Herb Garden
Western Thunderer
Right! 2025 let's get cracking!
Some of you who have followed this thread for a while may remember in post 20 3 part built locomotives appeared next to #74 in it's early stages. Before anyone gets exited no none have them have progressed in any way shape or form but the two No 1 class locomotives have been joined by a third.
After the decapod the number 1 class locomotives are the best known of the GER locomotives that didn't make it into LNER service. Designed by Sam Johnson in the late 1860s and built by Sharp Stewart and company which is how they got their nickname 'Little Sharpies'.
I however tend to believe that this nickname only came about in later years when the number 1s where outsized by T19s, D27s and T26s. When compared, as above with an original Sharpie 2-2-2 they are huge. I appreciate this model is a later Holden rebuild with the same boiler as the E22 (J65).
I was very happy to give this beautiful model a good home. And given how high quality the construction I'm wondering apart from essential numbering and weathering I'm going to leave the body well alone. It's a real tribute to the skill of the builder.
The chassis however by the looks of it was never quite completed so a bit of work is needed if this little beauty was to run. A tight spot in the motion and the fact the front compensation beams were seized led me to strip the chassis down and re true it up in my reliable chassis jig.
Once rewheeled with EM wheels, It originally had P4 wheels but the frames were luckily EM, it rolls lovely. I've been able to scrounge from the bits box a appropriate motor and worm gear to match the worm wheel that was allready part of the chassis
I've added a drawbar to the tender and adjusted the chassis so that the tender weight rests on the back of the loco. Like @James Spooner's 4MT but with a lot less valve gear
I've also added the brakes which are a tight fit on this class and the next steps are the pickups and hopefully then we should have a running loco.
Like the Y14 she is way too mainline a loco for Skeetsmere and also won't cope with the dodgy track on the mill board but hopefully once that is delt with she can pay a visit to the tiny hamlet whilst the greater layout is under construction
Some of you who have followed this thread for a while may remember in post 20 3 part built locomotives appeared next to #74 in it's early stages. Before anyone gets exited no none have them have progressed in any way shape or form but the two No 1 class locomotives have been joined by a third.
After the decapod the number 1 class locomotives are the best known of the GER locomotives that didn't make it into LNER service. Designed by Sam Johnson in the late 1860s and built by Sharp Stewart and company which is how they got their nickname 'Little Sharpies'.
I however tend to believe that this nickname only came about in later years when the number 1s where outsized by T19s, D27s and T26s. When compared, as above with an original Sharpie 2-2-2 they are huge. I appreciate this model is a later Holden rebuild with the same boiler as the E22 (J65).
I was very happy to give this beautiful model a good home. And given how high quality the construction I'm wondering apart from essential numbering and weathering I'm going to leave the body well alone. It's a real tribute to the skill of the builder.
The chassis however by the looks of it was never quite completed so a bit of work is needed if this little beauty was to run. A tight spot in the motion and the fact the front compensation beams were seized led me to strip the chassis down and re true it up in my reliable chassis jig.
Once rewheeled with EM wheels, It originally had P4 wheels but the frames were luckily EM, it rolls lovely. I've been able to scrounge from the bits box a appropriate motor and worm gear to match the worm wheel that was allready part of the chassis
I've added a drawbar to the tender and adjusted the chassis so that the tender weight rests on the back of the loco. Like @James Spooner's 4MT but with a lot less valve gear
I've also added the brakes which are a tight fit on this class and the next steps are the pickups and hopefully then we should have a running loco.
Like the Y14 she is way too mainline a loco for Skeetsmere and also won't cope with the dodgy track on the mill board but hopefully once that is delt with she can pay a visit to the tiny hamlet whilst the greater layout is under construction
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