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-   -   HST preservation unlikely? (https://www.railwayforum.net/showthread.php?t=6334)

Rassy 18th December 2009 17:19

HST preservation unlikely?
 
Hi

I was asking around about the going rate for a scrapline class 37 or 56. To my astonishment a scrapline condition class 56 would set you back £30,000!

Amazing to think just 6 years ago a recently withdrawn class 37 or 47 would only set you back £3,000 - £4,000.

Thanks to the industrial revolution occuring in India and China, I worked out a full HST set (2 power cars, 8 coaches plus transportation costs) would cost £205,000 in accordance with todays scrap price index.

With this in mind, is it likely a full HST set will be preserved outside the national collection?

steam for ever 18th December 2009 17:47

Well Rassy in the future we know we are going to get all sorts of rail tours.
50 years ago steam specials were all the rage and still are but steam has joined the ranks.
A tour operator such as west coast railways may buy one in the future for mainline tours but that won't be for a long time. The reason being that they are still everywhere. With the electrification of the GW main line (of which I am opposed to entierly and would go for hydrogen powered trains) the vast majority will be withdrawn. Virgin started it and this will most likely finnish the job.

We cannot be certain but my advice to you is to enjoy them while you still can. I do know of several people wanting to start preserving mark 3 stock and this I think would be a good idea but something tells me they will outlive the units that haul them as they are transferrable to the 225 units.

Pete Waterman is very rich and he has a passion for steam and so does David Shepard but with a bit of persuasion they might consider a one off diesel venture to save one of the most important modern traction sets.
Hope this helps put your mind at rest.

Rassy 18th December 2009 18:17

Still many years of service for HST's phew!

Totally agree with your GWR electrification comment. Why are people so stupid? Electric trains pump just as much carbon into the atmosphere as diesel ones. It's just that with diesel the carbon gets spread out along the journey, as opposed to it going up from one location - the powerstation. Nowadays, politicians can say and do anything just by crying 'CLIMATE CHANGE'!

Off topic slightly, but I read in an article by the founder of Greenpeace Irving Stowe, that Evironmentalism is the new communism. He said after the fall of USSR, all the communists flooded into the green movement especially Greenpeace, because they knew they could use the 'global warming' issue as a front for their communist ideals.

Hopefully if the tories get in next may, the GWR electrification might never happen!

swisstrains 18th December 2009 18:49

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rassy (Post 36304)
......................Off topic slightly, but I read in an article by the founder of Greenpeace Irving Stowe, that Evironmentalism is the new communism. He said after the fall of USSR, all the communists flooded into the green movement especially Greenpeace, because they knew they could use the 'global warming' issue as a front for their communist ideals.......................

That's amazing.....Irving Stowe died in 1974? :rolleyes:

steam for ever 18th December 2009 18:52

Well as much as I want to believe all of that Rassy I can't.
We need to start using energy saving bulbs and to recycle now.
Even if global warming is not true (which it most likely is but not as drastic) then natural resouces are.
If we use fossil fuels less then we can keep using it for the essential aspects of life or find a way to make it last and neutralise the emmissions.
The effects of pollution are obvious in the city.

When the ice caps are concerned they cannot be melting fast as the temperature is still far below zero all year round.
Enough to keep it at the present thickness anyway.

Back to trains- I would like to see some designs for a hydrogen powered train as they could well be the future.
Hydrogen is of course the most abundant thing in the universe and the only emmission would be water.
I think that this excess water could be used to power a steam booster.

To the original topic- all of the HST's have been re engined so none of the original examples exist.

PS: you may have noticed I am not using commas where they are needed recently and this is because the comma button is on the blink.

H886LOX 18th December 2009 19:33

Just remember that scrap prices dip and rise every minute, last october the scrap price went from £120 to £3 a ton of mild steel overnight. Most yards buying things buy at an average for the month price, hope this clears a few things up

John H-T 18th December 2009 21:45

I have no doubt that an HST set will be preserved and hopefully on the mainline. There is a group already working towards this. gathering spares etc.

As far as electrification is concerned it is the only way forward for the foreseeable future. I personally hope that the Midland Mainline Electrification goes ahead. I also think that the GWR electrification will go ahead. I am sure Brunel would approve! In fact I am sure he would have done it if the technology had been available.

Electrification should get more planes out of the sky and that would reduce pollution!

As a visitor to high mountains I can assure that glaciers are in full retreat! When I flew over Greenland on the way to California last April, glacial retreat was also evident even though it was still covered in snow!

Best wishes,

for Christmas and 2010,

John H-T.

6678bjm 18th December 2009 21:57

Hi, some info on a hst group can be found by following the link below
http://www.125group.org.uk

I for one hope they can save a least a pair of power cars ( I believe some Paxman Valenta's engines have been saved but the cost of reconverting would be huge even if it is Technically possible and some suggest that they cant reverse the re engine process). These are wonderful machines if you can see past the DMU link and have given sterling service and some record runs.
Regards

steam for ever 19th December 2009 16:42

Well John, Brunels atmospheric railway was similar in principle and the only problem was that the material used for the vacuum pipe either rotted or rats bit holes on it.

The basic principle beinghaving the power source at one particular location and distributing the means of propulsion.
In fact, with better technology which we now have, we could probably have another crack at it.

John H-T 19th December 2009 20:17

Thanks for the link Bryan.

Best wishes for Christmas and 2010,

John H-T.


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