Today on the WGLR

pugwash said:
The more I see of these two locos the more I think of getting one, I always dimissed them as too american but with detail tweaks and painting (Melling? The loco has been Melled?) the better they look. Damn fine job :thumbup:

Mellahed....
 
Another cracking job Mel, Lyn looks very 1935, that is the period before the L&B finally closed but they couldn't be bothered to clean the loco's as they knew the end was nigh.
Would it not be possible to fit a cosmetic chopper coupling on the front as per prototype ?
 
yb281 said:
Thanks again guys. I did suggest that Lyn had been "Mel'd", but as a certain someone of my acquaintance pointed out, that was the name of a Deltic. Someone else suggested that it had been "mellowed". :bigsmile::bigsmile:

Melded?

She looks right at home mate. :bigsmile:
 
geleded?
 
garrymartin said:
Another cracking job Mel, Lyn looks very 1935, that is the period before the L&B finally closed but they couldn't be bothered to clean the loco's as they knew the end was nigh.
Would it not be possible to fit a cosmetic chopper coupling on the front as per prototype ?

Funny you should say that Garry, I tried this photo yesterday.

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Notice how much cleaner she looks in black and white. Goes to show how dirty they actually were. :bigsmile:

I will look at fitting a either a Brandbright or GRS coupling on the front for cosmetic reasons at some time in the future.
 
To the tune of Donovan:
''They call him Mel'oh Yell'oh''
Sorry mate, couldn't resist, you've probably heard it too often already :bigsmile:
 
Fantastic shots of Lyn Mel :thumbup:
Looks like she's been busy since she arrived looking at the grime and dust (Great Weathering )
 
yb281 said:
garrymartin said:
Another cracking job Mel, Lyn looks very 1935, that is the period before the L&B finally closed but they couldn't be bothered to clean the loco's as they knew the end was nigh.
Would it not be possible to fit a cosmetic chopper coupling on the front as per prototype ?

Funny you should say that Garry, I tried this photo yesterday.

images


Notice how much cleaner she looks in black and white. Goes to show how dirty they actually were. :bigsmile:

I will look at fitting a either a Brandbright or GRS coupling on the front for cosmetic reasons at some time in the future.

Smashing picture, but wrong hemisphere :rolf: west of Offa's Dyke is no place for a loco in Southern livery :wave::wave:
 
yb281 said:
Rhinochugger said:
Smashing picture, but wrong hemisphere :rolf: west of Offa's Dyke is no place for a loco in Southern livery :wave::wave:
Oh really?? :bigsmile::bigsmile::wave::wave:

images
Nah, replica - gauge is all wrong :rolf::rolf:

Carn't fool me, I know me Fairbourne's from me Barmouth's.

And did you know that the maker of Milliput lives in Barmouth?

Ternight's useless bit of information :bigsmile:
 
If you've read of my walk about in Bromsgrove yesterday, you may have seen that I managed to pick up an excellent office building made from Jigstones moulds. Good job I didn't take it with me on "the walk", it's made of concrete.
Today I've been posing a few things in the unfinished side of the interchange yard to see how it all fits before doing the ground work.

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Trains were running too and with Gizzy's comments on standardisation ringing in my ears ............. well, what the heck? :bigsmile::bigsmile::bigsmile::bigsmile:

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:thumbup:
 
Nice work Mel. The office block fits in well, lucky beggar.......:bigsmile:
 
And following discussions with the WGLR's technical / historical guru (AKA Neil) I can now furnish you with the full story of how Lyn came to appear on the railway (answer's Gareth's question too).

When the WGLR underwent their loco improvement scheme in the mid 20's, they not only purchased the Corpet No.4, but also TWO Baldwin 2-4-2's which became No's 5 and 6. By the mid 30's the Baldwins were due for a heavy overhaul, No.5 being first into the workshops. With the closing of the Lynton & Barnstable in 1935, the WGLR recruited one of their senior engineers, Mr Denzil Pemberthy. One of Denzil's first suggestions was that when No.6 went in for it's overhaul, it should be re-built to the same specification as Lyn. This would involve a new braking system, new safety valves, re-siting the whistle etc, etc. As she was due to re-enter service on the second anniversary of the closing of the L & B, the board decided that it would be a nice touch to outshop her in Southern Green as a tribute to her lost sister.

The re-build was a complete success and No.6 came back into service just in time for the dark clouds of war to spread over Europe. Traffic on the WGLR increased thanks to the need to supply No.41 MU at RAF Ffynon Garew and no time could be found to re-paint No.6 in unlined black. In fact, the prospect of a railway in mid Wales running a loco with "Southern" writ large on her flanks was seen as a positive move to confuse 5th columnists and invading storm troopers from September 1939 onwards.

This theory was to be proven in May 1941 when a Luftwaffe Dornier recconaisance aircraft crashed in the Wetton Valley following an unplanned meeting with a couple of Spitfires. Most of the crew were arrested within minutes, but the Engineer, O Lt Reiner Von Chugger managed to slip the net. On the run for two days, he stumbled across the WGLR just as No.6 passed by and immediately presumed that he was well South of Offa's Dyke. Mistaking Wetton for Weston, he tried to hire a boat and was immediately reported to the local Home Guard. Re-united with the rest of his crew, he spent the rest of the war in a Canadian POW camp where, in search of a hobby to pass the long days, Von Chugger became a world expert in basket weaving. :bigsmile::bigsmile:
 
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