Help please - if you can
Re: Help please - if you can
Anyone fancy a real challenge? Three rusting hulks somewhere in S. America
Tried looking up PEY BELFI without success. Somewhat stumped.
I wouldn't mind betting they originated in the UK
Rik
Tried looking up PEY BELFI without success. Somewhat stumped.
I wouldn't mind betting they originated in the UK
Rik
Re: Help please - if you can
Depending on your grasp of Chilean Spanish, this might give you a clue:
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=JKO ... FI&f=false
and this might be relevant if I could read the link above!
I would agree that they have a distinctly British look about them and I'm tempted to think that the bottom RH one could be be Beyer Peacock, but I'm happy to be told not to be so stoopid! ?
Edited to add: This doesn't get you very much further except that it confirms that there were Beyers in Chile and is of general interest:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrocarr ... ivia#Steam
Edited again to add:
A google search for "Belfi steam loco" brought up the following ( huge!) link and seems to refer to a book called Los Ferrocarilles de Chile - Volumen 3 but trying to view that keeps trying to get me o print 78 pages! However I'm sure that one of the pictures is also one of your pictures - the top left one. There seems to be some description with it, if only I could read it.
https://www.google.com/search?sxsrf=ALi ... 3M0MVuox9M
Again!! Couldn't let it go.... managed to find a proper coy of that book, at :https://archivoferroviario.com.ar/losfc ... ol3-norte/
Just flicking through it, there are mentions of a fair view British loco builders, including Avonside, Beyer, Hawthorn etc. That one that is included in your scan seems to be labelled as an Orenstein & Koppel but it looks more UK than that.
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=JKO ... FI&f=false
and this might be relevant if I could read the link above!
I would agree that they have a distinctly British look about them and I'm tempted to think that the bottom RH one could be be Beyer Peacock, but I'm happy to be told not to be so stoopid! ?
Edited to add: This doesn't get you very much further except that it confirms that there were Beyers in Chile and is of general interest:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrocarr ... ivia#Steam
Edited again to add:
A google search for "Belfi steam loco" brought up the following ( huge!) link and seems to refer to a book called Los Ferrocarilles de Chile - Volumen 3 but trying to view that keeps trying to get me o print 78 pages! However I'm sure that one of the pictures is also one of your pictures - the top left one. There seems to be some description with it, if only I could read it.
https://www.google.com/search?sxsrf=ALi ... 3M0MVuox9M
Again!! Couldn't let it go.... managed to find a proper coy of that book, at :https://archivoferroviario.com.ar/losfc ... ol3-norte/
Just flicking through it, there are mentions of a fair view British loco builders, including Avonside, Beyer, Hawthorn etc. That one that is included in your scan seems to be labelled as an Orenstein & Koppel but it looks more UK than that.
Philip
Re: Help please - if you can
That's remarkable detective work, Philip. Not only the loco makes and numbers but also their present location. I've identified (with help) that some other photos were taken in Arica, so it makes sense that these are also located there. I wish I had the resources to ship those Hunslets back home. I might consider constructing one for the PLR. They do look interesting if somewhat large for PLR metals.
Rik
Rik
Re: Help please - if you can
Nearing the end of the album (you'll be delighted to hear).
Any ideas here? I've hunted high and low for preserved Garratts in S America and can only find some small versions in Argentina.
I have a feeling these locos are from various different locations rather than from the same preserved railway. I've tracked down some others in Peru but not these.
Rik
Any ideas here? I've hunted high and low for preserved Garratts in S America and can only find some small versions in Argentina.
I have a feeling these locos are from various different locations rather than from the same preserved railway. I've tracked down some others in Peru but not these.
Rik
Re: Help please - if you can
Just found this site:
https://www.steamlocomotive.info/ddsearchnew.cfm
If you go to the Search (top rh corner) select manufacturere and scroll down to Beyer Peacock and then select Chile as the the country, it comes up with a blank page, but if you select for Peru, it comes up with quite a large selection, don't know if any are relevant?
https://www.steamlocomotive.info/ddsearchnew.cfm
If you go to the Search (top rh corner) select manufacturere and scroll down to Beyer Peacock and then select Chile as the the country, it comes up with a blank page, but if you select for Peru, it comes up with quite a large selection, don't know if any are relevant?
Philip
Re: Help please - if you can
The loco in the two top row photos looks like it was built by O&K. It's rare for British locos to have oval cab windows and the dome just behind the chimney.
The locos in the bottom photos look more french than british. The opening in the cab front on the left is reminiscent of a Decauville, but close inspection shows it was made with a gas axe......
Graeme
Last edited by GTB on Sat Dec 31, 2022 9:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Help please - if you can
The first three locos are a very long way from Peru.ge_rik wrote: ↑Sat Dec 31, 2022 6:32 pm Nearing the end of the album (you'll be delighted to hear).
Any ideas here? I've hunted high and low for preserved Garratts in S America and can only find some small versions in Argentina.
I have a feeling these locos are from various different locations rather than from the same preserved railway. I've tracked down some others in Peru but not these.
The first photo is a Bundy Fowler. Specifically, BF5 'Bundy' preserved by the ANGRS and running on their line at Woodford in Qld.
Second photo is a froggie. Mallet 104 of the Chemin de Fer du Vivarais (CFV). Preserved, although it appears to be working a goods train.
Third photo is a Garratt alright, but it's G42, preserved at Puffing Billy in the Dandenongs near Melbourne Vic. Looks like it is waiting at the platform at Belgrave. Must be summer, the driver has hung a water bag out of the window, which is partially obscuring the number plate.
Your guess is as good as mine as to what and where the contraption in the fourth photo is. Looks industrial.........
Regards,
Graeme
Re: Help please - if you can
That's sneaky. Assuming the 'contraption' is in S America, those three are the only photos in the entire album which aren't S American. No wonder I was struggling to find a preserved Garratt with that wheel arrangement in the S American continent. There were Garratts of various descriptions exported to that continent but it seems that very few now survive. To be honest, I'd not started searching for the other two. I'd found a couple of parks running restored steam locos and identified some other photos, but (for obvious reasons now) I was struggling to find anything on those railways which even vaguely resembled those locos. I was only a couple of thousand miles out!GTB wrote: ↑Sat Dec 31, 2022 9:12 pmThe first three locos are a very long way from Peru.ge_rik wrote: ↑Sat Dec 31, 2022 6:32 pm Nearing the end of the album (you'll be delighted to hear).
Any ideas here? I've hunted high and low for preserved Garratts in S America and can only find some small versions in Argentina.
I have a feeling these locos are from various different locations rather than from the same preserved railway. I've tracked down some others in Peru but not these.
The first photo is a Bundy Fowler. Specifically, BF5 'Bundy' preserved by the ANGRS and running on their line at Woodford in Qld.
Second photo is a froggie. Mallet 104 of the Chemin de Fer du Vivarais (CFV). Preserved, although it appears to be working a goods train.
Third photo is a Garratt alright, but it's G42, preserved at Puffing Billy in the Dandenongs near Melbourne Vic. Looks like it is waiting at the platform at Belgrave. Must be summer, the driver has hung a water bag out of the window, which is partially obscuring the number plate.
Your guess is as good as mine as to what and where the contraption in the fourth photo is. Looks industrial.........
Regards,
Graeme
Rik
Re: Help please - if you can
Interesting. When I was searching, I passed a reference to Bundaberg but didn't bother looking!
Philip
Re: Help please - if you can
Equally embarrassed. I've seen videos of that Puffing Billy Garratt and the coach behind it is very distinctive of the line. I just assumed all the photos in that album were from the photographer's S American trip. There was no particular order to the way the photos were placed in the album and absolutely no annotations so I don't even know when they were taken. No idea why he included three 'rogue' photos in the album.
The NGRS librarian says that when enthusiasts go on specially organised trips, they quite often exchange photos with each other - which makes cataloguing a bit of a nightmare as you can never be sure which photos can be attributed to which photographer. Maybe the chap who compiled this album was given those three photos by one of his fellow travellers during his S America trip???
Rik
Re: Help please - if you can
Someone on one of my other forums tracked down that mysterious loco - a Baldwin pusher loco at a Chilean copper mine. The arm allowed it to push wagons on adjacent tracks on either side. It was electrically powered both by overhead catenary and third rail.
https://www.pinterest.co.uk/pin/561753753501322936/
(Click 'More...' and scroll down for an English translation - unless your Chilean Spanish is better than mine... )
Rik
https://www.pinterest.co.uk/pin/561753753501322936/
(Click 'More...' and scroll down for an English translation - unless your Chilean Spanish is better than mine... )
Rik
Re: Help please - if you can
Hopefully the last one from this batch. I think it's in Chile. Looks like a photo taken of an old photo in a museum.
Any suggestions as to what the locos are?
Rik
Any suggestions as to what the locos are?
Rik
Re: Help please - if you can
The one on the right looks like an Avonside, but it has been modified. Specifically the sandbox on the boiler and the damper on the chimney. Otherwise it is very similar to an Avonside that ran in Qld. at Irvinebank and later at Marian Mill.
The one on the left looks German built, some details suggest O&K, but other details aren't typical of German practice. It may have been rebuilt, which makes a definite ID more difficult.
Looks like the original photo was behind glass in a frame when the photo was taken. The sepia toning and the clothing suggests the original photo was taken before the Kaiser's War. The Irvinebank Avonside that resembles the r/h loco was built in 1909.
The engine shed seems very large and well built for what was presumably a narrow gauge mining line.......
Graeme
Re: Help please - if you can
Thanks GraemeGTB wrote: ↑Tue Feb 14, 2023 12:37 pmThe one on the right looks like an Avonside, but it has been modified. Specifically the sandbox on the boiler and the damper on the chimney. Otherwise it is very similar to an Avonside that ran in Qld. at Irvinebank and later at Marian Mill.
The one on the left looks German built, some details suggest O&K, but other details aren't typical of German practice. It may have been rebuilt, which makes a definite ID more difficult.
Looks like the original photo was behind glass in a frame when the photo was taken. The sepia toning and the clothing suggests the original photo was taken before the Kaiser's War. The Irvinebank Avonside that resembles the r/h loco was built in 1909.
The engine shed seems very large and well built for what was presumably a narrow gauge mining line.......
Graeme
I had a suspicion that you might be able to shed some light on it.
That engine shed does look capacious. I wondered if it was part of some sort of processing plant.
Rik
Re: Help please - if you can
Slightly different request this time. I've just scanned a press release from the Ffestiniog Railway announcing a gift given to the seven millionth passenger (Miss Jeanette Gardiner) with a photo. The press release is helpfully dated 21 April - but doesn't include the year.
I've done some online researching but found no reference to this event. Does anyone have it listed in one of their books on the FR?
Rik
I've done some online researching but found no reference to this event. Does anyone have it listed in one of their books on the FR?
Rik
Re: Help please - if you can
Not a definitive answer, but I would say late 70's - my wife had the same hairstyle🫡
Phil
Sporadic Garden Railer who's inconsistencies know no bounds
My Line - https://gardenrails.org/forum/viewtopic ... 41&t=11077
Sporadic Garden Railer who's inconsistencies know no bounds
My Line - https://gardenrails.org/forum/viewtopic ... 41&t=11077
Re: Help please - if you can
Seven million by even by the late 70s seems quite impressive!
How about this? A Jeanette Gardiner died in New Zealand aged 52 on 8 September 2010. She would have been 23 either 21 April 1981 or 1982. That’s still a reasonably impressive number of passengers in under 30 years, but certainly fits with the type-written press release.
How about this? A Jeanette Gardiner died in New Zealand aged 52 on 8 September 2010. She would have been 23 either 21 April 1981 or 1982. That’s still a reasonably impressive number of passengers in under 30 years, but certainly fits with the type-written press release.
Re: Help please - if you can
Well done Simon,
A check of the British Newspaper archive prompted by your search suggests 1983 (she was 25, not 23). However, the publication date is 15th April 1983?
Next question, Mr Bennett?
A check of the British Newspaper archive prompted by your search suggests 1983 (she was 25, not 23). However, the publication date is 15th April 1983?
Next question, Mr Bennett?
Phil
Sporadic Garden Railer who's inconsistencies know no bounds
My Line - https://gardenrails.org/forum/viewtopic ... 41&t=11077
Sporadic Garden Railer who's inconsistencies know no bounds
My Line - https://gardenrails.org/forum/viewtopic ... 41&t=11077
Re: Help please - if you can
Excellent detective work chaps! The identity of Jack the Ripper next???
Rik
Rik
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