Do love 47s. Underrated in my opinion and often overlooked as 'boring'. But they did great work and were reliable in later years, and theres just something about them that I personally enjoy. Nice to see coverage on 'Falcon' as well. Also, shout out to Class 40 D208 near the beginning! A personal favourite!
@@gilbertporter4992 Actually I think - of all the "workhorse" locos of the 50s and 60s - the 47 had a simple elegance and economy of design which I find very satisfying, a bit like the HSTs. They were nicely proportioned locos.
This machine, and the class 37, addressed most of the issues the early diesels had, not without a reason some machines still run after 60 years of service.
From 1962 to well into the 1990s these machines were the Ford Cortinas of British Rail, excellent at nothing but good at everything. A couple of Stratford based locos were used experimentally on the WCML to Glasgow in 1963, totally out-performing the EE type 4. By 1966 they were on everything north of Crewe into Scotland, the EE type 4 being retained on Blackpool - Euston services and intermediate trains. D1848 was a regular on the Mid Day Scot. Excellent video and narrative-as usual.
My basic engine when I trained as a driver and still my second favourite type of the 15 traction types I’ve operated. In fact the loco I got passed out on as a driver 47 639 is still about and working for West Coast Trains as 47 851! I might retire before she does and she’s a year older than me!
The locomotive in the police "jam sandwich" livery was so painted for use in a British Rail television commercial about the advantages of going by train rather than by car. It was shown pulling over a train for speeding.
@@nelson408. Thank you for posting this. I thought I remembered the locomotive in the TV ad where it was shown pulling over a speeding train being a class 37 and that my memory was wrong. I did not know that two locomotives were painted in this way on different occasions.
Gotta be real I’m tired as hell right now and this video feels like it’s beaming directly into my subconscious to be cited in a conversation I’m not due to have for 9 years
Was stuck on a 47 for 30 years, must have gone thousands of miles, one time we had a bad shunt in the yard and most of the carriages derailed, very strong smell of burning. Fortunately we still had 6 volts on the Hornby power supply and once the boggeys were placed back on the tracks it went round again, dad said the brushes might need renewing soon🎉
Hi. Do you recall the ratio of 37s to 47s at Canton? I seem to remember reading somewhere that at one time over a third of all 37s were to be found there.
@@stephendavies6949 In the 1970's we had a lot of class 47's based there almost 50 /50 ratio with the 37's , in 1989 we had 101 x 37's and 20 x 47's . The most 47's were in 1976 when we had 67 x 47's . Most of the Paddington trains were worked by 47/4's from Landore.
@DOCTORDROTT Ah, thanks for the info. Very interesting. Sounds like what I read was correct, as there were 309 37s in total. 47s stabled at Landore make sense to haul the Fishguard/Swansea to Paddington expresses. I do recall seeing 47s on the London trains, although being a Valleys Boy & miner's son with an interest in industrial stuff, 37s seem to be everywhere! I Landore closed now? I guess the 47s were based at Old Oak Common at the other end?
My favourite class of loco too. I used to live in Kenilworth, the roller-coaster single line route between Coventry and Leamington Spa, and these locos were my staple diet. A great and very handsome locomotive and long may they live. I now live in Australia, and you know there's always something you miss when you go and live in another country, and for me, it was the class 47s. Thanks for sharing.
Ah, which state? If you're in Victoria, a vast number of the venerable T Class dating from the 1950s are still around, some in their original form, others rebuilt as H or P classes.
@@MrSulzerboy I should have realised that by the "Sulzer" in your name. S.A. doesn't have any huge classes of antique locomotives, even the smaller classes of old S.A.R. engines have sadly been retired. 😞
As a big fan of the original Thunderbirds show, learning that several of these locos were named after characters or model props in the show warms my heart so much.
Yes, they were built at the time Thunderbirds was produced; in 1965 no-one could have predicted that 40 years later some of them would be named after Thuderbirds characters!
Very well researched, scripted, compiled, edited and produced piece of industrial rail videography. Particularly love the mix of sources to support the "real story" as no-one can have covered the career of such an impressive class of UK locomotive. Certainly growing up near to Crewe and being a frequent visitor to "The Works", Crewe Station and "The Shed" (Crewe Diesel Depot). My youth was packed with multiple memories of the "Brush 4" Class 47 in all its guises fulfilling virtually every discipline possible. They also became a familiar sight UK wide as I later travelled to various parts of the UK outside our Cheshire home range with my beloved Dad on our many, many "spotting" trips and adventures. He would have truly loved this piece of film and as a result I was reminded of many happy hours spent with him "shedding", "cabbing" and being pulled by these incredibly versatile "work horses" as you correctly describe the class. Happy to have Subscribed to your Channel and will know work my way through your catalogue of work. Well done for a very polished and professional piece of quality videography 👍🏻 ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-RBWM1BE1DFk.htmlsi=EeHb7KNMr0KlYgsY
Living in the south east of London, I considered seeing a class 47 very dramatic, I remember them with fantastic idling sound in Paddington station as a child travelling to Fishguard harbour to travel over the sea to Rosslare, the very smell of them was glamorous to me
I'm 60 and remember as a kid seeing them at Freightliner Garston,they had Purple tinted glass and always looked Grimy,great Loco though,thanks for video
Thank you for another well researched and informative video. The 47s are one of my favourite diesels. In the old two tone green livery they looked absolutely stunning.
Remember taking the Boat Train from Euston to Holyhead. Started electric and I seem to recall it being loco hauled when we got off. Remember admiring a 47 or on the opposite track, solo with engine running. Alas my camera was packed away. Saw a 47 go pass solo by Stratford Lift in the early 80s. Seem to recall it being in two tone green. But maybe my memory id playing tricks with the colour.
@@jonathanbutson1385 I should certainly think so, given the freightliner terminal. A Class 47, I can understand-those can fit in ones garage (if it is a bit on the larger side). But a freightliner terminal? Where on Earth would one put that?
I love the 47s. One of my favourite diesel locos, they have a simplistic and industrial charm to them in my opinion that make them majestic and resolute.
Just shows how the use of the railways declined under BR in the 1980s - 3 car units replacing 9 to 11 carriage loco hauled trains. I remember the BR service being awful in the 1980s, I was a frequent user and I have no rose tinted view of this era in terms of the service but the motive power variety was indeed superb but could hardly have been efficient. The railways are here for the users not the workers or enthusiasts and certainly not the unions who have bled them dry for the last 50 years. I realise my comment will no doubt attract much hate! Great video as always
3-car units replaced longer trains in some places because the loading density, ie the number of occupied seats, in the longer trains could not be justified in regard to maintenance costs. A Mi1 TSO with 64 seats 8 bays of 8 seats around 2 tables was no longer seen as an efficient use of space with many passengers travelling solo. And with the Mk1s and early Mk2s coming to the end of their working lives (30 years was seen as a good working life for coaching stock before replacement) BR decided to reduce the numbers of tabies and increase the number of "airline" seats. This simple change allowed a greater passenger density in a much shorter train.
I remember well the 47's on the Exeter to Waterloo service. Which I used on a semi-regular basis in the early 90's. To be fair to them. I can remember only one instance where the train broke down and required rescue by another engine.
I was a driver at saltley and crewe and the 47s were my favourite diesel loco, totally reliable and any fault could be fixed with insulation tape and a hammer. I remember doing my training on them and the instructor going on about the decompounding winding in the main generator, the useless things that stick in your head 😂
My favourite Class 47 is the one preserved and repainted along with a DBSO MK II set into The former Scotrail Intercity colours. And also some that were painted into The Raspberry Ripple Intercity colours.
That locomotive is 47712 "Lady Diana Spencer"! I have her on my layout, but in parcels sector red livery. I do have a push pull set, train loco being 47708 "Waverley"!
From a standing start, no load, light engine, could practically guarantee it, a tower of jet black spewing from it's top. Loved it as a kid growing up seeing these monsters and still do 😀
Excellent historical record of a great locomotive. I have to agree with the many supportive and praising comments of this channel. A lot of work and careful research on display here.. Thank you.
They looked splendid in the NSE and Intercity liveries! One of my first Hornby models was NSE 47 called 'London Evening Standard'. Soft spot for the old Stratford TMD
Yes, a big missed fact was the de-rating of the engines from 2750hp to 2580hp meaning the lightweight body was the only thing that made them barely better than Peaks in terms of power/weight.
The first Batch of prototype 47s D1500 to D1519 were slightly different to the production 47s. They were fitted with steam heat and ETH equipment. The ETH came from a DC auxiliary generator. Under the TOPS system they were numbered 47401 to 47420. And were known as the generator 47s.
Huge fan of these videos, excellent and informative…unsure what’s happened with the narration this time though, it was a bit robotic in places, lacked the usual smooth cadence. Excellent video nonetheless. Edit. Clears up by the middle of the video.
Solid stuff, thank you - there was a whole variety of liveries, my favourite being Stratford Works' blue with silver roof and a large full-height Union Jack for the Silver Jubilee \m/
excellent video, thanks. Beautiful shot at 2:45s of that wasteland site outside Waterloo (?) with a lovely collection of classic vehicles to be seen. I always found those kind of sites fascinating, you know, the places the Lorry-drivers and Bus Drivers parked their vehicles. Note the beautiful seemingly all-White Bristol K-series double decker parked there, along with a Bristol MW single-decker in resplendent Green, parked on the left.
A good workhorse was the 47 and still is in certain places , my Grandad who was a former blacksmith / boilersmith and engineer at Derby works didn't like them , then again he didn't like many Diesels as he was steam through and through , he did favour 2 though HS4000 Kestrel and the Class 56 as he admitted once he liked big V16 engines and said the 47s engine problems were down to Sulzer changing the original cylinder heads to a lighter version to reduce weight which eventually caused the power unit to be permanently de - rated to 2580 bhp .
When I was working as the Waterloo to Exeter power controller in 1992-1993 the 47/7s were my locos allocated to haul these trains. They were terrible! They were unreliable, always need new brake blocks and every night it was a struggle to get enough locos available to haul the next days trains. I had great fun arranging alternative motive power, usually 33s, but a lot of 47/4s, and no heat 47s had to be begged borrowed or stolen to cover the next days diagrams. I even managed to replace a 47/7 with a 37 once, but only from Exeter to Salisbury, the driver who knew 37s was due to be replaced and after a rest break work back to Exeter. The driver who took the train forward to Waterloo didn't know 37s. So anyone who calls 47s reliable probably hasn't had to work with them.
One of the Toton fitters told me they had the same issues with class 45/1 fleet on the midland mainline , running on full power all day knocks them about , also having narrow brake blocks fitted is not the best outcome
Class 57s do have 2-stroke EMD 645 power units, although it should be noted that these are 12- and not 16-cylinder versions. Power outputs range from 2,300 to 2,800 hp and top speeds from 75 to 95 mph, making most of them broadly equivalent to Classic 47, at least on paper. Naturally, they don’t sound as good as Sulzers, however.
From what I can gather, The Royal Family were very keen on these locomotives . Particularly Prince Andrew.. Apparently if he had a word with the driver you could visit the Royal Train private compartments and recommended the helmet purple livery.
Great video. As a young boy growing up in the 1980s, the 47 became my favourite diesel loco, and indeed my layout is set in Lanarkshire in 1989-90! 47s dominate my layout, along with a class 08 shunter, and a class 60. Otherwise, at the time I wrote this reply, I have 28 class 47s, and by the end of 2024 it'll be 30 class 47s, in various liveries! These include the unique 47475 in trans pennine livery, the three GWR green 47/4s, 47359 in dutch livery, large logo blue, 47599 in metals, 47708 and 47461 in Scotrail blue stripe, three in NSE, and some in Intercity! Actually, I'm obsessed with the 47 in the sectorisation period! I can't pick a favourite though lol!
I remember 47 437. We called it "The Shiverer' because it always used to shake under power! Weirdly, it was usually one of the best 47's for reliability otherwise.
Yet another great documentary and what reliable, dependable machines the 47s were/are! Underrated indeed by many and as soon as they started to be withdrawn in earnest, what happens? Yes, enthusiasts start chasing them, often with photographic or video equipment of some kind! Like they did with the HSTs just recently; still doing, in fact because there are still one or two Castle sets about! any way, great video and another Like for this channel! 😀😃😄😁
Another great video! I was always curious about their transformation into the class 57. But personally I wasn't a particular fan of these. Especially in recent times, I once travelled all the way to Devon to see a Steam hauled train, I think it was Tornado or Tangmere. They was supposed to rendezvous with a class 47 at Bristol Temple Meads and continue onto Plymouth with Steam power. However the 47 that was hauling the coaching stock to Bristol failed, despite seeing it working earlier in the day. The whole show had to be cancelled. But at this point, I had already travelled 4 hours to Whiteball summit. Spent 2 hours hanging around before a passerby informed me of the situation. So yea, the unreliability of the 47's certainly left a bitter taste.
Great video. Never took to the 47's, they had no character unlike Class 20's or 37's say. They were the vanila ice cream, the Cheddar cheese of the train world.
I'd put 37s, 20s, 52s & 55s ahead of them on my personal list, but there's no doubt as to their significance in the history of UK locomotive development.
I do love the 47 it a good looking machine.. i remember going train spotting one night at Doncaster I remember it well because it was night before live aid 😊
Great video as usual I have been waiting for one dedicated to this particular locomotive; the one I most remember on UK railways. Clearly a well designed, reliable and capable machine.
In the daily routine of Peaks and BR type 2s on the Midland main line in the 70s the appearance of a Brush 4 on the evening Freightliner and Thames Clyde Express was always slightly exciting😀
I worked at the old Freeman's warehouse in Peterborough a few years ago right next to the mainline and station used to see all sorts coming through from the tornado to flying Scotsman but my favourite was seeing the 57s and 37s coming through
They were such an obvious step up from the Peaks in all aspects (apart possibly from an asthetics viewpoint). It was a shame - but nonetheless inevitable - that their introduction would hasten the demise of the hydraulics. Liked the passing shot of the class 15 (or was it 16?). A truly hopeless loco.
I have seen them out and about. The Class 47s are still the best locomotives on British railways. With most of them now retired and some used on heritage railways.
Would have been nice to do a little shout out to the variants built for Cuba and Rhodesia. I know they aren't strictly the same model but they have all the stylings of a class 47.