Wednesday, August 31, 2022
a very expensive 1985 Ford Escort RS Turbo
That's because it was driven by Princess Diana of Britain from August 1985 to May 1988; it was sold to a UK buyer at auction on Saturday for £650,000 ($US 764,000).
Monday, August 29, 2022
Sunday, August 28, 2022
Saturday, August 27, 2022
biggest oil tanker ever visits NZ
STI LILY (IMO: 9838242, MMSI 563070900), a Crude Oil Tanker, was built in 2019 and currently sails under the flag of Singapore.
Friday, August 26, 2022
trucks and a tram on Thorndon Quay, Wellington, circa 1925
Tuesday, August 23, 2022
arrival of a passenger train in rural Vietnam, circa 1908
In French colonial days and the metre-gauge system. The inscription says it's a train from Bien Hoa near to the bridge over the Donai river, now spelt Dong Nai and this area northeast of Saigon is no longer rural.
Monday, August 22, 2022
Sunday, August 21, 2022
Hobart trams, Australia, late 1950s
Saturday, August 20, 2022
parked taxis on Thorndon Quay, Wellington, circa 1934
Friday, August 19, 2022
Louisiana Cypress Lumber Company 2-6-0 'Mogul'
It's not clear if this is information about it as the road number is different -- on steamlocomotive.com
AEC Regal buses advertisement, Wellington, 1950
A pic taken in Post Office Square off Jervois Quay, at the place where City Sightseeing buses left from, which was the initial use of these new arrivals. This kiosk building still exists.
For lots more, see the books Wellington: a Capital century and Wellington Transport Memories.
NZR southbound coal train leaving Granity in Westland in the early 1950's
Thursday, August 18, 2022
Tuesday, August 16, 2022
NZR double-headed steam locos on the 'South Pacific Steam Safari,' 1972
Launceston, Tasmania, trolleybus
Further lines opened to Basin Road and Quarantine Road via Talbot Road, both on 24 February 1957 to form a cross-city service, followed by Norwood on 27 November 1961. The network closed in stages in 1968.
Monday, August 15, 2022
British Railways 22 class diesel loco and Diesel Multiple Unit on Biston Flyover, Monmouthshire
cars and buses in Pariser Platz, Berlin, early 1930s
With the Brandenburg Gate (Brandenburger Tor) obvious. This pretty much is the heart of Berlin, in divided Berlin days, just on the DDR side. At right is the French embassy, which had to be rebuilt because of the destruction in WW2.
Sunday, August 14, 2022
farewell to Auckland's Diesel Multiple Units
It comes as KiwiRail works to modernise the city's rail network, with buses replacing the service till electric trains take their place in 2024.
Auckland Transport’s Raymond Siddalls, who played an integral role in introducing diesel passenger trains in New Zealand 30 years ago, says it's "the end of an era".
Siddalls told 1News the move to electric trains is sad but it's progress. "It's sad in some ways to see them go because they've been so successful."
He said the other major factor is that electric trains are better for the environment.
Saturday, August 13, 2022
an NZR Fiat articulated railcar and a Standard railcar cross at Manakau south of Levin, May 1955
The Fiat was brand new, undergoing trials from Wellington, the Standard dated from the late 1930s. The station at Manakau has long gone. For lots more, see our books. (NZR photo)
NSW class 47 Co-Co type diesel
This was a class of 20 units built over 1972-1973 by A. Goninan & Co. in Broadmeadow, NSW. They were numbered 4701 to 4720, prime move was a 4-stroke Caterpillar 16-D399TA rated at 1,126 hp. Six are preserved.
Friday, August 12, 2022
Rogers 4-6-0 from 1891
Comox Log & Lumber co. 2-8-2 steam loco, Vancouver Island, BC
A postcard published in the 1980s stated "The locomotive was built in 1923 by the Baldwin Locomotive Works [Eddystone, PA.] (Ser# 67409), purchased by Comox Logging in 1937 and used in continuous service until 1961, hauling logs between Nanaimo Lakes (about 12 miles or so west of Nanaimo) and Ladysmith. Following retirement in 1962, it was overhauled and put on display in Ladysmith. Currently, the loco is sitting in derelict condition around 616 Oyster Bay Drive, in Ladysmith."
Wednesday, August 10, 2022
Wiscasset, Waterville and Farmington 2ft gauge heritage railway, Alna, Maine
The WW&F Railway traces its roots to 1894 when the Wiscasset and Quebec Railroad constructed a two-foot “narrow” gauge railroad northward from the bustling wharves of Wiscasset. Far short of its international delusions of grandeur, the railway of “big dreams and little wheels” only reached Albion, Maine.
Heavily burdened with debt and with very little business, the railroad reorganized as the Wiscasset, Waterville and Farmington. Like Quebec, the destinations of Waterville and Farmington were never realized. Winding through the wild pine forests, farmlands and hamlets of the Sheepscot Valley to connect the interior of Maine with the coast, the WW&F served the businesses and residents of rural Maine until 1933. Ultimately, the railroad was closed, scrapped, and nearly forgotten.
Brought back from extinction, today’s railway connects you with a Maine that has all but slipped away. See why the WW&F’s attractions and special events are some of the best things to do in the Midcoast. Bring the kids and enjoy authentic Maine – a tour of a simpler life from a century ago. It is yours to discover and explore – we will take you there.
97 Cross Road
Sheepscot Station
Alna, ME 04535
207-882-4193
The WW&F is ten minutes off US Route One in Wiscasset.
Take Route 218 near Red’s Eats (mmm Maine lobster rolls.)
See you on the narrow gauge!
Tuesday, August 9, 2022
DDR museum steam locomotives in 1986
Although described as "museum" it's not clear if this meant preserved in operational order, of which there were quite a few in addition to these in the DDR.
Monday, August 8, 2022
Berna automobiles poster 1903
Sunday, August 7, 2022
morning freight trains at the Frost crossovers - Victorville, California
"Besides the famous Cajon Pass, the Frost Crossovers are one of the more unique places along the BNSF Cajon Subdivision, which runs between San Bernardino and Barstow, California.
"The Frost Crossovers are located between the cities of Victorville and Hesperia, and provide a unique flashback look at former left hand railroad operation. Constructed in the early 1900's, the crossovers were designed to provide easier grades for trains climbing and descending the Cajon Pass. A hill lies on the Southern end of the crossovers, providing a great vantage point from above to watch the action along the busy BNSF Southern Transcon.
"Unfortunately, this vantage point will soon be history, as a road project is proposed to run directly through the hill. In this video, you'll see some busy Union Pacific and BNSF freight action on a beautiful Winter morning at the Frost Crossovers."
Video and Content by MichaelLovesTrains, June 2020