Tuesday, 20 January 2026

Nostalgia ...

 ... Isn't Like It Used To Be

Back in the day, your Cornwall bus service would, with very few exceptions, be run by Western National. The company was under the overall management of The Transport Holding Company Ltd, formerly Thomas Tilling.

THC and the British Electric Traction (BET) group both became, effectively, state owned and were later formally united as The National Bus Company.
The NBC adopted a policy of local branding which begat "Cornish Fairways" ...
... soon to be eclipsed by a variety of privatisation paint schemes, a mixture of red, blue and cream.
The nicest was the "flags" version ...
... downgraded to something more boring when First Group bought the company.
Then along came pre-barbie ...
... followed by Barbie ...
... then Barbie Mark 2! 

First continued it's trend of adopting boring liveries in weak colours.
Competition hit when former First employees set up Truronian.
A highlight was the development of "The Helston Branch Line", route T34, building on nostalgia for a much loved but closed railway service.
Truronian's enthusiastic local management produced an effective and successful local brand which nibbled away at First's network.

Next came pink liveried Western Greyhound ...
... a bit insipid, but certainly "different".

Colours later became green and white ...
... then all over green with a tasteful orange line. The company was, by now, biting, not just at the heels of First, but devouring the whole business. There were also some powerful route developments and some very smart double deckers.
First Bus, long regarded as a 'basket case' by the industry, fought back by buying Truronian. The rumour in the pubs frequented by Britain's bus managers was that First had paid too much for Truronian "to keep Stagecoach out"!

Then the wheels began to fall off Western Greyhound. The end was sad and abrupt. The company was sold but the new owners gave up before they really started and First took over the bits.
First was back in almost total control of the county.

BUT ...

For reasons which are not clear, good things did not last. There was route branding ...
... and an explosive growth of open top buses.
The leisure services centred on The Eden Project ...
... we're complex but unsuccessful; and a similar lack of business eventually removed open toppers at Falmouth, Newquay and Exeter ...
... together with the closed top run over the moors from Exeter to Plymouth ...
... although shorter versions remained for a year or so.

Then came the decision to withdraw ALL open top services including the apparently successful ones!

It was the recent competitive attacks by GoAhead that seems to have thrust the knife into the ailing company and was the final straw that broke the First Camel's chassis.

Fortunately there has been little evidence of First's latest boring livery ...
... with only one such evident when the fbbs sojourned at Penzance in September last year. But what was palpably evident was that First had already given up. Buses were no longer in the correct branded livery whilst a selection of cast-offs from other group companies accompanied the mess.

So what will Go Ahead do with First's much depleted network?

Outline information is now available for the February changes.

  Next Kernow blog : Weds 21st Jan 

Monday, 19 January 2026

Monday Variety

Glorious Gronk 2

This company has taken a rather tatty and unloved class 08 ...

... and removed everything under the bonnet! Actually the bonnet itself has gone as well.
What is left has been cleaned down and protected by coats of heavy duty paint.
In the space go the batteries ...
... and a new drive train.
The original 08 is a diesel electric shunter, so it appears that the electric motors that turn the wheels are retained in the 08e.

It is all computer driven ...
... and miles away from the greasy growl in the cab of a Gronk!

Create a new lower height bonnet and you are ready for a launch.
Of course it has to have a leaf green livery to emphasise the environmental credentials of the rebuild.
News breaks more recently of the  first 08e to be sold for real.
Whilst the steady eddy of the 08 is no longer the normal sight in every goods yard (there ain't  no "every" goods yards nowadays) it would be good to see more of these delights.

You wonder who will be the first to market a OO model of the 08e

Puzzle Picture
This is a clue!
It was professor Eric Laithwaite ...
... who introduced the linear electric motor to the World, which, combined with vehicles floating on a magneti field gave us "Maglev" trains.
 
As it so often the case (see tilting trains) the UK failed to develop the idea. 

This is the best and only Maglev train to enter commercial service at Birmingham Airport. 
It was replaced with a more conventional string hauled system!

But others from far away have funded the development - and this is the latest result.
Seen above on its test track, it is now ready for public use, the technicians claim.

It goes quite quickly.
The plan is for Japan Railways ...
... to build a brand new Maglev line ...
... linking Tokyo with Osaka.
The road distance is just a smidge under 500km.
Trains currently do this trip in a little over two hours, so nippy in the extreme. In theory the new trains will take less than an hour! 

In the UK, that would be like London to Carlisle in just one hour.

Yikes.

How does it work.

It is levitated up and down ...
... guided side to side ...
 
... and propelled along ...
... all by magnets!

The principle of all three is simple (Yeah, right!!) with alternate north and south poles attracting and repelling in sequence.

That's  how fbb understands it - but what does he know? Not a lot and most he learned from Eric Laithwaite's Royal Institution Christmas lectures.
But that was nearly 60 years ago and, possibly, things have moved on a bit in the meantime!

The puzzle Picture is a bogie from the Japan train. And it doesn't  make understanding it any easier. It seems to have wheel, presumably for low speed manoeuvering. 

What they need is an 08e shunter!

More Model Railway Madness
Look at this, guv!
Sorry, that should read ...
Look at this GUV.
A GUV is railway parlance for a General Utility Van and the above were in use for the Rail Express Parcels service, now long gone.

But you can buy a model for you very own little railway. This one is OO gauge and by Bachmann.
The price is relatively cheap by today's  standards,
But what about this one?
It is by Heljan and is twice the price and more.

Shock Horror!!

But, dear reader, it is to O gauge and nearly four times the size by volume.

The mind boggles!

Tomorrow (provisionally) more mind boggling stuff from Cornwall.

  Next Kernow madness blog : Tues 20 Jan