colin sitting on the toilet with a log clearly visible made me laugh harder than I have in a long time, honestly why can professional model makers at Hornby not see this when a complete amateur like me can? Thanks for brightening my morning by reviewing this Sam
I made myself a Manchester and Liverpool railway mail coach more than 20 years ago for my own layout. There is an awful lot of information out there on this model and I had no difficulty finding it, goodness knows where Hornby were looking. for me this is another failure and for the price they're asking for it I would consider something considerably better.
The passengers in the coach were indeed paying passengers. They paid higher fares to travel in the special RM coach which apparently had four seats not six (as in mere first class). I'm told by more knowledgeable men than I, that it shouldn't be on the same yellow chassis as it was narrower and inside the wheels. Mail was only carried. Personally, I love my red mail coach and have now named the Guard Colin :)
One of the drawings supposedly showing the coaches does, indeed, have a different chassis for the mail coach matching your description though it does have passengers.
BRILLIANT BRILLIANT BRILLIANT......We were both crying with laughter at the end of this, poor Colin, I hope someone sent him a good laxative in the mail. 11:00 on made us chuckle as in Metaphor for Hornby's products. ..lol...lol On a more serioius note, what the hell is happening at Hornby, ?. At least Simon cannot be blamed for this. Their product descriptions fell off the cliff with HM7000. In my opinion the best video you have ever done. Factual, to the point, and so so so funny. Briliant, thanks for posting.
Morning Sam. I watched the video with my early morning coffee and whilst also in a teams meeting, not realising that the mute button was not activated. A few comments about constipated Colin were heard along with me choking on my coffee ( went down the wrong way) unlike C Colin, and me laughing, coughing and spluttering. Needless to say, Constipated Colin is now a thing, along with me doing impressions of Colin becoming un-constipated.
@@SamsTrainsI think Colin is badly depicting the guard leaning forward so his face is hidden by the brown chest, in real life this would good way to keep smoke ,ash and embers out of your face when the train is traveling
As a Canadian, I've gotta say that 'Guard' looks like he's realized his 'Throne' is cold... no, wait! I think he's caught a glimpse of the horse up on the passenger 'walkway'...!
Coachman Colin is the most hilarious model train figure ever! Yes please keep him at the back of the layout where he belongs. Just seeing him riding on the coach gives me a pain in my-----
Constipated colin is loose on the back........ Had me in stitches. The coach from what pictures I have in colour, one is the same picture you looked at and another postcard with three closed yellow coaches and four open blue ones, shows the mail coach in the same colour scheme. Only thing is the sub frames on all the yellow stock is a darker colour in the picture. As my Lion Loco and rolling stock are in 'N' gauge.
hahaha! Yeah there's a few different drawings I've seen, none matching this one - is there a picture that shows this exact sceheme? Thanks for watching - Sam :)
Constipated Colin 🤣 OMG Sam this was a hilarious review, it honestly doesnt surprise me Hornby have made this a turd and honestly their product listings never fail to disappoint 😂
I love my 1960's Triang R346 Stephenson's Rocket set, still going strong after all these years. I wonder if this Hornby offering will still be around 60 years from now?
I have a Triang Rocket coach on order from eB** - it's a bit of shot in the dark, but I'm hoping it will work OK with my Rapido Lion (which has an NEM coupling)...
Sam's comments about the guy dropping a deuce and then likening that to Hornby's products is the kind of stuff that keeps me watching, even though I'm a Marklin fanboy.
Hi Sam. Yes, mis-describing the model is unforgiveable (if not contravening the trades description of goods act), but the coupling used fits in better with the era and other coaches it goes with.
Maybe the passengers in the drawing were employees of the Royal Mail service? Perhaps they had some sort of central mail sorting facility, then - at the end of the day - a couple of the employees would load up mail destined for their local post, put it in the box on top, and take a train ride. Then, at the end of the line, they’d get off, take the mail from the box and put it in a large bag, and put it on a horse-drawn wagon to the local post office, and the remainder of the postage would be sorted and ready for delivery the next morning. Then - after delivering the mail - they would all catch a ride back to the central facility on the train going the other way. 😊
Hornby have been advertising on Facebook trying to create a customer base here in the US. Guess I will stick with my Marx and Lionel O gauge. Love your product reviews.
Perhaps Colin is staring at the box in horror, because he's just remembered where he put the Anusol - -----out of reach! BRILLIANT SAM! haven't laughed so much!!!! This surely has to run!
By the way, I just remembered. I don't know if you knew this, but here in the US, when steam locomotives were coming out, rather than building coaches, they actually took decommissioned stagecoaches that were modified to run on rails. And there were extra seats added to the back for more passengers
“Collin is in for a very long uncomfortable ride in that posture. They should have made him more relaxed but alert. Also improve his mounting system. As far as the coach itself is concerned, I would have a hard time justifying the cost. I don’t know what the msrp was for the other coaches, but the “mail coach” should have been in the same price range. As you stated, Hornby needs to make sure that their advertising is accurate to the product. Thanks for the review their are always enjoyable.
Hi Sam, you know setting aside the mad price and the descriptive errors I really can't help loving the look of this and the train you ran. With the possibility of Locomotion I'm seriously considering it
FIY: Round axles in flat sided bearing boxes has low friction with a light lube, even on driver wheels. also: i am watching to see Hornby's response. You Do give them a LOT of honest, public exposure !
The idea of the mail coach was that it was meant to be a horse drawn carrage that could be converted to road usage by changing the wheels. This comes from the days that Royal Mail used to provide a taxi service in that paying passengers would ride in the wagon and the mail would be in boxes and bags on top. So the idea is you would stay in the coach and be taken to the final destination by horse and cart from the station. I don't know how partical it was however, but this was essentially the first road railer in existence.
You’ll be pleased to know Hornby have updated their page on this somewhat! Now it correctly states the couplings are not NEM, but chains, and the weight is now “17.59” (with no units however). However, still states the buffers are plastic and has the “seated at the back of your layout” gaffe.
"Medical" discharge is exiting below coachmans seat ! Right on the track. (Sam called it out at ~9:30.) also, NEM couplings are stated on the spec sheet, but NOT included ... ?
I remember, back in the late 1960's, Mike Sharman had a similar model, converted from an original Triang 'Rocket' coach on his Victorian railway. It looked much like this one, but without the guard's seat at the end. I've also seen a photo, in a book, of a very early TPO coach - again similar to this, but with a collector net at one end - which may actually be preserved in the NRM. I agree, the guard looks most unhappy.......
I collect transformers and if they advertised an accessory and it was missing from every copy ever printed there would be hell to pay. The fact that an actual toy company puts more effort into their product listing accuracy than a high end model company is insane.
Nem couplings didn't come in until 30 years later. 32 to be precise! Bishop of Wilchester. Seeing we have the TITFIELD THUNDERBOLT at the head of the train. OOPS hornby sadly didn't have a licence so made a Colin instead. Just recovering from the superb results from 2 of RAPEDOS FINEST train packs. Lion & Toby.
Sam - Your L&MR Mail Carriage is slightly different to mine - 1) On Mine - it is very hard to read the 'Royal Mail' & the 'Liverpool & Manchester' writing printing on my Mail Carriage. 2) The Red Colour on mine seems to be more of a darker brown than your & yes 'Colin' also seems to be doing a 'Pooh' on mine aswell!!! lol 😀🚂🚂🚂
I believe specific mail coaches weren’t invented until after the conveyance of mail act 1938. This act required railways to have available specific coaches for sorting if required by the postmaster, before then it seems to of been provision L&MR provided in agreement with Royal Mail of thier own accord… how Royal Mail ended up with one of the coaches branded I’m not sure
I believe you're thinking of Travelling Post Office vans. Royal Mail carriages were provided by the Post Office from pretty early days, and attached to trains for a fee from the PO. Passengers could travel in these coaches for a surcharge on the regular price, which guaranteed them fast transit.
Thanks Sam, probably the best Comedy I have seen in a model video for a long time! Just a shame this is actually a real product problem.... Shame on Hornby! I don't know much about the "Era 1" Era of the Railways, but I wouldn't be surprised if Mail Carriges also Doubled up as Passenger coaches. After all, White Star Lines Olympic Class Ocean Liners Primary purpose were as Mail Carriers which is why, Olympic, Titanic and Brittanic had RMS designation for Royal Mail Ship. Carrying passengers and other stowable freight were secondary side loads as extra revenue.
Not quite correct. RMS vessels received that designation because they got a subsidy from the Post Office in return for a guarantee that they would cover the route in less than a certain maximum time. Other than that they were just regular ocean liners.
Andrew Knights Add a comment... Sam, sorry to say Hornby are NOT a manufacturer, at least not of anything that comes from China. Like many other companies in the model railway world, they are simply another commissioner of models. However whilst this may explain that due to some lack of competence or communication between their manufacturer and themselves they may have little idea of the product they are trying to sell to the public. They should be on top of their supply, as the Chinese companies will supply what you request, for the most part. Thanks for a good revue of a cXXX product, entertaining at least!
What stood out to me was that the wheelbase was quite different to that shown in the paintings. Whether the paintings are wrong I don't know but I thought it noteworthy. It seems that the examples in museums are replicas so maybe the paintings represent the originals better? Also the body ends of the mail coach in the paintings follow the curved outline rather than being squared off on the passenger coaches. The text "Royal Mail" on the door seems to be in a modern typeface. That said, I wouldn't like to try to make and sell them for £40......
An accurate review Sam. You are right to call Hornby out for this sort of exploitation of the modelling base. It is their greatest failure and confirmation that they haven't just taken their eyes off of the ball, they are not even watching the game! I did read somewhere that well-known capitalist Mike Ashley has just purchased a sizable portion of Hornby shares. Make of that what you will but I cannot say that it fills me with hope for a positive future for Hornby.
I’ve given a thought about hornby’s listings. I think this might be the case: If it’s advertising a feature not on the model, it’s an oversight. Likely a template they forgot to change. If it’s NOT advertising a feature, I.e, not mentioning the couplings aren’t NEM, it’s deliberate.
It's a bit inconsistent having a figure suddenly appear at the end of the train while the locomotive is mysteriously driving itself and the carriages are presumably full of ghosts... Did Lion come with a driver and stoker/fireman? If not, why start including figures now?
it isn't actually new, they have been selling this longer than they have been selling Lion. The coach was included with a rocket train pack, which cost me £189.90. It seemed a lot more reasonable in that pack at that time (September 2022), but now to get just the coaches in that pack would cost £109.97 (this coach, one first class and one third class). So I effectively acquired rocket for £79.93 (which I think we can agree is a great model even if it was as expensive as locomotion No 1 is going to be)! Hornbys prices are just plain wrong now.
Sam; you’ve said the mail coach has the same chassis as the regular passenger coaches and showed a period drawing. The drawing clearly shows a different chassis; it’s four wheel, but it hasn’t got the long buffer shank things running down the solebars, and the axleboxes and W irons are not actually present - which admittedly seem odd on the drawing but nevertheless - for some reason the drawing shows a different chassis. Hornby recycled the same chassis as their coach - seems easier and cheaper for them of course - but it seems a work of fiction.
One problem with early illustrations -- as opposed to the few engineering/technical drawings -- is that the artists didn't really understand what they were looking at. So details we nowadays see clearly were often bodged in, or even omitted entirely. They could do horses and horse-drawn carriages no problem but in the 1830s axleboxes and W-irons were pretty alien technology for most people.
Interesting and insightful review. I was thinking of getting Hornby's Era 1 Queen Adelaide Saloon coach whenever it gets released but seeing those couplings, makes me think twice about buying. I am not too impressed with Hornby's quality or models over the last several years, however personally I think their 4/6 wheel coaches and BR Mk1 coaches aren't bad, also the J15 and newly-tooled terrier are good quality. But their wagons I'm afraid don't seem to do it for me anymore, especially since they've paid more attention to under the wagon detailing which I don't see as necessary. Prices are just a joke now and I feel as if Hornby are killing themselves although not softly.
Yeah - the Adelaide coach is listed as having NEMs too, which I believed until I saw this… now I’ve no idea if it’s got them or not. Hornby definitely get a lot of their models right, it’s just they’re extremely inconsistent!
It's priced like that because demand for Era 1 is going to be low, but also quite insensitive to price. There are a group of people who will want it because there's so little other Era 1 stuff out there and who will be willing to pay. I for one am just glad that Hornby are producing models beyond the grouping era and BR steam.
I have no experience in this industry, and I'm convinced I could get a job there as a designer, then get fired for my designs being too accurate and making everyone else feel bad about themselves for not knowing how to do their niche as hell job
haha yeah - there's something very valuable in there... he's even lost control of his bowel in the name of keeping his eye on it! Thanks for watching - Sam :)
@@richardlee653 I think it may be intentional, the poorest part of Britain’s Victorian population didn’t have toilets so that might be what they were trying to complete, the scene of a peasant who stole a top hat
Good review thanks and no surprise that Hornby cant be bothered with its products really. I suspect as with horse drawn mail coaches on the road the passengers go inside and the mail goes on the roof with Constipated Colin. Thanks Sam.
Sam, had Hornby fitted the NEM coupling to this piece of plastic, how would you have joined it together? What Hornby should do is release a packet of NEM couplings just for fitting to all of these coaches., Martin. (Thailand)
can you put the rider on the back of your layout as some creepy sasquatch cryptid of you layout, maybe then it's more in line with what hornby had in mind for modelers
I would assume the seats inside are for the mail couriers guarding the mail in front of them, beside them, and under the seats. I'd also consider false information about the model to fall under the quality score.
I'm seriously thinking about cancelling locomotion number 1, hornby seem hell bent on disappointing with what they produce currently... hesitant on the stanier black 5 too and I've been holding on for that for years too :(
Thanks for the comment Sam I have some of your merch and when it had delayed shipping my mum spoke to you online 😅 also in the next live I’d like to see a P2 with 9 pullmans and also the 0-6-0 blue Peckett with some GWR genesis coaches
Constipated Colin; haven't laughed so much in ages!! I've seen some risque things on layouts over the years, but never a bunged up Victorian gent relieving himself in a 4mm scale field..
I have one and think it looks rather neat on the back of my Lion train. £40 is pricey but that seems to be the going rate these days for wagons and at least this is new and unique. I did have all the new models on preorder but I’ve cancelled the rest as I can’t afford them. My real gripe is the bloody awful coupling chains….need tweezers and a wide vocabulary of expletives to fit the wretched things.
Yeah, doesn't look bad from a distance - £30 is pretty much the going rate for a wagon of this size, assuming they're well built and accurate... which this doesn't seem to be! Thanks for watching - Sam :)
Harsh words, but deserved. There is no excuse for those kinds of sloppy description issues. Way too easy to avoid. Really indicative of “not giving a crap”. As for the quality issues, it’s something of an industry epidemic, which would be ok except for the prices they’re asking. 😊👍👍
I paid less than this for 3 accurascale Chaldrons from rails... I know not technically right but they look pretty nifty behind my rapido lion... I was hoping for maybe something decent :/ not something that would have been with hornby first rocket.
No! constipated Colin is the charm of the Entire Thing. If I were able to buy UK train stuff in the US I would spend whatever money it takes to just get a figure of constipated Colin.
This train reminds me of Holmes and Watson who are always waiting for a letter to arrive via Mrs. Hudson and then jumping on the next train to the scene of the crime. The game is afoot :-)
The black and maroon livery was that of the Post Office, not the LMR. It was applied to all horse-drawn mail coaches long before rail carriage started. The 'coachman' is an armed guard, employed by the Post Office rather than the railway, and his sole duty is to protect the mails being carried; he has no responsibility for the train or its contents. However, this is the origin of the 'guard' in the railway sense. The mailbags were stowed in the cupboard-like box -- known as a 'boot' -- underneath the guard's seat. In those days there were only a few bags of mail to be carried in each shipment.
I don't know what Hornby have collectively been smoking to produce this mess, but it seems to be pretty heady stuff and I sure would like to try it.
The only thing under the guards seat looks somewhat more like a...shitment than a shipment 😅
Very interesting info.
@@karlyoung3275 What a great tribute to Constipated Colin, Sir!!
Even though I am Norwegian, I watch your videos with great interest. As a former newspaper editor, I appreciate that you are independent and honest. You say what you think, even if it may not make you popular in all circles.
Never a truer word said! I get so much personal flak for voicing what I think on my YT channel - and it's not even that controversial!
Takk. 😊
Colin looks very much like the "man on the bog" in Top Gear's "caravan train" 😂
hahaha!!
😂 Someone should make an OO gauge version of the Top Gear caravan Train and Jeremy's Sports Train
@@Alex-cw3rzNow THAT is something I'd pay good money for!
lol exactly what I thought
The perks of scum class
"...and on the floor: straw to soak up the blood, should there be a riot."
*Richard flings a banana in through the door*
Could not stop laughing at the “pooing trespasser” and his banishment to the outer rims of the layout ! 😂
And that's before Colin reached out for some foliage to wipe his lower parts, promptly grabbing a nettle bush.
I don't laugh very much, but that thumbnail of Colin sitting on the toilet with a log clearly visible made me laugh harder than I have in a long time, honestly why can professional model makers at Hornby not see this when a complete amateur like me can? Thanks for brightening my morning by reviewing this Sam
I made myself a Manchester and Liverpool railway mail coach more than 20 years ago for my own layout. There is an awful lot of information out there on this model and I had no difficulty finding it, goodness knows where Hornby were looking. for me this is another failure and for the price they're asking for it I would consider something considerably better.
Thanks for sharing - no excuse then - agreed, a failure overall!
Thanks for watching - Sam :)
@@SamsTrains How do Hornby continue to get away with producing this rubbish fgs!
The passengers in the coach were indeed paying passengers. They paid higher fares to travel in the special RM coach which apparently had four seats not six (as in mere first class). I'm told by more knowledgeable men than I, that it shouldn't be on the same yellow chassis as it was narrower and inside the wheels. Mail was only carried.
Personally, I love my red mail coach and have now named the Guard Colin :)
One of the drawings supposedly showing the coaches does, indeed, have a different chassis for the mail coach matching your description though it does have passengers.
I think it was Colin who wrote the Hornby Tech Spec for its website. Realising his ghastly error, Colin got an upset tummy.
haha I think you could be right!
Thanks for watching - Sam :)
BRILLIANT BRILLIANT BRILLIANT......We were both crying with laughter at the end of this, poor Colin, I hope someone sent him a good laxative in the mail.
11:00 on made us chuckle as in Metaphor for Hornby's products. ..lol...lol
On a more serioius note, what the hell is happening at Hornby, ?. At least Simon cannot be blamed for this.
Their product descriptions fell off the cliff with HM7000.
In my opinion the best video you have ever done. Factual, to the point, and so so so funny.
Briliant, thanks for posting.
It would be hilarious if you printed out a toilet for Colin and have him placed in a random corner on the layout.
Morning Sam. I watched the video with my early morning coffee and whilst also in a teams meeting, not realising that the mute button was not activated. A few comments about constipated Colin were heard along with me choking on my coffee ( went down the wrong way) unlike C Colin, and me laughing, coughing and spluttering. Needless to say, Constipated Colin is now a thing, along with me doing impressions of Colin becoming un-constipated.
Watching Constipated Colin with a slice of Colin the Caterpillar would be very apt
Hasn’t Colin got a stool to sit on? Hang on, Colin has a stool.🤣
I think Colin is pooing his pants because he realised there's no one driving the train ! ;)
haha absolutely!! ;D
@@SamsTrainsI think Colin is badly depicting the guard leaning forward so his face is hidden by the brown chest, in real life this would good way to keep smoke ,ash and embers out of your face when the train is traveling
He can’t bloody see anything either with that huge packing case in front of him 😂😂
Lol
@@forrestrobin2712 He would be able to see after the robbers stop the train, LOL
As a Canadian, I've gotta say that 'Guard' looks like he's realized his 'Throne' is cold... no, wait! I think he's caught a glimpse of the horse up on the passenger 'walkway'...!
"An act of public defecation"
That's me done.
You win the Internet for this week.
Coachman Colin is the most hilarious model train figure ever! Yes please keep him at the back of the layout where he belongs. Just seeing him riding on the coach gives me a pain in my-----
15:55 "...spatters of brown paint where it shouldn't be..." Well, perhaps Colon couldn't find a toilette in time?
Absolutely dying of laughter at you putting "Colon" instead of Colin
Constipated colin is loose on the back........ Had me in stitches. The coach from what pictures I have in colour, one is the same picture you looked at and another postcard with three closed yellow coaches and four open blue ones, shows the mail coach in the same colour scheme. Only thing is the sub frames on all the yellow stock is a darker colour in the picture. As my Lion Loco and rolling stock are in 'N' gauge.
hahaha! Yeah there's a few different drawings I've seen, none matching this one - is there a picture that shows this exact sceheme?
Thanks for watching - Sam :)
media.sciencephoto.com/c0/10/58/43/c0105843-800px-wm.jpg .
This is a very good drawing of the time.@@SamsTrains
@SamsTrains, it's a wonder you didn't have to re-do the scenes due to attempting not to laugh!
Constipated Colin 🤣 OMG Sam this was a hilarious review, it honestly doesnt surprise me Hornby have made this a turd and honestly their product listings never fail to disappoint 😂
haha glad you liked it! Yep... don't know what it is about Era 1 but they always find a way to ruin them!
Thanks for watching, Sam :)
@@SamsTrains This model makes the "Lowmac" Coca-Cola wagon look desirable!!!!
Remember when t the Predator took his mask off and Arnie said “what the hell are you”? That’s what ran through my mind when I see this.
hahaha dear god!
Thanks for watching, Sam :)
@@SamsTrainshaha my pleasure.
Get to the chopper!!
Ahh Hornby, will you ever learn. Ditto for Colin. Thanks as always Sam!
haha very true!
I love my 1960's Triang R346 Stephenson's Rocket set, still going strong after all these years. I wonder if this Hornby offering will still be around 60 years from now?
I have a Triang Rocket coach on order from eB** - it's a bit of shot in the dark, but I'm hoping it will work OK with my Rapido Lion (which has an NEM coupling)...
What's a NEM coupling? It's not a term I've heard before, or if I have I've forgotten.
It's the standard coupling used on 00 gauge models in the UK - a smaller and neater version of the old Triang tension-lock.@@davidturquand4342
Classic review, laughed a lot with this one regarding the crew member!
Sam's comments about the guy dropping a deuce and then likening that to Hornby's products is the kind of stuff that keeps me watching, even though I'm a Marklin fanboy.
Hi Sam. Yes, mis-describing the model is unforgiveable (if not contravening the trades description of goods act), but the coupling used fits in better with the era and other coaches it goes with.
Yes, it would controvene some act.
5:05 why am I not surprised about that Sam.
haha I don't know why I was surprised!!
Thanks for watching, Sam :)
right just got to drill a little hole at the back of my layout for the figure
hahaha!
Break out the thin brush and brown paint
Maybe the passengers in the drawing were employees of the Royal Mail service? Perhaps they had some sort of central mail sorting facility, then - at the end of the day - a couple of the employees would load up mail destined for their local post, put it in the box on top, and take a train ride. Then, at the end of the line, they’d get off, take the mail from the box and put it in a large bag, and put it on a horse-drawn wagon to the local post office, and the remainder of the postage would be sorted and ready for delivery the next morning. Then - after delivering the mail - they would all catch a ride back to the central facility on the train going the other way. 😊
Hornby have been advertising on Facebook trying to create a customer base here in the US. Guess I will stick with my Marx and Lionel O gauge. Love your product reviews.
Perhaps Colin is staring at the box in horror, because he's just remembered where he put the Anusol - -----out of reach! BRILLIANT SAM! haven't laughed so much!!!! This surely has to run!
Hopefully the Queen Adelaide saloon carriage will be good. I've seen the real thing and would love to own it as a model.
Hopefully it will be! They're claiming NEM couplings on that too, so hopefully that's accurate this time...
Thanks for watching, Sam :)
@@SamsTrainsThere will be no excuse for the Queen Adelaide coach to not be accurate.
Hopefully Prince Albert in a can will not be included!
By the way, I just remembered. I don't know if you knew this, but here in the US, when steam locomotives were coming out, rather than building coaches, they actually took decommissioned stagecoaches that were modified to run on rails. And there were extra seats added to the back for more passengers
“Collin is in for a very long uncomfortable ride in that posture. They should have made him more relaxed but alert. Also improve his mounting system. As far as the coach itself is concerned, I would have a hard time justifying the cost. I don’t know what the msrp was for the other coaches, but the “mail coach” should have been in the same price range. As you stated, Hornby needs to make sure that their advertising is accurate to the product. Thanks for the review their are always enjoyable.
Hi Sam, you know setting aside the mad price and the descriptive errors I really can't help loving the look of this and the train you ran. With the possibility of Locomotion I'm seriously considering it
FIY: Round axles in flat sided bearing boxes has low friction with a light lube, even on driver wheels. also: i am watching to see Hornby's response. You Do give them a LOT of honest, public exposure !
I remember some one saying DETAIL DETAIL DETAIL . but that person got the push or jumped ship good review thank you john
That would have been Simon Kohler.
The idea of the mail coach was that it was meant to be a horse drawn carrage that could be converted to road usage by changing the wheels. This comes from the days that Royal Mail used to provide a taxi service in that paying passengers would ride in the wagon and the mail would be in boxes and bags on top. So the idea is you would stay in the coach and be taken to the final destination by horse and cart from the station. I don't know how partical it was however, but this was essentially the first road railer in existence.
You’ll be pleased to know Hornby have updated their page on this somewhat! Now it correctly states the couplings are not NEM, but chains, and the weight is now “17.59” (with no units however). However, still states the buffers are plastic and has the “seated at the back of your layout” gaffe.
"Medical" discharge is exiting below coachmans seat ! Right on the track. (Sam called it out at ~9:30.)
also, NEM couplings are stated on the spec sheet, but NOT included ... ?
I remember, back in the late 1960's, Mike Sharman had a similar model, converted from an original Triang 'Rocket' coach on his Victorian railway. It looked much like this one, but without the guard's seat at the end. I've also seen a photo, in a book, of a very early TPO coach - again similar to this, but with a collector net at one end - which may actually be preserved in the NRM. I agree, the guard looks most unhappy.......
Good Review Sam, I'd love to see a Review on the Heljan 10800 class locomotive
I might look into that at some point - the prices are coming down a bit!
Thanks for watching, Sam :)
@@SamsTrains , Jennifer E Kirk looked at it and it looked pretty good
“Shambolic”? Thank you for increasing my vocabulary! 👍
I collect transformers and if they advertised an accessory and it was missing from every copy ever printed there would be hell to pay.
The fact that an actual toy company puts more effort into their product listing accuracy than a high end model company is insane.
LOLz at the scathing comments at 10:54 - nice one Sam :)
150k! Well done Sam. 👍
Hornbys next wagon in the series will be an Andrex for colin to use or chase the puppy. Your next wagon could be a bog car😂
Nem couplings didn't come in until 30 years later. 32 to be precise! Bishop of Wilchester.
Seeing we have the TITFIELD THUNDERBOLT at the head of the train.
OOPS hornby sadly didn't have a licence so made a Colin instead.
Just recovering from the superb results from 2 of RAPEDOS FINEST train packs. Lion & Toby.
Sam - Your L&MR Mail Carriage is slightly different to mine - 1) On Mine - it is very hard to read the 'Royal Mail' & the 'Liverpool & Manchester' writing printing on my Mail Carriage. 2) The Red Colour on mine seems to be more of a darker brown than your & yes 'Colin' also seems to be doing a 'Pooh' on mine aswell!!! lol 😀🚂🚂🚂
I believe specific mail coaches weren’t invented until after the conveyance of mail act 1938. This act required railways to have available specific coaches for sorting if required by the postmaster, before then it seems to of been provision L&MR provided in agreement with Royal Mail of thier own accord… how Royal Mail ended up with one of the coaches branded I’m not sure
Interesting... maybe their claim that this was specifically designed for mail was also false, who knows frankly!
Thanks for watching - Sam :)
@@SamsTrains I think the ‘special design’ is the safe on the roof and the position for the hired muscle to keep an eye on it
I believe you're thinking of Travelling Post Office vans. Royal Mail carriages were provided by the Post Office from pretty early days, and attached to trains for a fee from the PO. Passengers could travel in these coaches for a surcharge on the regular price, which guaranteed them fast transit.
Thanks Sam, probably the best Comedy I have seen in a model video for a long time! Just a shame this is actually a real product problem.... Shame on Hornby!
I don't know much about the "Era 1" Era of the Railways, but I wouldn't be surprised if Mail Carriges also Doubled up as Passenger coaches. After all, White Star Lines Olympic Class Ocean Liners Primary purpose were as Mail Carriers which is why, Olympic, Titanic and Brittanic had RMS designation for Royal Mail Ship. Carrying passengers and other stowable freight were secondary side loads as extra revenue.
Not quite correct. RMS vessels received that designation because they got a subsidy from the Post Office in return for a guarantee that they would cover the route in less than a certain maximum time. Other than that they were just regular ocean liners.
Great wheel chock at 07:08 !
For less than that you could buy a pack of 4 coaches in N scale from Kato, perfectly detailed with functioning taillights. Just sayin
Andrew Knights
Add a comment... Sam, sorry to say Hornby are NOT a manufacturer, at least not of anything that comes from China. Like many other companies in the model railway world, they are simply another commissioner of models. However whilst this may explain that due to some lack of competence or communication between their manufacturer and themselves they may have little idea of the product they are trying to sell to the public. They should be on top of their supply, as the Chinese companies will supply what you request, for the most part. Thanks for a good revue of a cXXX product, entertaining at least!
What stood out to me was that the wheelbase was quite different to that shown in the paintings. Whether the paintings are wrong I don't know but I thought it noteworthy. It seems that the examples in museums are replicas so maybe the paintings represent the originals better? Also the body ends of the mail coach in the paintings follow the curved outline rather than being squared off on the passenger coaches. The text "Royal Mail" on the door seems to be in a modern typeface. That said, I wouldn't like to try to make and sell them for £40......
An accurate review Sam. You are right to call Hornby out for this sort of exploitation of the modelling base. It is their greatest failure and confirmation that they haven't just taken their eyes off of the ball, they are not even watching the game! I did read somewhere that well-known capitalist Mike Ashley has just purchased a sizable portion of Hornby shares. Make of that what you will but I cannot say that it fills me with hope for a positive future for Hornby.
It’s all fun and games until they release the sports direct railroad 040 loco lol
YOU GO, Sam ! Calling out the omissions.
I’ve given a thought about hornby’s listings. I think this might be the case:
If it’s advertising a feature not on the model, it’s an oversight. Likely a template they forgot to change.
If it’s NOT advertising a feature, I.e, not mentioning the couplings aren’t NEM, it’s deliberate.
It's a bit inconsistent having a figure suddenly appear at the end of the train while the locomotive is mysteriously driving itself and the carriages are presumably full of ghosts... Did Lion come with a driver and stoker/fireman? If not, why start including figures now?
Yeah the locomotives do come with figures - but this is the first coach I've tried that did!
Thanks for watching, Sam :)
Why does that look so much like the blue carriages they made some 30 years ago to go with the blue 040 engine as the Rural Rambler set?
Got mine in that mail pack and that little box at the top was completely missing
9.35 - My dog's called Colin and he does deposits of pretty much the same shape and colour.
What? 2ft long and 3 inches in diameter?
@@mikehipperson well he is a big chap, it's like a sausage machine the way it comes out.
it isn't actually new, they have been selling this longer than they have been selling Lion. The coach was included with a rocket train pack, which cost me £189.90. It seemed a lot more reasonable in that pack at that time (September 2022), but now to get just the coaches in that pack would cost £109.97 (this coach, one first class and one third class). So I effectively acquired rocket for £79.93 (which I think we can agree is a great model even if it was as expensive as locomotion No 1 is going to be)! Hornbys prices are just plain wrong now.
Sam; you’ve said the mail coach has the same chassis as the regular passenger coaches and showed a period drawing. The drawing clearly shows a different chassis; it’s four wheel, but it hasn’t got the long buffer shank things running down the solebars, and the axleboxes and W irons are not actually present - which admittedly seem odd on the drawing but nevertheless - for some reason the drawing shows a different chassis. Hornby recycled the same chassis as their coach - seems easier and cheaper for them of course - but it seems a work of fiction.
One problem with early illustrations -- as opposed to the few engineering/technical drawings -- is that the artists didn't really understand what they were looking at. So details we nowadays see clearly were often bodged in, or even omitted entirely. They could do horses and horse-drawn carriages no problem but in the 1830s axleboxes and W-irons were pretty alien technology for most people.
Did you guys hear? Rails of Sheffield bought Hattons!!!
I like the new field with lots of little bullmans
Interesting and insightful review. I was thinking of getting Hornby's Era 1 Queen Adelaide Saloon coach whenever it gets released but seeing those couplings, makes me think twice about buying. I am not too impressed with Hornby's quality or models over the last several years, however personally I think their 4/6 wheel coaches and BR Mk1 coaches aren't bad, also the J15 and newly-tooled terrier are good quality. But their wagons I'm afraid don't seem to do it for me anymore, especially since they've paid more attention to under the wagon detailing which I don't see as necessary. Prices are just a joke now and I feel as if Hornby are killing themselves although not softly.
Yeah - the Adelaide coach is listed as having NEMs too, which I believed until I saw this… now I’ve no idea if it’s got them or not. Hornby definitely get a lot of their models right, it’s just they’re extremely inconsistent!
It's priced like that because demand for Era 1 is going to be low, but also quite insensitive to price. There are a group of people who will want it because there's so little other Era 1 stuff out there and who will be willing to pay.
I for one am just glad that Hornby are producing models beyond the grouping era and BR steam.
Hornby do seem to have updated at least some of the details on their the website. After seeing this?
Is the Grade F mean "FINE" ?
I have no experience in this industry, and I'm convinced I could get a job there as a designer, then get fired for my designs being too accurate and making everyone else feel bad about themselves for not knowing how to do their niche as hell job
I think Colin looked at home crouching in the bushes. I would leave him there !
haha I think so too - looks better than on the coach!
how many times has Hornby contravened the Trade Description Act?
I guess Colin's advantage is no air freshener is needed.
Ha Ha! I love how poor Colin is just sitting there staring at a box on the roof. Surely he has a job to do!
The box contains the items of Mail - he's making sure they don't fall out...
haha yeah - there's something very valuable in there... he's even lost control of his bowel in the name of keeping his eye on it!
Thanks for watching - Sam :)
What's in the box? Probably the bog roll! 😆
It;s not a box, it's a TV )))
@@digimaks I never thought of that! 😆
06:35 BACK OF THE LAYOUT?! HOW DOES THAT MAKE ANY SENSE?!
haha it doesn't! They got the term "train" and "layout" mixed up...
He might be less conspicuous.
They also got the term "back" mixed up with something else. Ask Colin about it.
@@richardlee653 I think it may be intentional, the poorest part of Britain’s Victorian population didn’t have toilets so that might be what they were trying to complete, the scene of a peasant who stole a top hat
Good review thanks and no surprise that Hornby cant be bothered with its products really. I suspect as with horse drawn mail coaches on the road the passengers go inside and the mail goes on the roof with Constipated Colin. Thanks Sam.
Sam, had Hornby fitted the NEM coupling to this piece of plastic, how would you have joined it together? What Hornby should do is release a packet of NEM couplings just for fitting to all of these coaches., Martin. (Thailand)
can you put the rider on the back of your layout as some creepy sasquatch cryptid of you layout, maybe then it's more in line with what hornby had in mind for modelers
I would assume the seats inside are for the mail couriers guarding the mail in front of them, beside them, and under the seats.
I'd also consider false information about the model to fall under the quality score.
I have no interest in buying or using a model railway. But I do enjoy your videos.
Do you ever challenge them on the incorrect description and if yes how do they respond, if they do?
If they just had painted yellow the 3 frames under the windows It would had been a beautiful and catching sight to watch the complete train.
"era 1 locomotives need something light to pull", except they're not era I but as preserved, as you've noted and not only Hornby.
I'm seriously thinking about cancelling locomotion number 1, hornby seem hell bent on disappointing with what they produce currently... hesitant on the stanier black 5 too and I've been holding on for that for years too :(
Nice work Sam plus I can understand about the problems with Hornby.
Thanks Dennis!
@@SamsTrains No problem Sam hope you have a good day now
Are you gonna get the other Era 1 coach being Queen Adelade's saloon?
The pictures on the Hornby web site don't seem to show any faecal matter being ejected under the guard's seat. That is misleading too.
Its great news that despite Hattons closing its now become part of Rails Family so in some way it’s still around.
THAT TINY THING IS THE SAME PRICE OF AN HST COACH
Yep - it's crazy isn't it??
Thanks for watching, Sam :)
Thanks for the comment Sam I have some of your merch and when it had delayed shipping my mum spoke to you online 😅 also in the next live I’d like to see a P2 with 9 pullmans and also the 0-6-0 blue Peckett with some GWR genesis coaches
Do what we want you to do and stick a rake of 8-9 Era 1 coaches instead of MK3s between your powercars
Constipated Colin; haven't laughed so much in ages!! I've seen some risque things on layouts over the years, but never a bunged up Victorian gent relieving himself in a 4mm scale field..
Reminds me of the giraffe and Battlespace sniper cars - shame they can't make Colin duck when he goes under a bridge...
I'd almost like the figure by himself. Is he available separately?
You know it’s bad when Sam says ‘it runs on the track’
Bear minimun
Please review cavalex class 56
I will look into that at some point - thanks for the suggestion!
Thanks for watching, Sam :)
@@SamsTrains thanks Sam
Great suggestion 👍🏼
I have one and think it looks rather neat on the back of my Lion train. £40 is pricey but that seems to be the going rate these days for wagons and at least this is new and unique. I did have all the new models on preorder but I’ve cancelled the rest as I can’t afford them.
My real gripe is the bloody awful coupling chains….need tweezers and a wide vocabulary of expletives to fit the wretched things.
Yeah, doesn't look bad from a distance - £30 is pretty much the going rate for a wagon of this size, assuming they're well built and accurate... which this doesn't seem to be!
Thanks for watching - Sam :)
Harsh words, but deserved. There is no excuse for those kinds of sloppy description issues. Way too easy to avoid. Really indicative of “not giving a crap”. As for the quality issues, it’s something of an industry epidemic, which would be ok except for the prices they’re asking. 😊👍👍
Constipated Colin should make a cameo appearance in future Hornby reviews. Give the poor gent a break.
I'd only pay a fiver for this.
haha I'd outbid you at £10 ;D
I paid less than this for 3 accurascale Chaldrons from rails... I know not technically right but they look pretty nifty behind my rapido lion... I was hoping for maybe something decent :/ not something that would have been with hornby first rocket.
That much?
Same... and by that I mean 5 JP¥.
No! constipated Colin is the charm of the Entire Thing. If I were able to buy UK train stuff in the US I would spend whatever money it takes to just get a figure of constipated Colin.
This train reminds me of Holmes and Watson who are always waiting for a letter to arrive via Mrs. Hudson and then jumping on the next train to the scene of the crime. The game is afoot :-)