Swanage Railway News Gallery - Page 393
CLASS 47 No. 47 635 SERVICES ON FRIDAY 21st SEPT 2007
News Item and Press Release from Andrew P.M. Wright
Official photographer & press officer, Swanage Railway.
Photographs are copyright Andrew P.M. Wright unless otherwise acknowledged.
To view a larger version of any photograph on this page,
just click on the thumbnail photograph and subsequently use the
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No. 47 635 on Friday 25th May 2007
hauling the Swanage Railway's innovative Friday Night Special evening trains,
driven by Pete Pickering with second man Mick Hatton.
Photograph copyright Andrew P.M. Wright
For full timetable details
for the evening of Friday 21st September, please click here.
To see the full set of over 50 photos of No. 47 635 in service
on Friday 25th May 2007, please scroll to the bottom of the page.
By Andrew P.M. Wright.
The evening of Friday, September 21st, 2007, offers the rare chance to ride behind a throbbing 120 ton
Class 47 diesel locomotive on the Swanage Railway!
To illustrate what visitors can expect to see, the photos
on this page show No. 47 635 on Friday 25th May 2007
hauling the Swanage Railway's innovative Friday Night Special evening trains,
driven by Pete Pickering with second man Mick Hatton.
For full timetable details
for the evening of Friday 21st September, please click here.
The Brush-designed diesel-electric locomotives used to run on the Swanage branch during
the summers of 1965 and 1966 when they occasionally deputised for steam traction on the
summer Sundays-only Eastleigh to Swanage train.
No. 47 635 on Friday 25th May 2007. Photograph copyright Andrew P.M. Wright
Unlimited evening travel wil cost no more than £4. The Buffet Car will be conveyed on all service trains serving
hot and cold drinks and snacks, with full bar facilities.
The full ordinary buffet menu will be offered from 18:00 until 22:30, including pasties and other snacks.
For the technically minded, No. 47 635 is 63 feet long, 12 feet high and nine feet wide.
The wheelbase on its four bogies is 14 feet while the diameter of each wheel is three feet
nine inches. The load on each axle of the Class 47 is 19 tons while the locomotive's fuel
tank capacity is 810 gallons of diesel. When operating on the national system, No. 47 635
had a top speed of 95 mph.
No. 47 635 on Friday 25th May 2007. Photograph copyright Andrew P.M. Wright
When the Class 47s first came out in September, 1962 - the year of the Cuban Missile
Crisis and the month that the last 'Pines Express' ran on the Somerset and Dorset line -
they were originally weighted at 2,750 brake horsepower. Because of problems with the
Sulzer-manufactured twelve cylinder four-stoke LDA 28-C engine on the locomotive, the
power rating of the Class 47s was downrated shortly after they came into use to 2,580
brake horsepower.
Class 47 No. 47 635 was built for British Railways at Crewe and was brought into
traffic on 29th July, 1964. Its builder's number was 'Crewe 400' and it was outshopped
in the then two-tone BR green livery.
During its working life, the locomotive carried two names - 'Jimmy Milne' between 7th
April, 1987, and April, 1991, and then 'The Lass O' Ballochmyle' between 25th July, 2003,
and March, 2004.
The locomotive's first number was D 1606 which it carried between July, 1964, and April,
1974. Between April, 1974, and January, 1986, the Class 47 carried the number 47 029 and
the standard BR blue livery while its final number - carried from January, 1986 - in
national railway service was 47 635.
Driver Pete Pickering at the controls of No. 47 635. Photograph copyright Andrew P.M. Wright
During this final period, the locomotive carried its current livery of BR blue with a
large white 'double-arrow' BR logo and first a grey roof and then a blue roof.
It was in January, 1986, that the locomotive was became a 47/4 - meaning that it was
fitted with ETH (electrical train heating system)
While D1606 from July, 1964, the locomotive was based at the following depots:
07/64: Swansea Landore.
02/65: Cardiff Canton.
12/65: Old Oak Common.
10/67: Bristol Bath Road.
11/67: Old Oak Common, London.
10/68: Cardiff Canton.
03/69: Swansea Landore.
1/70: Stafford Road, Midlands.
3/73: Saltley, Birmingham.
5/73: Bescot, Midlands.
2/74: Cardiff Canton.
While 47 029 from April, 1974, the locomotive was based at the following depots:
2/75: Plymouth Laira.
11/78: Cardiff Canton.
5/81: Plymouth Laira.
10/82: Cardiff Canton.
06/84: Bristol Bath Road.
While 47 635 from January, 1986, the locomotive was based at the following depots:
1/86: Eastfield, Midlands.
5/87: Inverness.
11/90: Crewe diesel depot.
12/90: Crewe with Regional Railways.
1/91: Tinsley, Midlands.
1/91: Tinsley with Railfreight Distribution.
7/91: Crewe diesel depot.
7/91: Crew diesel depot on parcel duty.
1/99: EWS Crewe and available for duties countrywide.
3/00: EWS Crewe and no longer available for duties countrywide.
12/2000: EWS Crewe and available for duties countrywide..
4/01: EWS Crewe in the dual brake pool and available for duties countrywide.
1/04: Toton, Midlands.
3/04: Toton, Midlands - EWS in storage but available for use.
4/07: Moved to Eastleigh.
10/05/07: Entered preservation at Swanage.
Thanks to Bournemouth signalman and Class 47 authority Steve Anstey for
the information about the history of No. 47 635.
All photographs are copyright Andrew P.M. Wright unless otherwise acknowledged.
Photos on these pages are low resolution versions.
Full resolution photos are available for media use
Last updated 14th September 2007 by Keith Morgan.
© Swanage Railway
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