🚂 Ellis Clark Trains Announce L&YR "Pug" in OO & O Gauge

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Pug
Pug
Pug
Pug

Ellis Clark Trains/ Clark Railworks have just announced a newly tooled Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway "Pug" 0-4-0ST steam locomotive in both OO Gauge AND O Gauge! 


It's been decades since a new tooling of this popular little tank engine was produced and we're glad to see this loco produced with a modern mechanism & detail.


The good news is that the all-new Pugs are at an advanced stage of development. O Gauge Pugs will be leading the charge, and we hope to receive the first of these during Summer 2026. Their little OO Gauge sisters will follow a few months later, in late 2026/early 2027.


The Clark Railworks Pugs will come in two electrical flavours: Analogue/DCC Ready and DCC Sound Fitted. The former will retail at £325 for O Gauge models and £150 for their OO Gauge siblings – representing excellent value for their specification. They're still finalising prices for the sound-fitted engines and will confirm these in the near future. 


The great thing about little engines is that they’re as much at home shuffling around in the tightest corners of an industrial scene as they are at front and centre of the smallest of micro-layouts. And as you can probably tell, the great thing about these little engines is that though they’re small of stature, they’re packed to the dome with fantastic features and superb build quality

Pre-Order Now - OO Gauge Models

Pre-Order Now - O Gauge Models

Pug

Product Features - OO Gauge

Sprung buffers where appropriate

Mostly die-cast construction

Semi-open die-cast chassis

Tank and cab variations

Highly detailed backhead and cab

Removable NEM coupling and pocket

Space for EM/P4 Conversion

Firebox glow

Full detailing pack

Etched plates and separately fitted finely etched detail

Plux12 socket in ‘DCC Ready’ models

Coreless motor with superior quality gearbox

DCC Sound Models include:

- High quality speaker
- Stay-alive on board
- DCC controlled firebox lighting with sound and movement

Pug

Product Features - O Gauge

Opening smokebox door with full interior detail

Full inside working motion

Highly detailed backhead and cab

Mostly die-cast construction

Tank and cab variations

Removable cab roof

Removable slide bar covers

Coreless high power motor with superior quality gearbox

Firebox and ashpan glow

Sprung buffers where appropriate

Full detailing pack

Plux 22 socket in ‘DCC Ready’ models

All Pug eras depicted

Etched plates and separately fitted finely etched detail

DCC Sound Models include:
- Two high-quality speakers fitted inside the tank
- DCC controlled firebox & ashpan lighting
- Stay-alive on board

Prototype Information

Pug
Image by BWard 1997

The Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway had some rather twisted outposts – twisted as in tightly curved, that is! The sprawling docks at Liverpool, Fleetwood and Goole all had extensive and sinuous railway systems, as did many shunting yards in the Manchester area. These demanded compact, short-wheelbase engines and until the later years of the nineteenth century employed a rag-tag selection of decrepit examples that were no longer fit for purpose. When John Aspinall became the L&Y’s Chief Mechanical Engineer in 1886, he soon set about modernising – and standardising – the company’s shunting fleet.


Aspinall’s first in-house 0-4-0 emerged from Horwich Works in 1891, with a further 11 entering service that decade. A total of 57 L&Y ‘Pugs’ were scuttling about their business by the time construction ended in 1910. Initially known as ‘1153 Class’ (the number of the first engine), they were redesignated Class 21 in 1920.


All L&Y Pugs were inherited by the LMS in 1923, and it was during the Grouping period that they started to wander, slogging their little hearts out at factories and power stations from Somerset to Scotland. Pugs were resilient, and a lack of dinky diesel shunters meant that many worked into the 1960s.


Two L&Y Pugs survive today in preservation – one at the East Lancs Railway and the other just over the hills at Yorkshire’s Keighley & Worth Valley Railway.


Although all L&Y Pugs were built to the same design, cosmetic differences crept into the fleet throughout their production, often related to where specific engines worked. Some Pugs had bells connected to their inside motion, for docks and yards where engines shared the road with motor vehicles. Engines working in the Liverpool area had smoke deflectors fitted over their chimneys for when they worked into warehouses (now there’s a cool modelling idea...) or beneath the Liverpool Overhead Railway. And those that worked in Ormskirk’s munition factory during WW1 – where a stray spark could be somewhat ‘problematic’ – sported substantial haystack spark arrestors, giving them a definite ‘yankee’ vibe!


Pugs built in the 1890s had circular sprung buffers, but later examples had ‘dumb’ buffers made from wood and rubber, which were a better match for the often-ancient wagons found in docks and yards. Earlier engines were subsequently ‘dumbed down’ as standard in this way. L&Y Pugs didn’t have bunkers – so the coal upon which they feasted had to be carried in the cab.


The word ‘Pug’ has been applied to many small locomotives from the early days of railways and could be dismissed as an endearing or even slightly derogatory term. But before all you big engines look down your noses at the Little Guy, let’s consider the origins of the word.


“One thing I’ve learned about Pugs: they are a most hearty folk.”*


‘Pug’ comes from ‘pugilist’ – the old-fash-ioned term for a boxer. Because of their short wheelbases, 0-4-0 engines have a tendency to weave from side to side on the track with alternating piston thrusts – just like a boxer in the ring. Pugs certainly proved their mettle, both through longevity and an ability to punch above their weight when shunting. So they can hold their little chimneys high in the knowledge that there’s more to a name than meets the eye.

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