Branchline [OO] 32-529C Class 55 D9010 'The King's Own Scottish Borderer' BR Two-Tone Green (SYP)
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Bachmann Branchline (OO Scale)
Product Code: 32-529C
Class 55 ?Deltic? D9010 ?The King?s Own Scottish Borderer? BR Two-Tone Green (small yellow panels)
Era: 5 (1957-1966)
DCC Ready: 21-Pin Socket (Sound Ready - Speaker Fitted)
Built: 1961 - 1962
Constructed by: English Electric
Duties: Express passenger
Highlights
? Illuminated head-code boxes
? Sprung buffers
? Driver figure fitted
? Etched name-plates
History
The Class 55 ?Deltic? diesel locomotive was built in 1961 and 1962 by English Electric for British Rail. They were designed specifically to power the high-speed express passenger services on the East Coast Main Line (ECML) between Edinburgh and London King's Cross, most notably the Flying Scotsman, taking over from the large roster of Pacific steam locomotives on the route. They also worked famous named trains such as the Hull Executive and Yorkshire Pullman. They gained the name "Deltic" from the prototype Deltic locomotive which was named after its Napier Deltic power units. Their striking original livery of two tone green emphasized their length and powerful bulk.
Twenty-two locomotives were built, which dominated express passenger services on the ECML, particularly from London to Leeds and Edinburgh, until 1978 when High Speed Trains (HSTs) were introduced. They were subsequently relegated to semi-fast services on the Kings Cross to York, Edinburgh and Hull routes whilst continuing on sleeper services along the ECML. Other occasional destinations, although with no officially diagrammed work, included Cleethorpes, Stockport, Liverpool Lime Street and Aberdeen. They could be found on diversionary routes such as Newcastle to Edinburgh via Carlisle and the Waverley Route, and Doncaster to Peterborough via Lincoln and Spalding. During the latter years organised Railtours took them further afield to Worcester, Cardiff, Bognor Regis, Dover, Norwich and Exeter. The class was withdrawn from service between January 1980 and January 1982.
By the time of the class? withdrawal they had garnered a fanatical following. Six locomotives entered preservation during 1982 and 1983, and several have subsequently operated on the main line, both on railtours and for Virgin Trains on its Cross-Country network, in place of the diagrammed Class 47s.