steam loco on M6 / M42 today
steam loco on M6 / M42 today
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TJS10

Original Poster:

634 posts

224 months

Wednesday 6th October 2010
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The initial message was deleted from this topic on 27 January 2021 at 13:02

TheEnd

15,370 posts

211 months

Wednesday 6th October 2010
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There's a place just off the M42 where they repair / restore old trains, most likely it will be something to do with that.

If it was painted bright blue, then it's Thomas the Tank Engine going for a tidy up over the winter.

eharding

14,648 posts

307 months

Wednesday 6th October 2010
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TheEnd said:
If it was painted bright blue, then it's Thomas the Tank Engine going for a tidy up over the winter.
If he looked miserable, then Daisy the Diesel Rail-Car has dumped him...again. What a bh.

TJS10

Original Poster:

634 posts

224 months

Wednesday 6th October 2010
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Just remembered the name "Manston"

here it is http://www.nymr.co.uk/special-events/autumn-steam-...

Nickyboy

6,794 posts

257 months

Wednesday 6th October 2010
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Different loco but passed it on the A34 doing around 20mph

Edited by Nickyboy on Wednesday 6th October 23:33

W124Bob

1,852 posts

198 months

Thursday 7th October 2010
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Costs are astronomical to move by rail,so nearly always cheaper to move even a big loco by road, this particular operator has been running for years.A fully working loco steam or diesel cannot be moved under it's own power without various modern saftey features and Network Rail approval.

markmullen

15,877 posts

257 months

Thursday 7th October 2010
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I saw that being transported yesterday morning on the A64 near Malton, I presume it came out of the North Yorkshire Moors Railway.

Chrisgr31

14,212 posts

278 months

Thursday 7th October 2010
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They must of been pretty sure the grass on the site was dry to take all that weight!

Skodaku

1,805 posts

242 months

Thursday 7th October 2010
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Chrisgr31 said:
They must of been pretty sure the grass on the site was dry to take all that weight!
They must HAVE been pretty sure the grass on the site was dry to take all that weight!

Nickyboy

6,794 posts

257 months

Thursday 7th October 2010
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Manston weighs 128 tons so quite a load. The costs arent as high as you might think, an average diesel loco costs from £1250 one way. The problem lies in using the railways themselves more than the cost.