Difference between revisions of "BR Class 50 50035 Ark Royal"

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==50035 Ark Royal in preservation==
 
==50035 Ark Royal in preservation==
50035 was the first Class 50 to be preserved, being acquired by [[Class 50 Alliance Limited|The Fifty Fund (now Class 50 Alliance)]]. Having been advised that the going rate for a Class 50 was £16500, the fund simply added the last two digits of the locos number to this and bid £16535.They later found out that they had outbid their nearest rival by just £31. 50035 was handed over by Network SouthEast at the 1991 Old Oak Common Open Day held on 17-18 August.<ref>[http://www.bropendays.co.uk/1965_1993.html BR Open Days] (Retrieved 18 August 2019)</ref> It was moved initially to St Leonards where the initial restoration work and start-up was carried out.  
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50035 was the first Class 50 to be preserved, being acquired by [[Class 50 Alliance Limited|The Fifty Fund (now Class 50 Alliance)]]. Having been advised that the going rate for a Class 50 was £16500, the fund simply added the last two digits of the locos number to this and bid £16535. 50035 was handed over by Network SouthEast at the 1991 Old Oak Common Open Day held on 17-18 August.<ref>[http://www.bropendays.co.uk/1965_1993.html BR Open Days] (Retrieved 18 August 2019)</ref> It was moved initially to St Leonards where the initial restoration work and start-up was carried out.  
  
 
Subsequently, the loco was moved by road to the SVR, arriving 19 September 1996, since when it has been a regular performer.<ref>SVR Stock Book, 9th edition</ref> Ark Royal is not registered to work on the main line but can be hauled for the purposes of [[SVR-based diesel locomotives visiting other events|visiting other railways]].  
 
Subsequently, the loco was moved by road to the SVR, arriving 19 September 1996, since when it has been a regular performer.<ref>SVR Stock Book, 9th edition</ref> Ark Royal is not registered to work on the main line but can be hauled for the purposes of [[SVR-based diesel locomotives visiting other events|visiting other railways]].  

Revision as of 20:16, 1 October 2020

BRBritish Rail or British Railways Class 50 50035 Ark Royal
50035 20170510.jpg
50035 Ark Royal at Hampton Loade
Built By English Electric Vulcan Foundry Works, Newton-le-Willows
Configuration Co-Co
Power type Diesel Electric
Status In service
Loco Number 50035
Other Numbers D435
History
Built 1968
Designed By English Electric
Type Class 50
1991 Purchased by The 50 Fund
Technical
Length 68ft 6"
Weight 115t

Diesel Locomotives

50035 Ark Royal is a BRBritish Rail or British Railways Class 50 diesel locomotive.

BRBritish Rail or British Railways Class 50

Fifty English Electric Type 4The British Railways classification for diesel locomotives of 2000 bhp to 2999 bhp (later BRBritish Rail or British Railways Class 50) diesel locomotives were built by English Electric at their Vulcan Foundry Works plant in Newton-le-Willows between 1967 and 1968. When built they were numbered in the D4xx series. They later became BRBritish Rail or British Railways’s Class 50, being allocated TOPSTotal Operations Processing System, an American computer system adopted by BR from the late 1960s to number and manage rolling stock. numbers in the 50xxx series. The class was nicknamed “Hoovers” because of the distinctive sound of the inertial air-filters with which the locomotives were originally fitted.

Initially the locomotives were used to haul express passenger trains on the West Coast Main Line (WCML) between Crewe and Scotland; that section not then being electrified. This often entailed ‘Multiple Working’, with two locomotives under control of a single driver.

By 1974 the northern WCML had been electrified, and the Class 50 fleet was being transferred to BRBritish Rail or British Railways’s Western Region to work main line passenger services out of London Paddington.

The Class 50’s did not originally carry names, but in the late 1970s BRBritish Rail or British Railways agreed to their being named after Royal Navy vessels with notable records in the First and Second World Wars.

Withdrawal of the class began in the early 1990s.

50035 Ark Royal in service

D435 entered service at Stoke in August 1968, having been built as English Electric Works No 3805/D1176.

In May 1973 D435 was transferred to Crewe, being re-numbered 50035 in March 1974. Following electrification of the WCML, 50035 moved to Plymouth Laira in December 1976 (following a brief spell at Bristol), moving again to London’s Old Oak Common in June 1980.

In January 1978, 50035 was named Ark Royal after HMS Ark Royal, a Royal Navy World War 2 aircraft carrier. Commissioned in 1938, HMS Ark Royal was sunk on 14 November 1941 after being torpedoed by German U-boat U-81.

50035 was withdrawn from service by BRBritish Rail or British Railways on 5th August 1990.

50035 Ark Royal in preservation

50035 was the first Class 50 to be preserved, being acquired by The Fifty Fund (now Class 50 Alliance). Having been advised that the going rate for a Class 50 was £16500, the fund simply added the last two digits of the locos number to this and bid £16535. 50035 was handed over by Network SouthEast at the 1991 Old Oak Common Open Day held on 17-18 August.[1] It was moved initially to St Leonards where the initial restoration work and start-up was carried out.

Subsequently, the loco was moved by road to the SVRSevern Valley Railway, arriving 19 September 1996, since when it has been a regular performer.[2] Ark Royal is not registered to work on the main line but can be hauled for the purposes of visiting other railways.

For some years 50035 ran in a fictitious Load Haul livery and |numbered 50135, but in 2015 it was repainted into BRBritish Rail or British Railways blue livery.

See also

Diesel Locomotives
List of preservation groups
SVR-based diesel locomotives visiting other events
Locomotives running under different identities

Links

Class 50 Alliance web site
50 Fund web site (still maintained)

  1. BR Open Days (Retrieved 18 August 2019)
  2. SVR Stock Book, 9th edition