Boring Visually ... But ...
Some readers will be ancient enough to remember Motorail before it became Motorail, whereby cars were sometimes loaded on to bogie General Utility Vans fitted with end doors.Two doors opened conventionally and a plate was lowered to fill the gap between vehicles. Generally a beefy BR employees drove the cars on and off as clearances were tight. Some services used flat wagons ...... where motorists were usually guided on, trusted to do the driving themselves.Specially designed car carriers were used in later years ...... again with loading and unloading in the hands of Motorail staff. Note that these wagons each carried six cars, but a GUV or flat wagon could only manage three.
A further three car version was developed by "The Western" ...... using side loading (as with Channel Tunnel shuttles), shown above on test. Below, a vehicle on display and not being unloaded!
But in pre-Motorail days, someone at BR had a jackpot idea. They modified a standard carriage or GUV type to carry SIX cars!
The steel fabrication was undertaken by Newton Chambers of Chapeltown, near Sheffield way back in 1961!! In fact, the vehicles were heavily modified Mark 1 coaches.
STOP PRESS : The above highlighted sentence may be rubbish; utterly incorrect. fbb will expound further in tomorrow's blog.
There wasn't much left of the originals apart from body framework and roof! Even the bogies were a special short wheel base design to give maximum space. Much of the original underframe had to be cut away ...... and equipment relocated; because that is where two of the six cars would go. But how would they get there?
That was the clever bit.Note that the top four are high up in the van, well above normal floor level but with no room for any ramp down to the lower deck at bogie level!
The two 'lower deck' cars were driven on first and positioned in a two vehicle 'cage' in the centre of the van. The cage had a 'roof' which formed a section of the floor for the top deck once the 'cage' was lowered into irs well.
Obviously all lower deck cars had to be lowered in place throughout the train before the upper deck was loaded.
... but the original departure sidings at Caledonian Road ...
... made use of a wagon with ramp attached!Here is the portable ramp in use for the short-lived Motorail service at Okehampton ...... with a somewhat anxious driver wondering where the precious family limo was being stowed!But the resultant trains were hardly interesting to look at!You might think that any such service would not arouse the excitement juices of a typical railway modeller with very few layouts having space for a realistic length of Motorail train.
But Oxford Rail offers a splendidly detailed 'car flat' priced at around £40.
Revolution Trains will allow you to run a set of four 'cartic' wagons at £160, but ..... they do come as a set - you can't buy one!
So we have to assume that there are modellers who run scale length Motorail trains on their layouts.
You would need lots of OO model cars to fill the open wagons.
But with Newton Chambers TCV vans ...
to be continued ...
Next boring blog : Friday 10th April




































































