Hornby TT3020TXSM Class 66 Co-Co 66789 'British Rail 1948-1997' GBRf Diesel Locomotive - Sound Fitted
Product Details
SKU | TT3020TXSM |
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Vendor | Hornby |
Categories | Best selling products Diesel Locomotives Era 11 Hornby Hornby TT:120 Hornby TT:120 2024 Announcements Locomotives New products Pre-Orders TT:120 Scale |
Scale | TT:120 Gauge |
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Features |
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Product Description
Expected Delivery Winter 2024 (Subject to Change at Manufacturer's Discretion).
This model will feature directional and cab lighting. Night and day headlights will also be included.
All variants of the Class 66 lighting have been tooled for both UK and European variants. The headlights will be prototypical for your model.
All the Class 66 models have 12 axles for the current pick-up and both bogies are motor driven. The UK variants of the Class 66 will not be fitted with traction tyres.
European variants will be fitted with one traction tyre per bogie.
History:
The Class 66 is one of the most ubiquitous diesel classes in the UK. 480 examples were built for the UK market with additional examples being imported from other countries pools to bolster the amount in service in the UK. The Class 66 is a progression of the privately commissioned Class 59 that Foster Yeoman had constructed to replace their aging and failing BREL locomotives. The Class 66 shares the same body as the 59 but has uprated internals.
In May 1996 EWS placed an order for 250 units to be built in London, Ontario. These would set EWS back £375 million, with the first units arriving relatively quickly in early 1998. The locomotives would be in service from the point they touched down at Newport Docks, with the locomotives shipped already filled with water and fuel. The last such example arrived in the UK in spring 2016.
Locomotive number 66789 is a named example of the class, named in honour of British Rail who managed the national network between 1948 and 1997, dates which are also commemorated on the name plate. The locomotive is in the employ of GB Railfreight, who have had the locomotive painted in BR Blue with a large logo and yellow ends, a glimpse perhaps of what a Class 66 locomotive may have looked like in BR service.
In May 1996 EWS placed an order for 250 units to be built in London, Ontario. These would set EWS back £375 million, with the first units arriving relatively quickly in early 1998. The locomotives would be in service from the point they touched down at Newport Docks, with the locomotives shipped already filled with water and fuel. The last such example arrived in the UK in spring 2016.
Delivered into Newport Docks on board the MV Stellanova in April 2004, 66850 first went into service with Freightliner, before being transferred to operations with Colas in June 2011. In August 2013, 66850 was named 'David Maidment OBE' at the National Track Plant Exhibition at Long Marston, in a naming ceremony honouring the founder of the 'Railway Children' charity.
Railway Children was founded in 1996, following Maidment's encounter with a young girl begging on a railway station in India and he has since dedicated his life to raising awareness of the plight of children living alone and at risk on the streets and railway platforms.