I'm jealous, would love to have been there too. Oh well, (sigh) it'll come to Newcastle one day!!:D
Printable View
Who did the restoration? I'd love to get up close to a 60 class again.
ARHS ACT did the restoration, the link to the restoration page is in the first post
Regards,
Tote
I wonder if Heavy Harry is even bigger?
Heavy Harry waits patiently for plans to get him back on track
My father who recently passed away, was an apprentice at Newport Railway workshops and once jumped up into the cabin of Harry when he had steam up. Apparrently he did get her to move a bit before the foreman told him off!
Thanks for the great videos.
According to the reference I have to hand (Locomotives of Australia), Heavy Harry is about four tons lighter, and about 8,000lbs less tractive effort. But it ran higher boiler pressure, and had a larger grate. But it was designed as an express locomotive for Melbourne - Adelaide, with bridges to be upgraded to cater for it, where the AD-60 was designed as a heavy freight locomotive with low axle loading to allow use on existing branch lines track without any upgrading. So the two had design briefs that could hardly be more different.
(In the event, largely because of the war, the bridges on the Adelaide route were not upgraded and H220 could never be used for its designed purpose.)
John
EXCELLENT info.
I've seen "Heavy Harry" in the Williamstown Museum, and stood in the cab,....a pretty big engine!!
But surely, the money to restore such a monster will never be found?....I visited Steamtown at Peterborough last week, and the only thing missing there is some live steam,...but the people I spoke to there said that they had almost zero hope of achieving that,...no expert engineers, workers etc, and NO MONEY to either rebuild, maintain, or run, any live steam?
Pickles.
They did not that long ago. If only they had remembered to store their locomotive properly when they stopped using it.
Aaron
Does any one know of the whereabouts of 6042? The last I saw of it was in Cowra. It was alive and well and housed in a Round House. But that was back in the 70s.
Cheers, Billy.