Standard class 4 76038 on rear of 13.17.Pickering - Grosmont at Abbots House 1st October 2016

Steam Locomotives


B.R. standard class 4 2-6-4T 80136 passing Moorgat…

B.R. standard class 4 2-6-4T 80136 approaching Abb…

LNER class A1 4-6-2 60163 TORNADO passing Abbots H…

LNER class A1 4-6-2 60163 TORNADO climbes towards…

B.R. standard class 4 2-6-4T 80136 passing Moorgat…

LNER class A1 4-6-2 60163 TONADO with the 15.40 Gr…

LMS class 8F 2-8-0 48151 with 1Z10 06.00 Hellifiel…

S.R. class V Schools 4-4-0 926(BR 30926) REPTON wi…

LNER class B1 4-6-0 1264(BR61264) arriving at Gla…

LNER class B1 4-6-0 1264(BR 61264) departing Glais…

LNER class A3 4-6-2 60103 FLYING SCOTSMAN with 1Z6…

LNER class A3 4-6-2 60103 FLYING SCOTSMAN with 1Z…

S.R. Bulleid Merchant Navy class 4-6-2 35018 BRITI…

LMS class 6P Jubilee 4-6-0 45690 LEANDER with 1Z94…

Bulleid M.N. class 4-6-2 35018 BRITISH INDIA LINE…

31 May 2018 8 8 236
The SR Merchant Navy class (originally known as the 21C1 class, and later informally known as Bulleid Pacifics, Spam Cans or Packets) is a class of air-smoothed 4-6-2 Pacific steam locomotives designed for the Southern Railway by Oliver Bulleid. The Pacific design was chosen in preference to several others proposed by Bulleid. The first members of the class were constructed during the Second World War, and the last of the 30 locomotives in 1949. incorporating a number of new developments in British steam locomotive technology, the design of the Merchant Navy class was among the first to use welding in the construction process; this enabled easier fabrication of components during the austerity of the war and post-war economies. In addition the locomotives featured thermic syphons in their boilers and the controversial Bulleid chain-driven valve gear.The class members were named after the Merchant Navy shipping lines involved in the Battle of the Atlantic, and latterly those which used Southampton Docks, a publicity masterstroke by the Southern Railway, which operated Southampton Docks during the period. Due to problems with some of the more novel features of Bulleid's design, all members of the class were modified by British Railways during the late 1950s, losing their air-smoothed casings in the process. The Merchant Navy class operated until the end of Southern steam in July 1967. A third of the class has survived and can be seen on heritage railways throughout Great Britain.

Bulleid Merchant Navy class 4-6-2 35018 BRITISH IN…

LMS class 6P Jubilee 4-6-0 45699 GALATEA with 1Z86…

LMS class 6P Jubilee 4-6-0 45699 GALATEA with 1Z87…


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