The British Railways ‘Pilot Scheme’ orders of 1955 included ten
BTH and ten NBL Type 1 locomotives, these being introduced during
1957-61 for use in East London, and on the Great Eastern and London,
Tilbury & Southend lines. The BTH fleet subsequently expanded to
forty-four, as a consequence of their light axle-loading and the
availability of spare manufacturing capacity which BR chose to exploit
in their quest to eliminate steam traction. Further construction of
these two classes ceased after the fifty-four units, with preference
being given to the highly reliable English Electric product which by
mid-1962 had proliferated to 128 examples. The NBL fleet survived
until 1968, being withdrawn after ten years of indifferent
performance. The BTH locomotives followed by 1971, although four
lingered on as carriage pre-heating units. Dramatic reductions in
goods traffic during the 1960s/70s particularly impacted local trip
and transfer freight duties, the ‘bread and butter’ work for the
Type 1s, and it was inevitable that the less successful classes were
retired from traffic first. This book looks at the short history of
these two classes, making extensive use of archive sources, combined
with the primary observations of numerous enthusiasts. Previously
unpublished information, covering the introduction, appearance design
and performance issues of the locomotives, form a central focus, and,
allocations, works histories, storage and disposals, liveries and
detail differences are covered in the same level of detail as previous
volumes in the ‘Locomotive Portfolio” series.
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Development, Design and Demise
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781526761972
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Vendor
Pen & Sword Transport
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter