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A1 Tornado on BBC website
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7238506.stm
Usual journalistic inaccuracies. It was all going quite well until "When completed the steam train will be used for charter journeys operated by Network Rail." And "The original locomotive had a top speed of 100mph (160kmph) but the modern version will be limited to 60mph." I would thing 75 would be the limit, though I did read it could do 90 as its new-build. Then there's this one "1314 steam trains still running" Where? Worldwide? Or is this just in the UK? If you counted every working loco on narrow guage lines and minature railways as well, would that figure be accurate? "2000 tons of coal used annually" Is that accurate, espcecially given the mainline charter business? Neill |
A1 Tornado on BBC website
On 11 Feb, 14:21, Neill wrote:
"1314 steam trains still running" "2000 tons of coal used annually" http://ukhrail.uel.ac.uk/facts.html U -- http://londonconnections.blogspot.com/ A blog about transport projects in London |
A1 Tornado on BBC website
On Feb 11, 2:34 pm, Mr Thant
wrote: On 11 Feb, 14:21, Neill wrote: "1314 steam trains still running" "2000 tons of coal used annually" http://ukhrail.uel.ac.uk/facts.html U --http://londonconnections.blogspot.com/ A blog about transport projects in London I didn't think there were 1314 steam "trains" still running (Yes I know they're locomotives, not trains). 800 is a good percentage though. The 2000 tons of coal total is a total misreading though. Neill |
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