I posted this on uk.railways, though might interest someone here.
Thunderbird is very flakey at the moment
Anyone know if any Marconi locomotived survive anywhere
shorturl.at/eoxRS
Marconi Wireless Telegraph (Locomotive?) No.1
Are these locomotives built by them or merely named after the product to promote it?
Brian
I posted this on uk.railways, though might interest someone here.
Thunderbird is very flakey at the moment
Anyone know if any Marconi locomotived survive anywhere
shorturl.at/eoxRS
Marconi Wireless Telegraph (Locomotive?) No.1
MB <MB@nospam.net> wrote:
I posted this on uk.railways, though might interest someone here.
Thunderbird is very flakey at the moment
Anyone know if any Marconi locomotived survive anywhere
shorturl.at/eoxRS
Marconi Wireless Telegraph (Locomotive?) No.1
Try asking the Railway and Canal Historical Society, they are full of information like that.
On 06/10/2022 14:57, Liz Tuddenham wrote:
MB <MB@nospam.net> wrote:
I posted this on uk.railways, though might interest someone here.
Thunderbird is very flakey at the moment
Anyone know if any Marconi locomotived survive anywhere
shorturl.at/eoxRS
Marconi Wireless Telegraph (Locomotive?) No.1
Try asking the Railway and Canal Historical Society, they are full of information like that.
Wikilies says it was built by Dick & Kerr in Glasgow, and it is not
listed among their surviving production.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick,_Kerr_%26_Co.#Locomotives
The line was torn up and all the rolling stock probably scrapped in
1922, when the Marconi works burned down.
I doubt if an industrial locomotive would be scrapped unless it was too
badly damaged or near the end of its life anyway. They were often sold
on to another owner, overhauled, re-named, re-numbered and put back into
use.
On 06/10/2022 17:47, Liz Tuddenham wrote:
I doubt if an industrial locomotive would be scrapped unless it was tooA lot of the others of that type were nearing their end of life, as
badly damaged or near the end of its life anyway. They were often sold
on to another owner, overhauled, re-named, re-numbered and put back into
use.
looking at the dates, it was one of the last of that type produced, in the early 1900s, but as you say, they did tend to have the last ounce of use worked out of them. As this was a narrow gauge line, though, the market
was more limited.
--
Tciao for Now!
John.
On 06/10/2022 11:22, Brian Gaff wrote:
Are these locomotives built by them or merely named after the product toThe sign writing on the one in the picture was just a way to let people
promote it?
Brian
know who owned it, and which one it was. It worked on a railway which was entirely on site, and never went outside the fence.
Basically, poorly stencilled white lettering on a plain black locomotive.
It is attached to a passenger carriage which looks as if it was made specially for a VIP visit by fastening a few seats and decoration to a
goods waggon.
--
Tciao for Now!
John.
Hmm, more of a curio than anything else then.
Brian
I was going to say, the line gauges being different for different rail systems was always an issue. Some were of course built to be modified for similar if not the same gauges.
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