Tuesday 27 October 2020

Composite Van 286

Railways of Queensland an album of .... Volume Two provided the inspiration for this model. Page 37 shows a Stan Moore photo of CV 286 at Gladstone on the 17th of April 1966. I could also recall these vans in service with their uneek windows across the end of the 2nd class compartment.
Diagram 454 provides the following information. Year built 1885 to 1887. Running Numbers: 239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 281, 282, 283, 284, 285, 286. 12 in total. Size of Journal 7” x 3”, Centre 5’ 0” (Drawing shows 4’ 6”, photos do show two different types of bogies were used). Tare 11 T 19 CWT, Gross 20 T. Carrying Capacity; First Class – 8 (1 Compartment), Second Class – 15 (2 Compartments). The compartments are dog box style. The plan shows vans 282 and 285 were modified. The two second class compartments were made into one. The end door was removed, the seat in the end compartment was reversed across to the end wall. The seat in the other compartment was reduced to make way for a walkway to the relocated seat reducing the carrying capacity by one. The windows in the end were removed. Photos show 283 also was modified. A photo of another van at Wooloongabba in 1957 shows three windows across the end instead of two and with what appears to be original combined panel/matchwood doors as shown in the plan.
The van could be CV 243 Stan photo shows the van having an awning over the end windows similar to some Northern Division carriages and vans. It appears the bogies on the Woolloongabba van had been changed as well. Another photo shows CV 242 with three compartment doors with no end windows. This highlights four different vans can be made from the plan. The vans were built by Springall and Frost at Ipswich. List of Coaching rolling stock dated 1963 shows the following vans in service, CV 242, 243, 284, 286, 283, 285. CV 283 was a part of QR historical collection in 1997 suggesting it was still in service when Guards Vans were removed for trains in the mid to late 1980’s, that’s 100 years of service. In later years, some carried the QR logo and were classed BGV even with “First” still shown on the door.
Photo:- Rob Farlow. Modified CV 283 with 2 compartments. 

My van is made from Evergreen scribed styrene sheet and strips. The crown lights construction changed mid way, I was trying to use up some old Slater’s plastikard microstrip (cost .60c), that was a mistake. Old styrene strip can get brittle. The malthoid (canvas) look to the roof was achieved with used tea bag that had been washed out and cut into strips. The van was made with all the windows open and the Guard doors open for a change. Making more of the inside visible, the interior was painted. Seats, passengers and Guard was added. 

To try something new, working compartment and tail lights were installed. The lights work off a 2032 3V button battery mounted on the van end wall. Being an older vehicle, the width of the underframe was too small for the battery to be fitted under the floor. The roof was made removal to access the battery and to turn on the lights if required. The lights were made up in two circuits, the tail lights are two red 0402 LED’s on a 2.2 K resister, the compartments lights are three 0402 warm white LED’s on a 1 K resister. All purchased off eBay. At first I could only get one set of lights to work, that is, tail lights or compartment lights. After playing around and adding resistor to both circuits, all lights come on. Having said that things could be better. I feel the tail lights are on the bright side and the compartments are a little dull. I guess the lights in the compartments on the prototype were not that bright anyway. My stock of resisters is not great, this give me something to think about next time.
                                                      The van runs on Caintode Flats bogies.
The van can be found working trains on the layout 


Another welcome addition to the layout.

Monday 12 October 2020

B class Containers Wagon

Weekly Notice 24/77 dated 15th June 1978 advised the entry into service of five (5) new wagons. These wagons are of skeletal flat wagon design designed specifically to carry two (2) “QRRC” Containers, but provision is made to carry two (2) standard 20 ft containers or one (1) 40 ft container. The wagon is provided with angular paten floor plates at the centre and ends.
Basic features:- Running numbers 40128 – 40132 Tare - 16.7 tonnes. Carry 23.9 t all lines, 46.3 t “S” and “A” class lines, 32.1 t Some “B” class lines (Roma to Charleville for example). Length Unit – 3.5 Bogies – Cast steel roller bearing – QR 37 with 760 mm dia. wheels. Red Circle wagon available for Express freight trains (80 km/h). Drawgear classification - D1. Draft Equipment – Automatic Couplers and Transition Couplings. Wagon diagram No.352. The wagon length was 16 460 mm over headstocks and 17 520 mm over coupling lines. Bogie centres at 10 970 places the bogies some distance back from the headstocks. Loaded, the floor height was just 933 mm above rail. The floor on timber floored wagons was around 1030 mm above rail level. At the time “B” wagons were the longest wagon in traffic.
When ISO containers entered traffic they were eight feet (8’) / 2.438 mm wide, eight feet (8’) high and twenty (20’) feet long, some were forty (40’) feet long. These containers exceed the maximum height dimensions set out in the General Appendix and as such represent “Out of Gauge” loading. It didn’t take long before the height of containers increased providing many issues for a 100 year old rail network. The 1979 Supplement to Working Time Tables was the first to provide information on the conveyance of containers on the QR network. Containers had been on the network for over 10 years on set allocated wagons and routes. Eight foot (8’) high containers were allowed to travel on most lines without restrictions, except locations like between Park Road to Roma St, Roma St to Brunswick Street, lines west of Cairns etc. Additional restrictions were placed on 2.591 m (8’ 6”) high containers. Ipswich to Helidon unless loaded on a PC, B or PFCC wagons. For travel in the South-West Division (SWD) on the same class wagons, but not between Helidon and Toowoomba. (With restrictions and permission they did travel on these wagons between Helidon and Toowoomba). Other restrictions in the SWD included not to travel the platform roads in Toowoomba and Dalby, speed not to exceed 15 km/h passing through platform roads at Warwick and Roma or over the Condamine River Bridge at Warwick. What I recall, ISO containers conveyed grain and cotton from Toowoomba, Oakey, Dalby and the Goondiwindi area in the SWD. In later years export meat from northern New South Wales was conveyed from Wallangarra to Fisherman’s Island. Small numbers of export goat meat came out of Charleville. Most of this traffic was in 8’ 6” high containers. I could tell a story of a 9’ high container that went to Toowoomba more than 20 times before tripping the Container Gauge at Rosewood. Yet, from time to time loco cabs on coal trains would activate the gauge. New domestic containers including R.A.C.E. (Railways of Australia Container Express) containers with a height of 2.650 m (8’ 8½”) and 2.502 m (8’ 2½”) wide were given set routes they could travel, mainly the North Coast Line, Mt Isa Line and the Central line Rockhampton to Winton. These containers were not allowed west of Ipswich in the SED and SWD. The wider containers (8’ 2½”) allowed two (2) Australian pellets to be loaded across the container. In the years to follow, the height of containers grew higher. 2.74 metres (9’) by 2.5 metres, 2.9 metres (9’ 6”), 3.0 metres (9’ 10”), 3.05 metres (10’). Over time with modifications to bridges, tunnels, platform awnings and a new fleet of container wagons, 2.65 metre (8’ 8½”) high containers could travel on most lines on the network (except Roma St to Mayne via Central) on selected wagons. Loads on flat racks was subject to the loading gauge in the General Appendix or Operational Route Manual, today called the loose loading gauge my many rail operators. Box type containers are a fixed load, most networks have maps showing route available for containers of a particular height.
In the original wagon classification code,“B” class wagon was a six (6) wheeled box wagon. Most were converted to Grover’s bogies “BG” wagons, in later years they were allocated to carrying explosives and by the early 1970’s all were out of service. This left only one wagon group with a “B” classification, the BLC class louvered box wagon. The classification would be more correct to the code had it been called CLB, a few wagons had this what I call reverse coding. Soon after the “B” wagons entered service came the “BR” wagon. They were followed by the “BRM” container wagons being the first three (3) slot container wagon, all following three slot container wagons have carried the “B” classification. Container loading guide issued in the late 1990’s showed “B” wagons could carry 1 or 2 containers at 6.1 m and 7.6 m long and one container 12.2 m, or 13.8 m or 14.7 m long. April 1987, around the time when wheel/axle requirements for passenger vehicles was changed, and when most of the red diamond wagon fleet (QLX’s) was being downgraded to red circle status, B 40132 carried a red diamond. Around 1990, QR commenced removing buffer and transition links from container wagon fleet including the “B” class wagons. In the later part of the 1990’s, the class was listed for upgrade as part of the North Coast Line 100km/h project, “BY” classification was allocated. However with the entry into service of the new BEZY class wagons, this did not happen. A few years later with PNQ commencing operations on the QR network with their own fleet of container wagons, the class were placed into storage and later scarped. To expand my modern wagon fleet these wagons looked to be a simple project and would give me a uneek wagon for the layout. Plus I had recently purchase a couple packs of SDS QRC refrigerated containers on special. A great choice for this wagon as the wagon was designed around this type of container. These containers on most other conventional wagons robbed a loading slot. Another issue I wanted to test was the swing in the headstock given the bogie pivot beam is some distance back from the headstock. Under certain conditions on the prototype this has cause derailments which has resulted in modifications to wagons or rules around marshalling of these vehicles. Rolllingstock on a model railway layout operate on much smaller radius curves than the prototype and without springs like the prototype which affects the wheel to rail interface at the best of time. On top of this, most of my wagons have a smaller coupler yoke than the standard “Kadee” coupler box. The plan was for these wagons to convey containers on both slots. This made construction easier, the skeleton section of the wagon would be under the containers. The frame and fish belly sides were made from .040 styrene sheet, open areas were covered with “Slaters” checker plate. The wagons were fitted with Southern Rail bogies and weighted to 80 grams using lead sheet under the floor. Once completed the wagons went to the layout for testing and passed with flying colours, you just need to be carefully where you leave them, there is a good chance they will roll away if you track is not level on the layout.
These uneek container were built by Domino Industries between 1980 and 1983. Thermo King refrigeration unit mounted on one end. 100 SRC containers were jointly owned by NSWPTC and Queensland Rail. 100 QRC containers were owned by Queensland Rail. The containers mainly carried perishable and frozen goods to northern centres on the North Coast Line returning with fruit for both the local and interstate markets. A small number were used on the Mt Isa as cool cars for local perishable and frozen goods. There was a period where they could be found on the front of the Inlander. 25 QRRC Containers were built between 1977 and 1979. Basically they were a 20’ container with a fridge unit and a fuel tank attached. Q-Link allocated units (2012, 2022, 2023) had two compartments, one chiller and the other a freezer. The first 10 (2011 – 2020) only has end doors. Mainly, the containers were conveyed on early “B” series wagons (B, BR, BRM, BMM) and QFC class wagons. Using these wagons, the container didn’t required two loading slots. The container were maintained at Ipswich Workshops and conveyed between Moolabin/Acacia Ridge to the shops on MPJS wagons. By the mid 1990’s 20 plus and 40 plus refrigerated containers replace them. There was a period where longer containers were used, but these were to heavy for road transport when fully loaded.
This wagon is conveying COD fruit, both are SDS Containers.
The TNT Container is a Walthers SceneMaster HO 949-8650 20' Smooth Side Container, Undecorated that has been painted and Chickadee Models decals applied. The ASP container is a Lima Container repainted and specially made decals by Ted Freeman added to complete the project.
Since starting modelling container trains, I have found not all 20’ container models are the same size and vary considerably in the way in which they mount onto the wagon. Some consideration needs to be given to how the containers are on the prototype, you could end up with gaps when containers butt up in the centre of the wagon that is not on the prototype if working from the ends inwards. Trust you found the information helpful. It’s been great to have a hobby in these trying times of late. Have fun in your modelling. Arthur Hayes.