Coach advise sought - transition period, thompson, stanier, mk1's, others ?

Started by Dalek, January 07, 2021, 01:31:18 PM

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Dalek

Hi Guys

Looking for some advise or point me to some please regarding what coaches ran with what ?
I want to model the transition period between steam and diesel, actually i want to pick up some thompson coaches while these are still available and wondered if a full rake would be prototypical or would these more often than not be mixed in with other types, stanier, mk1's, something else ?

I did think of throwing in an "old" teak livery one weathered in a rake of Crimson & Cream ones, not sure if that would be suitable though ? Also would like some variety with the odd maroon etc ?

Mainly like diesels but planing some steam locos as well, quite fancy the 8f with sound so i guess i need to know if that fits in with the above as well ?

Was also thinking the rake should be, brake, 3rd class x1 or 2, comp, first, comp, 3rd, brake or something like that ? Would be better with a brake on both ends ?

Cheers  :D
Craig

Newportnobby

I'll defer to our more expert advisers such as @Karhedron but, to a certain extent, almost anything could be seen!

Paul J

By the 1960s, pre-Nationalisation coaches could end up anywhere. Looking at footage, you might find ex-LNER coaches on the WCML for example. There were massive culls of pre-Mk1 coaches in the first half of the decade though.

It really depends on the exact year. From looking at photos and film, crimson and cream coaches were quite rare by 1960. In 1956 they would be the norm on express stock (except perhaps the Southern Region). Any teak coaches surviving into the 1950s would be pretty grotty and I expect would be painted by the time diesels became commonplace.

Edit. Thompson coaches were metal bodied, at least some originally with teak effect paint (proto Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen at the LNER paint shop maybe)! I would expect all to be plain brown by nationalisation.


Portpatrick

A Brake at each end?  By the late 60s early 70s most trains at least to Bristol and Cardiff only seemed to have them at one end only, usually a BG. I used to watch them go through Reading from Western Tower windows!  And the rakes were not remarshalled for each single journey.   But at the back of my mind is a feeling that somewhere I read that the guard must be no more than "x" coach lengths from the rear of the train.  This was from memory a requirement up to at least early BR days.  And no I cannot remember what "x" was.  I think it was either 2 or 3.  Which might allow, say , for a back portion separating from the rest of the train.  And if it was a rule it applied to all portions of such a train, such as the Lakes Express, Atlantic Coast Express etc.  I am sure there is someone here with more specific expertise?

Dalek

Quote from: Portpatrick on January 07, 2021, 03:40:35 PM
A Brake at each end?  By the late 60s early 70s most trains at least to Bristol and Cardiff only seemed to have them at one end only, usually a BG.

Thanks, what's a BG ? Just googled and Brake Gangwayed came up, would the society full brake be the same thing, i'm not sure as i thought there wasn't many of them built ? Just found a GF mk1 version just now though  :confused1:

Confusing this, would there be lists of coaches used in a train formation that i can look up anywhere, anybody know ?

:confusedsign:

Craig

Paul J

Hi

To give a definitive answer, you really need to give a more specific idea of the region and time period. Coaches changed as rapidly as locomotives in the transitional period, and what was normal on the Southern would not be on the WCML.

Southern Region practice was different to the other regions as they had fixed rake portions which would be put together into rakes (with "loose" coaches for strengthening etc).

Newportnobby

Quote from: Dalek on January 07, 2021, 04:19:01 PM
Quote from: Portpatrick on January 07, 2021, 03:40:35 PM
A Brake at each end?  By the late 60s early 70s most trains at least to Bristol and Cardiff only seemed to have them at one end only, usually a BG.

Thanks, what's a BG ?

Craig - this site will help you check out who made what and when. For example, the 2nd item down are BGs and you can also check Farish and Dapol items.....

http://ngauge.org.uk/bac_pass_non.php

PennineWagons

The Farish Thompson brake 3rd in LNER faux teak is actually in immediate post-nationalisation condition, with an E prefix to the number and no LNER lettering. So it would be entirely prototypical to run this with the Thompsons in BR crimson & cream, which would allow you to have a five-coach rake with a brake 3rd at both ends, although this would really only have been seen in the first few years after the nationalisation in 1948. By the time of the transition era in the late 50s / early 60s all coach rakes would have been largely maroon with just the very occasional c&c here and there, and the teak ones would have long gone. And sadly the Thompsons haven't been released in maroon yet. But no matter, just apply Rule 1 and run anything you like.
PW

martyn

As per Penninewagons, few Thompsons were built in faux teak; the main build was after C+C livery was standard.

Mk1s, ex LNER and SR coaches had the same type of gangways (Pullman) , and could be marshalled alongside each other easily. LMS and GWR coaches used a different gangway (British Standard); they could be marshalled alongside each other, but needed an adaptor between LNER/SR/BR mk1s. Thus a mixed rake could be seen but usually with BS gangways at one end, Pullman at the other.

I can't find the reference, but I think the last Thompson in teak was repainted in 1956-but this would have been a rarity even then.

There are a number of threads concerning coach formations already written on the Forum;

eg

https://www.ngaugeforum.co.uk/SMFN/index.php?topic=52560.msg687889#msg687889

https://www.ngaugeforum.co.uk/SMFN/index.php?topic=29863.0

The second one started as GWR, but spread to coaching rakes in general/

Martyn


Dalek

Thanks Guys, one thing i can't figure out is what a TK is ? Third Coridor or Trailer Coridor or Tourist Coridor (whatever that is ???)

Craig

Paul J

Quote from: Dalek on January 07, 2021, 10:24:53 PM
Thanks Guys, one thing i can't figure out is what a TK is ? Third Coridor or Trailer Coridor or Tourist Coridor (whatever that is ???)

Craig

A TK would be a third corridor (a second corridor SK after 1956). The "tourist" coaches were/are open coaches with 2+2 seating. e.g TSO, tourist second open. The letter C is used for composite which is why K is used for corridor.

Paul J

You mention Stanier coaches. Rakes of maroon Stanier coaches would be suitable for WCML trains up to the mid 1960s. Also Maroon Mark 1s. Thompson and Gresley coaches turned up in these rakes (the odd one). A handful of later LMS-derived "porthole" coaches received blue/grey livery but were gone by the end of the 1960s.

A lot of crack WCML expresses were class 40 hauled even in the late 1950s/early 1960s, with Maroon mk1s. Bear in mind that they were ignored by most photographers and film makers, so you won't get a full picture from the various DVDs out there. I remember looking through my father's spotting books from around that time at Crewe. There were loads of class 40s (D numbered of course) listed.

Paul J

Dalek

If you are interested in the Southern fixed sets, the details can be found in a spreadsheet at this address:

https://sremg.org.uk/coach/sets.html

This tells you the coach type, formation, routes and time periods as far as known. It even has the coach numbers!

martyn

The Great Eastern Railway Society sells-online-and for a very modest price, the working diagrams for East Anglia, giving the coach formation of every passenger train.

These are available for a number of years from mid 50s to mid 80s.

Martyn

Dancess

There is a book Passenger Train Formations 1923 - 1983 LMS - LMRegion by Clive S Carter that lists a fair number of formations.
S&D lives on - sort of!

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