Each social formation, through each of its material activities, exerts its influence upon the civic whole; and each of its ideas and ideals wins also its place and power - Patrick Geddes
Showing posts with label National Railway Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Railway Museum. Show all posts
things magazine was originally founded in 1994 by a group of writers and historians based at the Victoria & Albert Museum/Royal College of Art in the belief that objects can open up new ways of understanding the world.
Now an independent magazine, things has built a reputation as a home for new writing – essays, reviews, short stories and poems – about objects and their meanings. The website contains a weblog, photography galleries, special projects, searchable archives and the occasional on-line only article.
Our printing schedule used to be biannual, but now it's just occasional. This means you can't subscribe any more, but if you'd like to be notified of new issues, drop us a line and we'll keep you up to date.
To order back issues of the magazine (1 through to 17-18, the most recent), visit our archive page, click on 'add to basket' and our friends at PayPal will handle the rest...
I'll be back very soon with a longer blog update. I feel a rant coming on...
To keep you amused, the picture above comes from this website:
And finally; don't know if this is things or stuff, but fantastic Jayne, to have your and Rupert's wedding featured on Queens of Vintage! It was a wonderful day...
So I thought a short blog on Gresley's Mallard, just to brighten the wintry weather for all us rail enthusiasts.
*This short audio/video clip has the words of the driver, Joe Duddington, recorded in 1945, who was at the helm on that record breaking run, 126 mph, 'the fastest speed a steam locomotive had ever been driven in the world'.
For the sharp-eyed, there is a sign by the side of the track where that record run took place; I always look out for it and give a silent cheer!
In the summer of 1998, organised by The Gresley Society and with the help of railway companies and private donors, a sign was placed close to the East Coast Main Line at milepost 90¼ , on the Up side (the east side) of the line, to mark the place where Mallard achieved the record speed of 126mph.
Picture: Brian Dow
The map shows where the record was achieved and where the commemoration sign is, between Little Bytham and Essendine. The nearest town (not on the line) is Stamford
which was created to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the record run.
Cecil J. Allen, in 'The Gresley Pacifics of the L.N.E.R.', gave this account of the run:
"But...the sporting instincts of Sir Nigel had been aroused by the 114 m.p.h. attained by the L.M.S.R. Pacific Coronation in the previous year...and he was determined, under the cloak of these [brake] tests, to give the rivals a speed challenge which they would have little chance of beating. In Mallard he found a perfect instrument for his purpose, and in Driver Duddington, of Doncaster, a fearless collaborator. The test train consisted of three of the "Coronation" twin sets, plus the dynamometer car, seven vehicles in all weighing 240 tons."
The train was started a little north of Grantham, and passed the station at a modest 24 m.p.h., with the regulator wide open, and cut-off 40 per cent. In 2¼ miles at 1 in 200 up, the train accelerated to 59¾ m.p.h.; on 1½ miles further with cut-off eased to 30 per cent, the speed increased to 69 m.p.h.; and up the final 1½ miles through the tunnel to Stoke box, still at 1 in 200, 74½ m.p.h. had been reached as the summit box was passed. Due to the expert work with the shovel of Fireman Bray, the boiler continued to supply all the steam needed for an unchanged 40 per cent. as the engine swept southwards.
From milepost 100, speeds at the end of each successive mile were 87½, 96½, 104, 107, 111½, 116, 119 m.p.h. (milepost 93), and then, at the ensuing half-miles, 120¾, 122½, 123, 124¼ and finally 125 m.p.h. at milepost 90¼, while the dynamometer record for a very short distance revealed the tremendous maximum of 126 m.p.h., the figure usually quoted, and at which the 6 ft. 8 in. driving wheels were doing more than 500 revolutions a minute. All this was at 40 per cent. cut-off with full regulator, increased between mileposts 94¼ and 93 to 45 per cent. Five miles (posts 94 to 89) were reeled off at an average of 120.4 m.p.h., and speed actually exceeded 120 m.p.h. for three miles continuously (posts 92¾ to 89¾). So the record was secure; Mallard had travelled faster, not only than the L.M.S.R. Coronation, but also than all other steam locomotives in the world whose high speed performances, properly authenticated by a sequence of passing times, are on record.
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(c) Ruth Sharville, http://www.geograph.org,uk/ , licensed under a
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