Description: RailroadTreasures offers the following item: Steam Railway #11 1981 March Zimbabwe heavy metal Lament for Grange Steam Railway #11 1981 March CONTENTS Cocooning a killer. Steam Railway visits Dai Woodham's Barry Scrapyard to see the asbestos lagging come off a 9F. How preservation started. The Talyllyn Railway in North Wales is celebrating 30 years as a preservation project. Dale Coton tells the story. Keeping up Standards. Martyn Ashworth and Roger France describe the achievements to date of the Standard 4 Locomotive Preservation Society. The ultimate train-spotter. Peter Hands has taken the humble art of train-spotting to extremes, writes Peter Kelly. Steam still lives! A heart-warming account of how the magnificent Garratts of the National Railways of Zimbabwe have found a new lease on life. In at the killing. Robert Adley MP photographed main line steam dying a slow and painful death in Britain and tells how the experience affected him. The King must be freed. That's just one topic in our ever-lively Mailbag page. Also, why did preservation "forget" the LNER? The Northumbrian incident. No.4767's outing with the December 13 special proved eventful to say the least. But later she came back with a vengeance. Main Line Magic. This month, there's colour of the D49 4-4-0 Morayshire to set the scene for the new season. Black is beautiful. And we prove it with some stirring action by the newly-refurbished Stanier 8F No.8431. Urie's heritage saved. The Urie S15 Preservation Group have saved the only examples of the former LSWR's maids of all work. Peter Cooper tells how. The making of Britannia. Britain's first Standard Pacific has made a lot of friends at the Nene Valley Railway ... but there's plenty still to do. The art of rail photography. John Cooper-Smith explains how he tries to get that "something different" into his pictures of steam. The ones that got away. The Great Western "Grange" 4-6-0s were well-liked by their crews but sadly none has survived into preservation. Pride of East Anglia. Ian Rix recalls the "green goddesses" that brought the milk to London. Down at "The Brick". Bricklayers Arms is the subject for R.C. Riley's great steam sheds feature this month. With Fire and Thunder. By popular request D.W. Mosley, Assistant Education Officer at the National Railway Museum, tells exactly how a steam loco works. All pictures are of the actual item. There may be reflection from the lights in some photos. We try to take photos of any damage. If this is a railroad item, this material is obsolete and no longer in use by the railroad. Please email with questions. Publishers of Train Shed Cyclopedias and Stephans Railroad Directories. Large inventory of railroad books and magazines. Thank you for buying from us. Shipping charges US Shipments: When you add multiple items to your cart, the reduced shipping charges will automatically be calculated. For direct postage rates to other countries, send me an email. Shipping varies by weight. Terms and conditions All sales are final. Returns accepted if item is not as described. Contact us before making a return. No warranty is stated or implied. Please e-mail us with any questions before bidding or buying. Thanks for looking at our items.
Price: 9 USD
Location: Talbott, Tennessee
End Time: 2024-10-13T16:15:05.000Z
Shipping Cost: 6 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money back or replacement (buyer's choice)