Building the LNER Class U1 Garratt locomotive - Twice!
From Gazette Volume 19 No. 11 May 2016
By Nick Dunhill
Pictures of the finished models by Tony
Wright, courtesy of Model Railway
Journal, construction pictures by author
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Gladiator | Dave and Trisha Hill |
10 Merion Grove | 01332510346 |
Littleover | |
DERBY | Email: railwaycitytrains@btinternet.com |
Derbyshire | Web: http://www.gladiatormodels.com |
DE23 4YR |
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The LNER Garratt locomotive was
built in 1925 by Beyer-Peacock & Co
Ltd at their works in Gorton,
Manchester. It was built as a banking engine
for use on the steeply graded Worsborough
Bank on the former Great Central Railway
goods only line between Wath and
Penistone. The Garratt was used on the
steepest part of this bank from Wentworth
Junction near Dodworth to West Silkstone
junction near Oxspring. A gradient of 1 in
40 for nearly 2 miles required a great deal of
motive power. A train, usually comprising
a locomotive with 60 loaded coal wagons
and a banker, would arrive at Wentworth
Junction from the Wath direction. The
Garratt would buffer up to the rear and the
whole ensemble would ascend. At West
Silkstone Junction, the Garratt would drop
away, reverse over the crossover and
descend to Wentworth Junction ready for its
next duty.
It was the longest, heaviest and most
powerful loco to run in the UK.
Unsurprising, as it was effectively two O2
2-8-0 three cylinder engines steamed by an
enormous boiler of seven feet diameter.
Indeed it replaced the work of (typically)
two class O4 2-8-0 bankers, and sympathy
must be felt for the firemen who worked on
this engine with its voracious appetite for
coal.
The engine worked 18 turns a day, 6 days
a week (Sundays were spent at
Mexborough MPD for a boiler wash out) for
24 years (less trips to Doncaster for repairs
and routine overhauls). There was an
inspection pit and water supply for the
Garratt and the other banking locomotives
at Wentworth Junction and coal was
obtained from a special bunker installed at
the nearby Wentworth Silkstone Colliery. It
was however rendered surplus to
requirements in 1949 by the onset of the
Manchester, Sheffield and Wath
electrification scheme.
In order to justify the commissioning of a
new boiler alternative work was sought on
the Lickey incline near Bromsgrove. The
engine was not received well by the crews
in that area of the West Midlands, especially
the firemen (obviously nesh chaps not made
of Yorkshire grit). Despite attempts to
appease the engine men with electric
lighting, oil firing and soft buttoned fabrics,
the engine was returned to Gorton unloved
in October 1955. The locomotive was
condemned in December 1955 and cut up at
Doncaster Works in 1956.
The Model
I had always fancied building a model of
this behemoth of a loco, and was pleased to
accept a commission to build one from a
Gladiator kit. Another friend heard of the
intended build and asked if I could make
him one at the same time (the second one
should only take half as long as the first!).
Would I live to regret this?
One model would represent the engine as
running in the last months at Worsborough
in BR days, and the other shortly after
entering traffic in LNER days. The
appearance of the engine, aside from
liveries, differed little between these periods
so the builds would be easily able to
progress in tandem.
Both models would feature Alan Harris’
excellent wheels, expertly turned by Steve
Ross, and have fully compensated chassis.
Working Gresley-derived motion was
specified, together with inside cylinder
detail (slidebars, crossheads, connecting
rods and cranks).
I was put in touch with Peter Dobson of
Newbold Models, who had designed the
etchings for Geoff Stratford at Gladiator
Models, and he sent me a GA drawing and
lots of pictures of the engine under
construction at Beyers in the 1920s. All the
necessary parts were purchased and work
began.
I largely follow the instructions whilst
constructing models, however I do like to
add all the fine details as I am going along
whilst they are fresh in my mind, and to
avoid any backtracking.
Motorising the model
For a model of this size one would have
thought that the location of the motor(s)
would be easy. In fact it proved to be a bit
of a headache as the frames of the Garratt
are so open that a lot of the chassis ‘between
the frames’ detail is in view. The motors
could not be located on the outer or second
outer axles because of the inside
cylinder/con rod/crank assembly. The 3rd
outer axles were on view below the pivot
pins, which only left the inner axles. The
one below the smokebox is also on view, but
the one below the cab is hidden, so I
decided to locate the gearbox there with the
motor hidden in the firebox/ashpan
assembly. The front unit would have to be
motor less and free-wheel.
Some thought was now given to the kind of work the model would do. As the prototype was only a banking engine and only ever pulled a handful of trains, we agreed that the motor only needed to be strong enough to propel the model itself. An exchange of emails and several telephone calls to Brian Clapperton of ABC resulted in a suitable design for a gearbox and motor. A mock up of the assembly was constructed in card to check that the finished job would fit the models and two were ordered. I was assured that the chosen motor would be sufficient for the models to pull 60 wagons.
Motors and gearboxes
Card mock up for motor and gearbox
Gearbox installed
Chassis construction (4 off) The chassis is quite an easy construction, but since there are two on each model this would be the part of the job with the most number of repeat items. The chassis frames (8 in total) were removed from the fret and etching cusps filed away. I used Martin Finney hornblocks and guides for their high level of detail, so 32 were constructed. It is important that hornblocks are a nice sliding fit in the cheeks of the guides, with no lateral movement, if a model is to run smoothly. These hornblocks were not quite square so I marked each bottom face was identified a centre punch mark and used colour coding to ensure each block was returned to the correct guide.
Holes of the appropriate size were cut in
the chassis frames to accept Motors and gearboxes the hornguides,
and the 4 chassis were assembled. The kit
provided chassis etches with all the
frame spacers in their prototypical positions which greatly
aided their construction.
Four pairs of coupling rods were made, each jointed with Laurie Griffin’s pins and castellated nuts. These were used in conjunction with my trusty dummy axles (invaluable tools for any modeller) to locate and attach the axle box assemblies in the correct position The Alan Harris wheelsets provided had to be quartered by eye and secured with Loctite. I am quite happy to use this method of wheel assembly but it does mean that the hornblocks and any shims to control end float have to be positioned before the adhesive is applied. It does also mean that all the springs, brake rigging and sanding gear has to be detachable. Painting wheelsets after assembly is a little more challenging too, but least only one colour was needed! Four nice free running chassis were the reward for my patience, and I moved on to the chassis detail.
Frame and brakegear
One of four rolling chassis
Valve gear and cylinder
The laminated springs and hangers
supplied in the kit were a little
two dimensional, so I made my own
pattern and 32 of them were cast in whitemetal.
Syphons for the axlebox lubrication
system were cast at the same time from
another pattern I made. All these details
would be added after painting. The pony
trucks were assembled and attention turned
to the brake system.
The kit includes very usable brake blocks and hangers and lozenge shaped stretchers, but nothing to represent the operating mechanism. A considerable amount of time and effort was spent scratchbuilding the brake rigging, from brake cylinders to pull shackles on the brake stretchers. Again I was aided with the use of many castings from the Laurie Griffin range.
The cylinder blocks were assembled next
with modifications made to accept
slidebars, piston glands and valve rod
covers for the inside cylinders. Castings for
the latter were purchased from Laurie
Griffin. The cylinder blocks were offered up
and fitted very well, but the slide bars were
a little short and had to be modified. As a
consequence the motion brackets had to be
repositioned slightly. This done, all the
valve gear was assembled and fitted. The 2
in 1 levers in the kit for the conjugated valve
gear required some modification to make
them work satisfactorily. The return crank
etchings were replaced with Laurie Griffin
cast items, as were the crosshead drop links.
Particularly useful items provided in the
kit are lengths of etched rivet strip to detail
the chassis. I continued with this theme and
purchased some more rivet strips from
Scalelink and used it to add rivet detail all
over the model. (Yes, I am a terrible rivet
counter!) The vacuum pipes were replaced
with castings from Laurie Griffin and cast
steps for the buffer beams were replaced
with scratchbuilt items.
The kit included a rudimentary
representation of the cylinder tops and all
the steam admission and exhaust pipes.
Since these details are visible through the
cut-outs on the tank sides I decided to
scratchbuild all these items. A section to
represent the complex shape of the tops of
the cylinders was fabricated from brass
sheet, and the pipe work and flanges made
from brass tube and sheet.
Water tanks and coal spaces
The four footplates were removed from the
frets and the etching cusps filed off. When
offered up to the chassis a problem
manifested itself. The chassis frames are a
couple of millimetres or so narrower than
prototypical, but the hole in the middle of
the footplate etching is not, resulting in a
gap of a millimetre or so between the inner
edge of the footplate and the top of the
chassis frames. Pieces of brass strip had to
be soldered in to correct this. Also the
footplate valances are taller than they
should be (to add rigidity), but I replaced
these with ones of the correct size.
The rest of the water tanks and coal spaces were a joy to construct as the etchings are very accurate. The only fault being the front unit upper tank being a little higher on the front than the sides, but that was easily corrected. Lots of rivet detail was added using the strips mentioned earlier. The vent pipes for the water tanks (different on each model) were scratchbuilt as the castings supplied were a little too large. The water treatment tanks on the front unit of the BR era model were added. The prototype has a ‘prop’ structure that sits on a chassis frame stretcher and supports the front (inner end) of the coal space. This is not in the kit and was scratchbuilt from brass sheet and the rivet strips. The mechanical lubricators supplied in the kit differed from those on the GA, so the correct Wakefield type (No. 7) were sourced from Hobbyhorse Developments and fitted. These had the potential to work, so, not wanting to miss a trick, I fabricated all the linkages. They achieve their movement from a crank on the inside of the expansion link, inboard of the motion bracket.
Tank under construction
Tank installed on chassis.
I now had all the outer units finished and
turned my attention towards the cradles
that hold the cab and boiler structures.
The middle bit
The cradles themselves presented no problems in construction, aside from the fact that the models were getting quite large and unwieldy now. I worried that the centre portion of the finished models may not pivot properly on the chassis using the cast sockets and pins supplied in the kit. The cast sockets were difficult to bore out accurately and the pins were slightly oval. So replacement sockets were made in Tufnol, for insulation purposes, and the pins made in brass (all turned by Steve Ross). The completed cradles were fitted up to the chassis and the heights adjusted with shims until all sat well. A slight amount of tolerance was made in one of the Tufnol sockets on each model using a taper pin reamer to allow smooth passage over slightly uneven track.
Fireboxes
Boiler
Tufnol pivot
Pivot Point
The cradles were detailed with water pipe
connections that stick out of the front and
rear. These would be connected up to the
water tanks with a flexible connection after
painting. The water balance pipes that run
down the right hand side of the models
were fashioned from the white-metal and
brass castings supplied in the kit. Next the
reversing rods were added down the left
hand side of the cradle. Some brass
Westinghouse pump castings were bought
from Laurie Griffin and modified to
represent the air operating tanks that work
the reversing gear behind the left hand
cradle frame.
The fireboxes, boilers and smokeboxes were made next. All were straightforward to make and fitted together very well using brass dowels to locate. Representations of the cladding joins and screws were made along the top of the fireboxes and boilers, and all the boiler bands and tightening cleats added. The smokebox saddles, whitemetal castings supplied in the kit, were cleaned up and added to the front spacers on the cradles.
The window frame sliders were made
from U-section brass and soldered to the
inside of the cab side windows. The cabs
were then folded up and fitted to the cradles.
When the boiler assemblies were offered up
to the cabs they sat too low and had to be
raised very slightly. Next,
L-section brass was annealed and bent
round the join between the spectacle plates
and fireboxes.
Finally, all the detail on the cradles was
completed, including the steps, remaining
water pipes and the balance pipe vents that
go up the rear of the cab and round the front
of the smokebox.
I spotted on a drawing that a rather large
cradle spacer was omitted from the kit. It
was just ahead of the firebox, had three
rather large access/lightening holes in it,
and also supported the feedwater well. I
fabricated and fitted the spacers together
with the well assemblies, and added quite a
lot of detail to the cradles between the
frames, mainly water pipes from the well
and reversing gear. I also added boiler drain
hatches which are only on view if you turn
the model over - I was getting carried away!
The ash pans were made and given a lot
of extra detail, and all the damper and
rocking grate levers added. The remaining
steam admission and exhaust pipes that
come out of the bottom of the smokeboxes
were fabricated from brass tube and given
flanges in the correct positions. All the
associated pipe work extending into the
front and rear units were made detachable
to aid assembly and painting. All the above
assemblies were made to accommodate the
motor and gearbox units.
The cab roofs too became a much larger
job with the inclusion of hand cut ribs and
pull chain mechanisms for the whistle. The
ventilators in the kit were replaced with
scratchbuilt working versions and I also
fabricated an additional front ventilator for
BR version. Brackets were made for the
gauge cases.
Firebox - ashpan
There were virtually no parts in the kit for
the cab interior. However I did notice some
cab details such as lockers, seats and
reversing handle depicted on the GA. I
fabricated lockers and the reversing
mechanisms and got some seats from David
Andrews. The handbrake stanchions
supplied were too short so ones of the
correct height were obtained, again from
David Andrews. The cab floors were
covered in veneer strips to represent
planking and raised platforms below both
seats made. Cab doors and latches were
made and attached to the lockers.
I was unable to locate any photographs of
the inside of the cab of this locomotive, so
accurate modelling of the cab interior would
be difficult. However, a picture exists of the
engine during construction in Gorton Works
erecting shop, and another showing the
engine partly dismantled in Doncaster
Works. A pattern for a backhead was made
with references to these photographs using
dimensions lifted from the GA. It was also
based on a South African Garratt with the
same boiler. Two copies were cast in whitemetal.
Backhead
The cab roof underside
Lockers and cab doors
Richard Hardy, the President of the Great
Central Railway Society, kindly drew me a
layout of a typical Gresley backhead based
on a P1 locomotive. Standard LNER fittings
known to be used on this engine were
specified and all the functions needed to
operate the Garratt were fulfilled using this
arrangement. All the castings needed to
detail the backhead in this way were bought
from Laurie Griffin and David Andrews.
Two sets of fittings and associated pipe
work were assembled and made detachable
so that their metallic finish could be
preserved through the painting process.
The rest of the fittings were added and
included chimneys, domes, smokebox
doors and handrails.
Smokebox for 69999
The safety valves and whistles in the kit were replaced with items from the Laurie Griffin range. The last thing to be fabricated to complete both models was an ejector pipe fitted to the early LNER model, yet again with Laurie Griffin fittings
In the paint shop
The models were dismantled and cleaned.
This took a while as the models had been in
construction for over a year and oxidation
had begun to show. A liberal spraying of
Viakal magically removed most of the
deposits (thanks to Bob Alderman for this
advice), a fibreglass pencil and scrubbing
with Shiny Sinks removed the rest. The
engines were masked where appropriate,
then primed with Hycote aerosol acrylic
paint.
The frame inners and bufferbeams were
sprayed red, and the cab interior upper
portions painted a stone colour. These areas
were then masked up and the whole lot
including the wheels airbrushed in
Humbrol 85 black. Plates were added from
Diane Carney, who produced the Beyer-
Peacock maker’s plate from a picture of the
original snapped in the NRM. I know these
plates take a bit of time to cut out but they
are the best available.
The extremely talented Diane also drew artwork for the BR model’s decals. These were the correct 69999 numbers (with curly tails) and BRITISH RAILWAYS for the cradle, all in the correct cream colour and outlined with a black pinstripe. She also produced artwork for the legends on the buffer beams. All this artwork was despatched to John Peck at Precision Labels, who produced very usable waterslide transfers on his ALPS printer. Finally the BR version was varnished and lightly weathered.
Painting the frames
The LNER version was more problematic. No commercial lining is available for blacklined- red LNER locomotives (as far as I am aware), so I had to spend quite some time producing artwork in CorelDraw for the thin red lines (they are 0.14mm, a scale 0.25in). This was very time consuming but did result in all the correct compound curves, especially round the cab front, which made them much easier to apply. John Peck of Precision Labels again printed the artwork on waterslide transfer paper. The lining transfers took about 35 hours to apply (it’s a big engine), but I think a very professional finish was achieved after varnishing. The lettering and numbers came from Fox Transfers. The BR version was fitted with a DCC chip and both models were adorned with coal.
In conclusion
I liked this kit, especially the etchings, and
it produced two excellent representations of
the real thing which were a lot of fun to
build. The white-metal castings were of
good quality, the lost-wax brass castings less
so, which was disappointing, especially in
a kit costing so much, and quite a lot of time
and money was spent scratchbuilding or
replacing these items.
A lack of information
obviously led to the lack of cab detail, which
is a situation that I’m sure will improve as
information filters back to Geoff Stratford
(now David Hill) at Gladiator Models.
This kit could be built by any modeller
with reasonable experience of etched brass
kits, and considerable stamina! (I would
think twice before building two at the same
time!) And no, the finished model did not
fit into the box!
Acknowledgements
- David Green, Richard Hardy and Stuart Tebbett for helping out with detailed information, photographs and support without whom this project would have been very difficult.
- Dave Andrews and Laurie Griffin for supplying castings and advice.
- Diane Carney for the typically excellent nameplates and transfer artwork.
- John Peck at Precision Labels for his help and advice and producing the transfers.
- Terry Smith of TMS Models for the loan of the completed LNER engine for photography.
- Steve Ross for turning the wheels and pivots.
- Tony Wright for the peerless photographs of the finished engine. Peter Dobson of Newbold Models for providing the GA drawings.
Reference Yeadon’s Register of LNER locomotives, Vol 9. W B Yeadon. Challenger Publications. Locomotives of the LNER, part 9B. RCTS. Ratnett and Co Ltd. Gresley Locomotives. B Haresnape. Ian Allan. Photograph collection of David Green. The Gladiator kit is expected to be available again by the time this article appears in the Gazette (Ed)