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Hornby H0 LNER 2-6-4T ´67702´ Thompson L1 Class DCC Ready
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Hornby Modelljernbane Lokomotive LNER 2-6-4T ´67702´ Thompson L1 Class DCC Ready
Til salgs1 695 kr
Beskrivelse
Flott detaljert modell fra 1940-tallet som er DCC Ready. Ble utviklet av Edward Thompson for blandet kort distanse transport av både passasjerer og tungtransport. Var kraftige lokomotiver som gjorde en bra jobb med å transportere tungtransport. Men levde ikke opp til forventingene til passasjertrafikk med krav på høy fart.
Spesifikasjoner:
Skala: 00 (1/76) passer til HO
DCC Ready
Jernbane operatør: LNER
Class L1
Satt i tjeneste: 1948
Periode: 1940-tallet
Designer: Edward Thompson
Formål: Passasjertog
Hjul konfigurasjon: 2-6-4T
Passer brukere fra 14 år+
Info fra Hornby:
In 1945 Edward Thompson produced the first 2-6-4T Class L1 locomotive at the LNER’s Darlington Works. Designed for mixed traffic, short distance passenger and freight services, these locomotives had a 5´2" diameter driving wheel, two outside 20" x 26" cylinders, a boiler pressure of 225psi and a weight of nearly 91 tons. Prototype No. 9300 underwent extensive tests before more of the class were put into production, with the remaining 99 being built between 1947 and 1950. Not released into traffic until after the formation of British Railways in 1948, the first three of the Class actually entered traffic in LNER livery, bearing the LNER numbers 9001, 9002 and 9003.
This was changed to British Railways livery and numbering within a few months, the class being re-numbered twice by British Railways. Unfortunately the L1 Class did not live up to expectations; whilst the locomotive had adequate power for hauling heavy freight trains at slower speeds, they were mainly assigned to outer London suburban passenger services where faster speeds and frequent stops wore the engines out very quickly. High maintenance costs led to various modifications on some of the engines in an effort to improve performance and reliability, but the modifications did little, if anything to help. Very careful handling was required by the crews who soon nicknamed the L1 as ´Cement Mixers´, due to the loud clanking noise they made.
Line electrification from Liverpool Street in 1960 led to the withdrawal of the first fourteen of the class and by 1962, the entire class was withdrawn from service, none being preserved. Built at Darlington Works as Works No. 2020, L1 No. 67702 entered service at 30A Stratford Shed on January 22, 1948, in LNER livery and numbered as 9001. Re-numbering under the British Railways’ scheme followed shortly after, on May 15, 1948 but curiously the locomotive retained its LNER branding and green livery until its first general repair in mid-November 1948. 67702 was the first of the class to be withdrawn, on October 31, 1960, at Darlington Works.
Spesifikasjoner:
Skala: 00 (1/76) passer til HO
DCC Ready
Jernbane operatør: LNER
Class L1
Satt i tjeneste: 1948
Periode: 1940-tallet
Designer: Edward Thompson
Formål: Passasjertog
Hjul konfigurasjon: 2-6-4T
Passer brukere fra 14 år+
Info fra Hornby:
In 1945 Edward Thompson produced the first 2-6-4T Class L1 locomotive at the LNER’s Darlington Works. Designed for mixed traffic, short distance passenger and freight services, these locomotives had a 5´2" diameter driving wheel, two outside 20" x 26" cylinders, a boiler pressure of 225psi and a weight of nearly 91 tons. Prototype No. 9300 underwent extensive tests before more of the class were put into production, with the remaining 99 being built between 1947 and 1950. Not released into traffic until after the formation of British Railways in 1948, the first three of the Class actually entered traffic in LNER livery, bearing the LNER numbers 9001, 9002 and 9003.
This was changed to British Railways livery and numbering within a few months, the class being re-numbered twice by British Railways. Unfortunately the L1 Class did not live up to expectations; whilst the locomotive had adequate power for hauling heavy freight trains at slower speeds, they were mainly assigned to outer London suburban passenger services where faster speeds and frequent stops wore the engines out very quickly. High maintenance costs led to various modifications on some of the engines in an effort to improve performance and reliability, but the modifications did little, if anything to help. Very careful handling was required by the crews who soon nicknamed the L1 as ´Cement Mixers´, due to the loud clanking noise they made.
Line electrification from Liverpool Street in 1960 led to the withdrawal of the first fourteen of the class and by 1962, the entire class was withdrawn from service, none being preserved. Built at Darlington Works as Works No. 2020, L1 No. 67702 entered service at 30A Stratford Shed on January 22, 1948, in LNER livery and numbered as 9001. Re-numbering under the British Railways’ scheme followed shortly after, on May 15, 1948 but curiously the locomotive retained its LNER branding and green livery until its first general repair in mid-November 1948. 67702 was the first of the class to be withdrawn, on October 31, 1960, at Darlington Works.
NB: Knappen for å vise hele beskrivelsen har kun en visuell effekt.
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Fast frakt 49,- Fri frakt ved kjøp over 1000,-
Alle produkter selges med 14 dagers angrefrist og 1 års garanti
Trykk på logoen vår oppe til høyre eller gå inn på www.bralek.no så får du opp hele utvalget vårt.
Følge oss på Facebook så kan du være med i konkurranser og få informasjon om kampanjer og gode tilbud!
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Beliggenhet
FINN-kode | 89093050 |
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Sist endret | 6.6.2019 kl. 12:33 |