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Maikha
Not a gunzel

Joined: Sep 06, 2003 Last Visited: Nov 21, 2008 Location: Wagga Wagga, NSW
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Posted: Mon Apr 07, 2008 1:44 pm
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Hi all
Due to their costs, I generally am limited in the amount of Railway books I have on my shelf. However, yesterday, I couldn't resist a special offer from the authors of one book, and got a copy at the AMRA/nsw open day, signed.
Railway Portraits - Robert and Bruce Wheatley, has some really great photos in there, not just of former NSWGR steam locomotives, but the men who worked them in many long forgotten environments.
I've been quite swept away by this book, and personally recommend it to anyone who's interested in NSWGR history and great historical railway photography.
In saying this, I'd like to open the thread to anyone who have particular favourite railway books in their collection, Australian or otherwise. Another one of mine I got recently, 2nd hand, is "Steam, Steel and Stars" which features the spectacular night steam photography by O Winston Link.
Fire away!
Cheers
Maikha Ly
The Intercity Platform & Valve Gear Media!
http://www.theintercityplatform.com/
Comments made are that of my own, and do not reflect those of organisations mentioned.
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R704
Deputy Commissioner
Joined: Oct 10, 2004 Last Visited: Nov 21, 2008 Location: Who cares you ain't gonna visit!
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Posted: Mon Apr 07, 2008 3:24 pm
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i have lots, probably over 100.
ranging from loco manuals, rules and regs, signaling, workings, 3 novels, and many pictorial and historical based books.
i'll have to make a list when i get home
The destroyer of toys & builder of models
3801 - Scrap metal on wheels
R766 - Its bastardized replacement from the south
OOH i'm a lumberjack and i'm OK i sleep all night and i work all day.
If you want to loose weight, Don't eat anything that comes in a bucket!
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macey
Assistant Commissioner
Joined: Mar 18, 2005 Last Visited: Nov 21, 2008 Location: Looking for where you live....
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Posted: Mon Apr 07, 2008 3:45 pm
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Just some im my shelf
Railway Portraits
30 class standerds in steam
32 class " "
50 class " "
53 55 class " "
P class
59 class
36 class
60 class
38 class
time of the passenger train 1,2,3
day of the goods train
coaching stock 1,2
tender into tank
South maitland railways
locomotives of australia
trackside 1,2
a century of loco hauled nsw hauled passenger carriages
green diesels
mercy trains
seasons of steam
away with steam
the last day of steam (another book by Robert and Bruce Wheatley)
remember when 2
There are a heap others but cant be bothered writing them all down
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Z1NorthernProgress2110
Chief Commissioner
Joined: Nov 30, 2004 Last Visited: Nov 22, 2008 Location: Burnie, Tasmania
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Posted: Mon Apr 07, 2008 3:59 pm
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Got a few, from the special Clyde lift out, out of Network Rail mag to the proper size books.
But, my favorite book, the one that i read the most is Motive Power by Leon Oberg, second fave would be that fantastic Port Dock published South Australian Diesel Pictorial, the 80s.
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TE2815
Minister for Railways
Joined: Mar 19, 2004 Last Visited: Nov 22, 2008 Location: Under the newsdesk !
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Posted: Mon Apr 07, 2008 5:00 pm
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I have and have had several. Some I wish I had kept.
When I moved recently I disposed of the Endeavour/Xplorer diagram book.
Photography wise I have "Among their favourites" which was given to me by one the photographers who frequented Picton when I worked there as a thank you, or gift, for the assistance given to railfans. (Before the "incident" that is).
Some others I have:Latest Locomotives of Australia
Along Parallel Lines (2 copies)
Australian Railway Disasters
Byways of Steam 4 and 6
Picton to Mittagong Loop Line and Main Line Railway
Rail Motors of NSW
Sydney's Forgotten: City Railways, Military Railways
Sydney's Central
75 Years of the Mountain Railway (Moss Vale-Unanderra Line Line that is)
I have been going to get Sydney's Electric Trains, but waiting to order it with something else to save postage .
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Colhad
Deputy Commissioner
Joined: Apr 29, 2004 Last Visited: Oct 30, 2008 Location: Watching 2300 class hauled coalies out at Wulkuraka.
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Posted: Mon Apr 07, 2008 8:05 pm
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I have a few, let's see....
Motive Power (The book by Leon Oberg)
Trains of the World (Brian Hollingsorth)
I have a couple of other ones that I can't remember the names of.
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MBAX
Chief Commissioner
Joined: Jun 22, 2006 Last Visited: Nov 21, 2008 Location: Depot No 19 Clyde
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Posted: Mon Apr 07, 2008 8:45 pm
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If you are interested in reading about South Australian Railways from the mid 60's to mid 80's one of my favourites is a book called "Wouldn't Have Missed it For Quids" by Cliff Olds.
The book was published in 1996 and is a very entertaining look at Cliff Old's railway career from the Peterborough Division (all gauges) to finishing up in the 80's around Mount Gambier and the mainline Board with VR and SAR locos running interstate operations.
If you see it this one is well worth buying, some great photos too.
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Gwiwer
Rt Hon Gentleman and Ghost of Oliver Bulleid
Joined: Nov 22, 2003 Last Visited: Nov 22, 2008 Location: Far away yet close at hand in images of elsewhere
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Posted: Mon Apr 07, 2008 9:55 pm
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I don't have as many reference works as perhaps might be the case for someone considered by others to be a more senior enthusiast. One of the reasons is that I had to make some choices when shifting to Australia some 8 years ago in that it simply wasn't possible to pack 30+ years-worth of magazine runs and a large number of books most of which might have never been read or referred to more than once. The sale of these items helped fund the big move.
The library currently holds around 150 titles of reference interest ranging from slim softbound line guides to the reprinted July 1922 "Bradshaw" and including a couple of superb works illustrating respectively the artwork of Terence Cuneo and the Great Western Railway in early photographs. There are also magazine runs dating from the re-start of my collection in January 2000 and single copies of those magazines to which I do not subscribe but bought and kept for specific articles of interest.
Of the reference titles there are several in the landscape pictorial format currently popular in the UK with large photos and extended captions rather than full text. I find these show in photographic form much more than can be described in as many pages of text and are invaluable also for modelling reference.
On the more general side there have been some notable reads:-
"The Railway Station" (Jeffrey Richards and John M McKenzie, first published 1986) is a fascinating broad-brush socio-economic history and potrayal of the importance of the railway station worldwide.
"The Ghan" (Basil Fuller, first published 1975) is a remarkable account of the reasoning behind, surveying, construction, operation and ultimate demise of the early narrow gauge Ghan operation. It includes some rare very early photographs including one of Quorn station yard in the 1880's and another of the "slow mixed" (which became known as "The Afghan", later shortened to the "'Ghan") comprising an early steam loco, numerous open goods trucks and cattle wagons plus a few passenger coaches at the rear.
"The Big Red Train Ride" (Eric Newby, 1978) is a portrayal of two Westerner's experiences on the Trans-Siberian "Rossiya" train in Soviet days and at times is as tedious to read as the journey must have been for Mr and Mrs Newby. As a piece of travel writing it gives a wonderful insight into a classic (though far from comfortable and easy) journey and the lives of ordinary Soviet people which would otherwise have seldom if ever been brought of the notice of the Western world. He mentions at times the determined efforts of the train crew to prevent him talking with locals and taking pictures.
I also treasure my signed copy of "Coach North", a novel by Phillip McCutcheon, for which I researched and provided much of the technical information and gave advice on operating methods of the time.
There are three books which I would dearly love to have in the library but first I have to write them! The outline plans exist as does a little of the research but until such time as I can be supported by other means than near-full time employment I have not the time to pursue these projects. No matter as they can probably wait a little longer. Two projects are transport related and one has been discussed privately with a few members of our community (among others) while the third will be travel writing in the sense that it shall be an account of my travels upon Shank's Pony.
CEO Penhayle Bay Railway. Ferroequinologist. BA Hons (Honourable Bachelor of Aquatarts  )
The wise yet mysterious Sir Gwiwer Greybeard
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Ballast_Plough
Chief Commissioner
Joined: Nov 16, 2006 Last Visited: Nov 22, 2008 Location: Lilydale, Vic
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Posted: Tue Apr 08, 2008 12:20 am
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"Red For Danger" by L.T.C. Rolt is excellent stuff.
My pics here - and the Forsayth Goods here!
Brendan McKenna
Member / Volunteer PBR, YVTR, past member of PRR, VGR!!!
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MarkWaller2
Junior Train Controller
Joined: Jul 24, 2007 Last Visited: Nov 20, 2008 Location: Cambridge, England
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Posted: Tue Apr 08, 2008 8:55 am
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| Ballast_Plough wrote: | | "Red For Danger" by L.T.C. Rolt is excellent stuff. |
Indeed so - it's my favourite railway book, and one of very few that I re-read every now and then for its own sake. For those who don't know it, it's a history of British railway accidents, and the safety developments that resulted from them (rolling stock design, signalling, etc.). It sounds as if it might be either unreadably dry, or luridly sensationalist; in fact, it steers a middle course, telling the story lucidly and vividly, and with sympathy for the railwaymen involved. The content is derived from the official reports of the Railway Inspectorate, which was responsible for investigating railway accidents and making recommendations for the their prevention.
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duttonbay
Chief Commissioner
Joined: May 26, 2003 Last Visited: Nov 22, 2008
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Posted: Tue Apr 08, 2008 9:43 am
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| Gwiwer wrote: | | "The Big Red Train Ride" (Eric Newby, 1978) is a portrayal of two Westerner's experiences on the Trans-Siberian "Rossiya" train in Soviet days and at times is as tedious to read as the journey must have been for Mr and Mrs Newby. As a piece of travel writing it gives a wonderful insight into a classic (though far from comfortable and easy) journey and the lives of ordinary Soviet people which would otherwise have seldom if ever been brought of the notice of the Western world. He mentions at times the determined efforts of the train crew to prevent him talking with locals and taking pictures. |
This *used* to be in my collection too, but was confiscated in 1983 by customs when entering the then Soviet Union at Nakhodka, after crossing from Japan and about to make my own journey across the USSR. The official said "there's nothing in there that is true". On the contrary, I found that most of what Newby had written seemed to me to be pretty much true...
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Valvegear
Deputy Commissioner
Joined: Dec 07, 2007 Last Visited: Nov 21, 2008 Location: Norda Fittazroy
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Posted: Tue Apr 08, 2008 10:20 am
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The favourite on my shelf is "Hudson Power". Beside it are two of Lloyd Holmes' books; "A Railway Life", and "The Branch Line" .
"Red for Danger" is there as well.
I also own assorted handbooks such as Westinghouse Air Brake for both steam and electric; the VR Gradients and Curves book circa 1925, and a couple of editions of Victorian Stations ( useful for solving the cryptics in another post!)
I also inherited a notebook listing the details of Indicator Card tests on H220's first run in February 1941. As well as the notebook, I have the original Indicator Cards. The book also lists details of another H220 test run in 1948.
It's an interesting assortment.
Cynic - a man who smells flowers and immediately looks for the funeral.
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Broadway
Station Master
Joined: Jan 26, 2006 Last Visited: Jul 26, 2008
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Posted: Mon Apr 14, 2008 10:50 pm
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'Red for Danger' for me as well.
Also 'Beyond Hidden Dangers' by Stanley Hall - another study of British Railway accidents which deals in particular with the series of terrible accidents in the late 1990's / early 00's in the UK (Southall, Ladbroke Grove, Hatfield and Great Heck)
And the best pictorial railway book I've seen in ages, 'A Bulldog Odyssey' (George Bamberry)
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bingley hall
Chief Commissioner
Joined: Nov 09, 2005 Last Visited: Nov 22, 2008 Location: gone fishin
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Posted: Tue Apr 22, 2008 9:25 am
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| Z1NorthernProgress2110 wrote: | | ...... second fave would be that fantastic Port Dock published South Australian Diesel Pictorial, the 80s. |
Who knows we might even get the 90s volume before the end of this decade
| MBAX wrote: | If you are interested in reading about South Australian Railways from the mid 60's to mid 80's one of my favourites is a book called "Wouldn't Have Missed it For Quids" by Cliff Olds.
The book was published in 1996 and is a very entertaining look at Cliff Old's railway career from the Peterborough Division (all gauges) to finishing up in the 80's around Mount Gambier and the mainline Board with VR and SAR locos running interstate operations.
If you see it this one is well worth buying, some great photos too. |
Still available, the NRM at Port Adelaide always have copies.
Bing
Life is just a bowl of All Bran...you wake up every morning and it's there
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Z1NorthernProgress2110
Chief Commissioner
Joined: Nov 30, 2004 Last Visited: Nov 22, 2008 Location: Burnie, Tasmania
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Posted: Tue Apr 22, 2008 1:09 pm
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| bingley hall wrote: |
Who knows we might even get the 90s volume before the end of this decade
Bing |
I did email National Rail museum a while ago asking about a 90s version. They told me that it won't be done. But, with that wink, do you know some inside info?
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