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A week ago my wife and I visited the Didcot Railway Centre in Didcot, England.  What a great place!

 

It had tons of interesting things to see but the one that blew me away Great Western Railway railmotor.  I knew these existed but had never seen one in person and certainly hadn't expected to see and ride on one that operates.  The two videos below show it operating. As you can see it consists of two cars.  One contains the steam boiler and engine bogie.  The other car is a trailer but the trailer can operate the engine throttle, reverse linkage, and vacuum brakes.  The reverse linkage and throttle are controlled through control rods that run underneath the cars.

 

Both videos show the railmotor leaving the dual track covered passenger station.  If you look closely you will notice a dual-gauge track on one side.  This station allowed passengers to transfer between standard gauge and GWR broad gauge which is 7 feet!!! 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Interior of railmotor: 

 

 

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 Operator end of trailer:  

 

 

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 Below is the broad gauge turntable they had on display: 

 

 

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Driver pairs near the entrance:

 

 

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 Coaling tower:

 

 

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Diesel:

 

 

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Another cool diesel:

 

 

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Damaged wheelset from 4-6-0 #6023 "King Edward II":

 

 

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A bunch of smokestacks "chimneys":

 

 

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Cool sign: 

 

 

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Serious derail setup:

 

 

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Water crane: 

 

 

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Semaphore:

 

 

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Transfer table:

 

 

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Milepost?:

 

 

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Signal of some type.  Somebody please explain!

 

 

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22" diamater pipe from Brunel's 1848 atmospheric vacuum traction railway! Piston in pipe attached to railway carriage through slot in top of pipe:

 

 

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Dual gauge switch, standard and broad gauge: 

 

 

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Beautiful 2-6-2 #4144:

 

 

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More neat signs:

 

 

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Attachments

Images (24)
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Last edited by John Meixel
Original Post

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Originally Posted by John Meixel:

A week ago my wife and I visited the Didcot Railway Centre in Didcot, England.  What a great place!

------------------------

John,

Happy you enjoyed your visit. Here's some info on the signals: check Frome #8 on this page

http://www.gwsbristol.org/hsignals.html

Signal of some type.  Somebody please explain!

 

 

_MG_1899

 

 

 Seven foot (and 1/4" - why?) gauge: imagine if Brunel's standards had become world-wide! Here's some model pics: http://www.broadgauge.org.uk/shows/exhib_2014.html

FANTASTIC! Where the heck is Didcot...near what English city?   I never heard of it and I have visited a little of the Welsh narrow gauge.  I could only open interior photos of the steam coach, I assume you also got exterior shots?  I have a steam coach photo in front of me, of a photo in the station at Shelburne, Vt., of an American steam coach, which was not the only one, that I am accumulating parts for to kitbash a model.

Originally Posted by p51:
Originally Posted by John Meixel:

Interesting story there, those were torched after the loco derailed at the famed Woodham Brothers' scrap yard

This engine lives today, though I have no idea where they got the replacement drivers from: http://www.6023.co.uk/

That's a great scrapyard shot. At the end of British steam, all sorts of slogans were chalked and painted on the last-run locomotives, like "The End is Nigh" and "Goodbye Cruel World", "One Owner, Cheap.", etc.

One of these King steamers did an American tour on the B&O back in 1927, so there's an excuse to run one on a USA layout.

http://www.justliketherealthin...e-loco-kit-p-92.html

Thanks!  I have been to Oxford, but certainly missed Didcot.  From a distance you might not notice this was a steam coach, but think it was a British gas electric or some such critter.  It is similar to Alco, Baldwin, and Unit-Stanley steam coaches.  Some others of the steam coaches were big monsters like the Kobusch-Wagenthals and the Railway Locomotor. For some reason, steam coaches were much more successful in England and Europe than they were in North America.  U.S. versions earlier than these, back into the mid 1800's, had had horizontal steam boilers protruding out the front like inspection engines.  Alco and Baldwin examples had vertical boilers with a stack through the front of the roof, like a gas electric.  Steam motor vehicles, with at least

two versions of model trucks (lorries)  available as models from Matchbox, apparently  ran on British Roads long after having vanished from ours.

Didcot is a small place so even if you visit Oxford you can easily miss it. The museum is based in an original GWR engine shed complex at an important railway junction and even though if is a little "staged" in appearance now on a cold November day with the engines steraming in the shed It still has that "real steam" feel. I am lucky its 40 minutes from me!

 

Someone asked about the cut driving wheels - simple solution ....new ones were cast

 

Over here we seem to just take on jobs like that without to much worry provided the funding is in place. In the UK there are many "new build" engines under construction although in the States you may have only heard about Tornado - but there are plenty more  - some almost complete. So never say never about your T1

 

CHEERS MIKE

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