1929 minutes-Diesel Freight Locomotive
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1929 minutes-Diesel Freight Locomotive
On the 26th July 1928 the board authorised the purchase/construction of a Diesel freight locomotive. On the 3rd of January the estimated cost was raised by £429
Part A- To what price.
Part B- Was the loco ever built and if so which one was it? (It's price rules out a shunting engine)
421
Part A- To what price.
Part B- Was the loco ever built and if so which one was it? (It's price rules out a shunting engine)
421
Re: 1929 minutes-Diesel Freight Locomotive
Jingling Geordie wrote:On the 26th July 1928 the board authorised the purchase/construction of a Diesel freight locomotive. On the 3rd of January the estimated cost was raised by £429
Part A- To what price.
Part B- Was the loco ever built and if so which one was it? (It's price rules out a shunting engine)
421
I think there was something about this in RCTS 'Green' Part 10A.
The proposed loco was not built. The purchase that was approved was only for a diesel power unit, not a complete locomotive. The LNER intended to convert one of the NER Shildon - Newport electric locos into a diesel-electric, as the traffic on that line had decreased and the electrics were redundant.
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Re: 1929 minutes-Diesel Freight Locomotive
Watto Flamingo, the exact wording is Diesel Electric Freight Locomotive and the final estimated price was £12k. You can see why I ruled out a shunter. I'll have to go through the minutes more thoroughly to see if they make any further reference to this loco.
Thanks for your time and info,
421
Thanks for your time and info,
421
Re: 1929 minutes-Diesel Freight Locomotive
I think the original quote might have been for a complete locomotive and have it built by contractors, but on second thoughts the LNER may have decided it would be cheaper to build i£ themselves. 12K does sound a lot for just a diesel engine in 1930. To do the conversion they would also have needed to buy a generator and those don't come cheap either. Plus other bits and pieces no doubt.
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Re: 1929 minutes-Diesel Freight Locomotive
The only loco that seems to fit the time frame was the Kitson-Still and 12k seems about right for the cost of these.Flamingo wrote:I think the original quote might have been for a complete locomotive and have it built by contractors, but on second thoughts the LNER may have decided it would be cheaper to build i£ themselves. 12K does sound a lot for just a diesel engine in 1930. To do the conversion they would also have needed to buy a generator and those don't come cheap either. Plus other bits and pieces no doubt.
Bill Bedford
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Blog: http://www.mousa.biz/info
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Re: 1929 minutes-Diesel Freight Locomotive
Watto Bill,
Could you tell us a bit more about the Kitson/Still loco?
421
Could you tell us a bit more about the Kitson/Still loco?
421
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Re: 1929 minutes-Diesel Freight Locomotive
Watto JWA,
As the minutes only authoriied the expenditure and don't describe it as a Diesel/Electric like they had when mentioning rail coaches. I think this could be the engine.
Thank you all for your time and assistance,
421
As the minutes only authoriied the expenditure and don't describe it as a Diesel/Electric like they had when mentioning rail coaches. I think this could be the engine.
Thank you all for your time and assistance,
421
Re: 1929 minutes-Diesel Freight Locomotive
Just read the article indicated in the thread re the loco.jwealleans wrote:http://www.lner.info/locos/IC/kitson.shtml
The following sentance struck me.
Later in 1928, it successfully hauled a 400 ton goods train from Darlington to Starbeck and back. It managed to restart this load on a 1 in 33 gradient from a signal stop.
Where was this 1 in 33 gradient?