An ice cold start on Monday, and although the painting job was under cover outside the station building, there was a nasty little wind that gave us all a chill factor. We stopped every 30 minutes to warm up our cold and stiff fingers in the mess hut.
During the day we gave this pile of timber for the footbridge sides a first coat of primer. It's already been knotted, and had three coats of preservative put on it too.
Soon Neal will start using it for the sides of the steps. He will start on the P1 side, at the bottom, and work up.
Neal once again was a lonely figure on the P2 side, where he slowly worked his way down the steps, fixing on the treads, after drilling in new holes on each timber and reaming out the top so that the bolts can be countersunk. Slow and steady, he was on step No. 10 out of the 28 on this side here.
As the sun went down half way through the afternoon we were so cold that thoughts turned to some warmer activity, so it was decided to move the remaining wooden treads, mostly spares, from a pile on the grass to inside the P2 tower. That will look neater, and there is a limited amount of shelter there too.
The Broadway gang also did physical stuff to keep warm, such as digging soil along the drive, sweeping leaves along the platform, and this team here, which was sweeping up the needles along the track through the platforms.
The Broadway gang also assembled the bench ends we bought at auction a while back. The whole kit is there now, so with the help of the stainless steel nuts and bolts the bench was put together. Now it just needs a couple more coats of paint to complete the job.
These bench ends are originals, and a bit scarce, as they have pierced backs, as you can see in the pictures. All the others we have are solid in that area.
Standard 76077 AGM
Saturday saw the first ever AGM of the new company that will see through the completion of this attractive and most useful engine for our railway. We met in Toddington village hall.
This is the company board, the people who are going to see the restoration through, with our support. They're all GWSR volunteers.
Andy Meredith, our Engineering Director (centre), gave an overview of where we are with the locomotive at this stage. The loco is 95% complete (not counting the missing tender) and in relatively good condition too, as of course it was one of the newer locos at Barry. The condition of the boiler is very good, although as all second hand boilers it will need work doing to it. The loco will initially be restored without the tender, and we hope to run with a borrowed one until further funds have been raised to pay for a new one. We already have many parts for a new tender frame.
The principal items missing are the reverser box and screw. If you know of one.... get in touch! We had a newly manufactured smokebox door at Toddington, but after hunting round the yard we were unable to find it, so we will need a sponsor for a replacement. If anyone knows where it is then we would love to know.
The frames were shotblasted at Toddington and have been sent to Loughborough to Locomotive Maintenance Services (LMS), who just outshopped Pitchford Hall. As a result, our frames have now been taken indoors for the restoration to start. We have enough shareholder funds for the first year's work. This will include the manufacture of a new front bufferbeam (damaged in a collision), a new dragbox, re-wheeling and a cab. By the end of next year then the frames should see the smokebox at one end, and the cab at the other, with a big gap in the middle. This is for the boiler, and for that we need further financial support.
Standard 76077 behind the Toddington goods shed (where the new mess room is now being built) shortly after arrival on the GWSR. |
Now we need your help. Many, but not yet enough, people have purchased a block of 500 £1 shares, and this will see us through the first year. Please consider helping us, we can't do it on our own. If you can afford a block of £500 shares that would be great. What would really help is to have an income stream of say £25 a month. We can plan with that, know what we can afford. If you set up a standing order and fill in the share application form, you will slowly accumulate a growing block of shares, converted to an annual certificate, but with a modest monthly outlay.
Share application form
Standing order form
These two links will take you to the share application form. On the form you can opt for either a single purchase of shares (minimum £500) or an ongoing purchase of shares in £25 increments. Yours truly purchased his block in the summer, and now feels he can afford £25 per month, so signed up for the standing order. Could you do that too? Let's get this loco back up and running, it's ideal for the GWSR and we are all GWSR members - it's going to be our engine.
Wednesday Usketeers
It was a bright morning, but also ice cold. Paul broke out the seasonal mince pies, and you can gauge the temperature in the mess coach by the steam coming off the tea. It's a seasonal picture for you.
You had to be quick to get a mince pie though.
8 of us were off on a course, one of many we now have to undergo.
Others sorted out a delivery of lifter fishplates with the Telehandler, while more went to Hayles to start ballast boxing south towards the team that is working north from Chicken curve. They should meet half way down the Defford straight then.
It was difficult getting into Winchcombe yard today, not only because of the increasingly heavy traffic. An Alleleys low loader was waiting at the top of station drive, unable to enter because of residents' cars parked at the top of the road. This despite the double yellow lines.
The purpose of the low loader was to pick up Foremarke Hall for a trip to Tyseley for a repair job. This is cheaper than having the Tyseley team come down to us over several days.
The unloading road at Toddington is currently blocked with the scaffolding for the mess room extension, so the pick up today was from Winchcombe.
Here the loco is being brought in by the class 73.
Clearly some thought had gone into this manoeuvre, because by propelling the loco down from Toddington, the class 73 was in the right position to push it up against the trailer.
Here they are just passing the C&W extension, with the trailer parked just out of sight to the left.
After a reversal by the stop block, the class 73 was once again able to propel the loco past the pit and up to the end of the trailer.
There the class 73 was unhooked (just as well....) and from that point on the loco was slowly winched on board with a cable.
A careful eye was kept on the point where the loco's wheels left the rails.
With the two changes of angle from track to slope and then the top of the trailer, the frames of the locos are subjected to some stress, as you can see in this picture. However, all went well.
While Foremarke Hall was being secured to the trailer, the Usk team took to splitting engineering blues int two, so that we could build the wall with an English bond (or apparently so, as the skin is actually only one brick deep.)
Eventually we had a team of three doing this (Jules is at the rear, collecting a further supply) while Paul gave us a brief 'acte de presence'. In fact Paul was away for most of the morning on an urgent shopping trip, and was unable to contribute to the build today, leaving only instructions to divide a lot of bricks in two.
We have all sorts of bricks from many different sources, and here is one with a clear source cast into the inside. It's a fairly local company. If you have a brick with an inscription and want to know what it means, you can look it up here:
http://www.brocross.com/Bricks/Penmorfa/Pages/england15a.htm
It's a jolly useful reference site. Scroll down, and it says this about our brick:
Mobberley & Perry was at The Hayes, Lye, Stourbridge, West Midlands. The brickworks for building bricks was on the main Stourbridge Road in Wollacote and the Firebrick works was in Hayes Lane. George Attwood worked the brickworks untill 1840, then Fisher Bros. worked the brickworks until Mobberley & Perry took over the brickworks, the works closed in the late 1960's.
Of course we had our own brickworks at Greet, just down the lane from the station in fact. That pit produced the clay for some of the archway specials we found at Broadway - they had a 'W' cast into them. The GWR didn't go far for these to build our line then.
One construction job we could do today was to extend the foundations of the brick skin a few feet round the back of the platform end. This is to avoid showing concrete blocks exposed by the slope of the terrain at the back.
Neil is seen digging here.
In a spare moment, Jules decided to sweep the millions of leaves off our foundations. Whose Idea was it to build right underneath an oak tree anyway?
Concrete in at the end of the day. |
Santa, stop here to let our happy children off. |
Once Foremarke Hall was safely secured to the trailer, the tractor turned around, coupled back on to the end from which the loco was loaded, and then slowly reversed back out of the yard.
What a blessing it is that we now have a concrete roadway for the larger part of it.
Here is Foremarke Hall being propelled past the signal box. The man in orange is in charge of steering the rear wheels of the trailer, with a remote control box in his hand.
A tricky zig-zag was required at the yard gate, in view of cars parked just outside.
But that was not a big thing, again with the rear wheel steering the combination skipped neatly around the obstruction.
As with the approach by the lorry first thing, the throat of the yard was the problem area again. To straighten out the 'S' bend by the gate post (this used to divide the goods yard from the passenger forecourt, and had a lamp post beside it) the second gate was opened, something we don't see that often.
Another car was parked awkwardly in the road, this time outside the B&B.
Double yellow lines are apparent here too, but to no avail.
The last photograph, a little unsharp due to the digital zoom, shows the loco being taken across the railway bridge on the Greet road.
She'll be back again soon.
What is it about Audi drivers? Vorsprung durch tecknik= "Me first, now. Don't care about anyone else"
ReplyDeleteExcellent blog, and great to see Broadway footbridge progressing so well in the cold and frosty weather.
ReplyDeleteThe sunshine looks good at Winchcombe, but I know that the sun is very watery at this time of year.
Hope Foremarke Hall returns soon. Get well soon!
regards, Paul.
Another comprehensive & detailed blog, thank you Joe.
ReplyDeleteI hear what you say about the driver, but where are the Police when you want them? Any vehicle parked on a road (the highway) is causing an obstruction, and certainly so when parked on D/yellows. May roads in the B'ham area now have double Red lines - "absolutely & absolutely" no parking. No point in any of them if they are not going to be enforced!
Powli
Is it possible to get them towed away if they are parked in prohibited areas?
ReplyDeleteNoel
Difficult - the station approach is a private road. The double yellow lines, as I understand it, have no legal meaning on a private road.
DeleteAh. Who owns the drive then? Does the person parking on it have a right-of-way over it? (Trying to remember how RoW's work!)
DeleteNoel
Jo
ReplyDeleteMany thanks for the report on the 76077 AGM. I have subscribed for a share over 20 months.
Perhaps you could encourage the directors to add a regular monthly news update to the 76077 website on progress? I know, I know, you have enough on your plate, but someone might step up.
I'm constantly impressed by your endeavours and your ability to blog them so quickly.
Regards
Eric
PS I used to drive an Audi 80. I liked it.
I note that you mention a new buffer beam is required for 76077. If my memory is correct I helped mark out and drill a new beam in the early 1990s. What happened to that one ??
ReplyDeleteI understand that we do have the buffer plank that you refer to but it was never finished or riveted to the loco. The plan is to use that buffer plank together with new corner gussets and dragbox material, so your input is definitely much appreciated.
DeleteJoe (and Eric).
ReplyDeleteThese responses are very interesting and not just informative but "engaging". I think Eric makes an important point (which no doubt the GWR directors are well aware of).
I worked as Finance Director for Birmingham Diocese for the last 20 years of my career; this included (as a side issue) controlling Income and Payments in respect of many parish "Community Projects" most of which relied upon income grants from various charities. What i heard (frequently) from the donor Charity Trustees was "keep us informed - regularly; we have plenty of Endowment income but too many recipients fail to keep us informed and loose their grant, or have the reduced, because they fail to keep their donors informed.
Eric is not wrong.
E G: I support three loco support groups (in addition to GWSR) and i have just written to one and asked for their most recent accounts before I agree to increasing my monthly S/O.