This is a continuation from Part I of our tour of the Acton Museum Depot run by the London Transport Museum, courtesy of Geoff Thorne and his crew of volunteers working on the Q stock at the depot.
There was a LOT of interesting equipment at the depot, much of it on rails and some of it not. The unusual piece of equipment pictured above is sleet locomotive ESL107. It is the most significant remnant, I suppose you'd say, of the 1903 stock, which were the first electric MU cars built for the Central London Railway (today's Central line). When service began on the CLR in 1900 the line used trailers pulled by locomotives, but the heavy locomotives caused such vibration in the buildings over the tubes that they quickly switched to MU cars. These looked similar to the later Standard Stock cars, with a large compartment over the front truck holding electric equipment. In the late 1930s, as these cars were being retired, some were cut in half and the two motorized halves joined to create four-motor locomotives for sleet cutting. That's what ESL107 is.
And here's the sleet cutter. The locomotive has four trucks, its two "real" trucks (which looked oddly like American-style MCB trucks, I must say) and two trucks mounted near the center of the locomotive which carry the sleet cutting equipment pictured here. Unbelievably, this thing was apparently used in service on the tube system into the 1990s.
It looks kind of like a "normal" tube car but this is actually a pretty unique piece. It's the only surviving example of 28 tube cars built in 1940 specifically for the Waterloo & City line in London, nicknamed "the drain," which runs as a 1.5-mile, two-station shuttle between Waterloo and Bank (formerly known as City). The line was considered an adjunct of Waterloo Station and fell under the auspices of the railway companies (for a while, the Southern Railway) until it was absorbed by London Transport in the 1990s. The first cars built for the line in the 1890s were actually provided by Jackson & Sharp of Wilmington, Delaware! They were replaced in 1940 by cars like this one, designed by SR's Oliver Bulleid and built by English Electric with Dick Kerr electrical equipment. This car was retired in 1993 and has just recently been restored and repainted.
I earlier mentioned Standard Stock; well here it is. This is a fully restored Driving Motor built in 1927. From the early 1920s until the early 1930s cars built for the tube network looked like this, with squat clerestory roofs and arched end windows. The motor cars had a third of their length taken up by an electrical equipment compartment, which Steven (R) is pointing out to Greg (L). Most Standard cars used Metropolitan-Vickers electrical equipment though some used GE equipment built under license.
The interior of this car, number 3327, is beautiful. It's been fully restored, obviously, and looks like it's ready to head out on the underground network. This is taken looking towards the equipment compartment, which is located through that door in the bulkhead.
And here's the equipment compartment. To the left are some knife switches, equipment boxes, and the air compressor; to the right are the grids and, on the lower "shelf," the contactors. The green door in the end goes to the driver's cab which permits him to come back here and repair his train if it breaks down. These cars remained in service some 40 years and were retired in the early 1960s.
We're still in the tube network here but we've moved forward in time a few decades. This is a preserved example of 67 Stock, built in (you guessed it) 1967 for the opening of the then-brand-new Victoria Line. These cars were designed for ATO, Automatic Train Operation, which meant that although they did have drivers, the drivers could run the train from station to station simply by pressing two buttons to start the sequence. Sounds like something Tesla built.
Here's Zach in the driver's seat. Near the bottom right of the panel, from his perspective, is what looks like a big Staples "Easy" button but which I think is actually an indicator light; partly hidden by that are the two buttons that the operator pushes to proceed to the next station via ATO. This particular car, 3052, was operated by Queen Elizabeth II when the line opened in 1969 so Zach is sitting on somewhat hallowed ground.
And then we go backwards in time again (though still on the tube network). Here we have what might be the pride and joy of Acton Depot, a full four-car set of restored and operational 1938 tube stock. These "38 Stock" cars were built by Metro-Cammell and the roughly 1,100 cars of this type built were used all over the tube system for nearly fifty years. They had much more compact electric equipment (cam control) fitted under the floor, which allowed for more seating since they didn't need a large compartment for control equipment. The train at Acton includes two Driving Motors, a Non-Driving Motor, and a Trailer. Sitting in front of it on a pallet is a CP-30 compressor which was apparently used by a few different classes of Underground cars.
The interior of the 38 Stock cars is beautifully restored. The intricate upholstery designs - or "moquette" as it is evidently called in Britain - are authentic reproductions of what these cars were originally fitted with. Like other early tube trains, they have hopper upper-sash windows that tilt in for ventilation. I noted that the upper sash window frames, which are brass, lack a lower rail; the stiles have a nub at the bottom which holds the glass in place but the bottom edge of the pane is exposed (though it's ground smooth). I suppose this helps with the old problem of bottom rails collecting water and rotting out.
And now we're back to the 1920s and the Standard Stock which preceded the 38 Stock in tube service. This shot shows car 3693, built in 1934 by Metro-Cammell at the end of Standard Stock production. Note that only four years later the Underground was building 38 Stock cars of a much more modern and efficient design. Acton Depot has a complete, albeit unrestored, train of these Standard Stock cars including two Driving Motors, a Control Trailer, and a Trailer. This car was used in revenue service until the mid-1960s, when it was moved into work service and given the number L131.
This is the other unrestored DM in the Standard Stock train, 1927-vintage car 3379, later work motor L134. It can be seen that the louvers in the equipment compartment can be removed for relatively easy access to the control and electrical equipment. I didn't get close-up photos of them but the CT and T cars in this train were both sold for use on the Isle of Wight in the mid-1960s. At that time the IoW abandoned most of its (then steam-operated) branch lines and electrified the one remaining line. But clearances through a tunnel in Ryde were so tight that the only cars that would fit were these London tube cars. So that's what they bought, 40 year old Standard Stock, and ran them until 1991 when they were replaced by 38 Stock cars. But more on that later.
And then our guides showed us through a section of Acton Depot devoted to road vehicles. First in line was this horse-drawn omnibus dating to 1881 which has been completely restored. Beautiful! At one time there was an omnibus in the CTA Historic Collection, alongside artifacts such as our own cable trailer and car 4; anyone know whatever happened to that thing? Oakey's: for when store-brand knife polish just won't do.
I'm not a big bus fan, but if you're going to collect buses then you may as well collect ones from before World War II. The bus closest to the camera is a B-type double-decker bus dating all the way back to 1911. The Transport Museum has two of these things; the other will be seen a bit later. Next to it is a K-type bus built in 1920 and beyond that is an NS-type bus built in 1926. The NS was built with an open cab, like the others, but at some point they decided that windshield wiper technology had advanced sufficiently that a windscreen wasn't a safety hazard and retrofitted a cab.
There were a bunch of buses, mostly double-deck with some single-deck, and two trolley buses of which this was the elder. It's an A-1 "Diddler" dating to 1931, which makes it about the same age as IRM's own CSL 84. It bears a distinct family resemblance to the "Feltham" trams built around the same time.
Speaking of which, here's the museum's "Feltham" (pronounced "felt'm" not "felth-am") tram, car 355. It was built in Feltham by Union Construction Company in 1931, sold to Leeds in 1952, and later designated for preservation. There were 100 cars of this type and they were the pride of the London system. Only three are still around: this car, a prototype center-entrance "Feltham" at Crich, and car 341 at Seashore in Maine in very poor condition. All three of us were struck by the size of this car: it's 40' long, not huge by American standards, but it is more than 15' tall!
The museum's other London tram is this beauty, E1 type car number 1025, built by Hurst Nelson in 1910. The E1 was about as close to the "standard" tram as London got; it was kind of their version of the "Old Pullman" and they had over 1,000 of them. Car 1025 ran in service in London until 1952 when it was retired. Though shorter in length than the "Feltham" at just 34' it's even taller, with a height of some 16'1", making it about the same height as Frisco 1630!
London used a conduit system for current collection in the center of the city and standard overhead wire further out, similar to how Washington DC did it. This shot of the truck (bogie) on the E1 shows part of the plow mounting between the wheels. Note that the car has what is, in effect, a Maximum Traction truck although I'm pretty certain this isn't a Brill design.
Here Steven shows us a display with a section of conduit and a streetcar plough for demonstration purposes. A similar setup is displayed at the National Capital Trolley Museum outside of Washington.
The tour then moved into the bus maintenance workshop. Most of the buses at Acton are in running condition and this is where they're maintained. This is a 1914 Leyland bus painted up for the London & North Western.
If you recall that 1911 B-type bus pictured earlier, this is a similar type. A number of these buses were moved from London to the front lines in France around 1916 and used for transporting troops and, sometimes, casualties. The museum painstakingly restored this example to full London red-and-cream livery, complete with all the striping and everything, and then painted over it all in olive drab just so that it would be correct with little bits of red poking out here and there - just like the buses sent to France would have been. While this was originally meant to be a temporary transformation for the 100th anniversary of the Great War in 2014, it's been decided to keep the bus in this guise as a memorial.
Then we poked out heads outside briefly. This is one of four cars of A-stock built c1960 for the sub-surface lines. One A-stock Driving Motor is preserved inside the Acton Depot but this complete set, which was in work service until recently (though retired from revenue service about five years ago), had just been stripped for parts and was due to be cut up within the following week or two. The other two Q Stock cars were also stored outside under tarps.
The final exhibit we were shown was this fully restored Metropolitan Railway milk van dating to 1896. At one time freight was carried through the Underground system and this is a rare example of a car that did it.
The tour was fascinating, as was the explanation of all of the work that Geoff and the rest of the crew are putting into the Q Stock cars. We can't thank them enough for taking the time to show us everything! This final shot shows a service train passing the Museum Depot, which can be seen in the background.
And then, after a quick dinner, it was a quick procession from the sublime to the ridiculous. First we went on a high-speed train ride up the East Coast Main Line to Stevenage so that we could get a taste of 100+ mph running. That took about 20 minutes. The return trip took more than an hour because we rode on the EMU cars shown above, perhaps among the most wretched creatures in passenger service out of London at the moment.
These are Class 313 cars built in 1976 or so and now working their final days; replacements are already under construction and are being tested in Germany, or so Greg said.
As such they haven't bothered repainting these cars and instead the most recent private operator to use them has just given them a "patch job" over a rather disheveled older coat of paint.
The interiors were kind of sad too. These were the first EMUs built in Britain that could operate on both the 750v DC third-rail system and the 25,000v AC overhead wire system. They're three-car sets with the outer two cars basic 750v DC Driving Motors and the center car, a trailer, carrying the transformer and rectifier for AC operation. It was easy to feel the cam control notching up and the cars we were on also had a very audible and satisfying pop when the line switch opened under load. It was an eccentric but interesting ride back to Moorgate on the slow line to finish our first day.
Click here for Part III of our trip.
Perhaps I am missing something, but it doesn't appear to me that the rolling stock has anti-climbers on the ends of the cars? Maybe the orderly British don't allow rear end collisions or perhaps the vertical tube clearance wouldn't allow a car enough space to ride up in a collision?
ReplyDeleteC Kronenwetter
The CTA Omnibus was mentioned in the posting about the CTA collection.
ReplyDeleteHere was the comment.
Anonymous said...
A Chicago History Museum curator told me last year that the omnibus is stored in their warehouse. The Henry Ford also has one, but I'm unsure of its history.
Fred Ash
June 30, 2016 at 4:10 PM
ReplyDeletefolks,
I was able to find some information about the Ford Museum's omnibus buried deep in their web site. It was used by a hotel down near Monterey, California. It has not been on display for many years. They also own a brooklyn, New york horse car, which is on display.
Ted miles