Hornby mk 1 coaches
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Blood and Custard?
Hi All. I keep asking about Hornby, that is asking not complaining. And I have read a lot about Modellers concerns on Diagrams not matching the Hornby models but that does not worry me too much. I do have a livery question though “ “ Blood and Custard “ or Crimson Lake and Cream which ever you prefer. Did Hornby ever do a mk1 stock with this livery and how near was it to the Prototype. I have just read about Crimson and Lake being used on corridor coaches and plain Crimson on suburban coaches, did Hornby build them to scale or diagrams? Best wishes Kevin
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Staying on the thread Kevin.
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Close to the prototype diagrams and to scale? In both cases yes. Bachmann seems to lead in detailing, the latest Hornby ones seem to be in the railroad range with molded details. Gangways need improving on both due to the "toy-train" distances between the coaches. One interesting feature of the early Mk 1 coaches were the buckeye couplers at either end, in addition to the regular chain link. Good argument for using close-coupled Kadee coupers and some gangways that actually touch and compress/expand.
Some research on the web will get plenty of commentary on the positives and negatives of the many Mk 1 models.
Nigel
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Best wishes Kevin
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Staying on the thread Kevin.
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Staying on the thread Kevin.
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You need to decide exactly what you want and see if the particular ones you want are available at the moment.
Brian
OO gauge DCC ECOS Itrain 4 computer control system
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Staying on the thread Kevin.
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Brian
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Staying on the thread Kevin.
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I believe this was common in other BR regions. Those Mark 1's were for mainline services.
Nigel
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Staying on the thread Kevin.
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Staying on the thread Kevin.
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There was quite a mix of liveries between Nationalisation and the corporate maroon era (green on Southern). "Blood and Custard" is the same as "Crimson Lake and Cream" the former being a mildly disrespectful term applied to the latter as the official description.
Southern Region stock was mostly green though where suburban steam-hauled coaches were in use they might be crimson or green but never with cream; suburban coaches were one colour. There were differing shades of green and crimson and even some brighter red coaches. The Western Region continued with its own version of GWR chocolate and cream of course though also used blood and custard stock.
I recall there being a very colourful period in the late 60s / early 70s when maroon coaching stock was still quite common, blue-grey was the new thing and suburban units or DMUs were plain green or plain blue. But green coaches occasionally turned up as, for example, in the Brighton - Plymouth train which for at least one year was formed with a mix of green, maroon and blue/grey coaches behind either a green or blue diesel or, in winter until 1966, steam.
The same would have occurred not many years earlier when blood & custard, chocolate & cream and BR maroon were all about together along with crimson suburbans. BR Mk.1-derived short-frame suburban stock ran in lined maroon then plain blue just to fudge the issue a bit more!
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I have the impression that these old coaches didn't wander from their original regions. Mainline stock did, SR would find themselves in the northwest after being run into Oxford for an engine change. WR coaches would of course be found on the southeast coast. Those wonderful summer specials have great modeling potential.
Nigel
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Staying on the thread Kevin.
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Staying on the thread Kevin.
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As Nigel said there is probably a prototype for everything.
If you want your layout to be an exact time period and have totally the correct actual stock that would have run you would have to do a lot of research.
In the later BR years a lot of stuff did get mixed up it was not uncommon to see multiple livery trains.
Brian
OO gauge DCC ECOS Itrain 4 computer control system
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Staying on the thread Kevin.
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