Class 47 Locomotives In Scotland
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Class 47 Locomotives In Scotland
£15.99
A3001
Not Yet Published
Details
Class 47 locomotives were introduced to British Rail from 1962 onwards and eventually reached over 500. In Scotland, they were allocated to Haymarket depot, Edinburgh, and later to Inverness and Eastfield depot, north of Glasgow. They became known as a jack-of-all-trade-type locomotive and could be seen hauling anything from small freight trains to the more prestigious passenger workings. In later years they also worked between Glasgow Queen Street and Edinburgh. These particular trains were known as the ‘Push Pulls’ as the Class 47 could be driven from a DBSO coach which saved valuable time at terminal stations. They were also utilised on royal trains and have worked charters to Fort William, Mallaig and Kyle of Lochalsh. Class 47 locomotives received many upgrades over the years including the fitting of ETS (Electric Train Supply) for heating and lighting to work with more advanced coaching stock. Colin documents the Class 47 from the late 1960s into the BR era and through to privatisation and beyond.
Additional Information
| Stock Code | A3001.0 |
|---|---|
| Author | Howat CJ |
| ISBN13 | 9781398130012 |
| Format | Softback |
| Height(mm) | 234 |
| Width(mm) | 165 |
| Page Count | 96 |
| Pictures | 180 |
| Publication Date | 15 Sept 2026 |
| Publication Status | Not yet published |
| Publisher | AMBERLEY PUBLISHING |
| Record last updated | 11/06/2026 |
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