Work begins... |
Dave holds up the injector internals |
The blown seal |
A small team of people spent Saturday cleaning 35006 as well. |
3850 came in for a fair amount of attention on Saturday, its boiler needing the surface rust removing and given a coat of rust inhibiting primer before it can be Non-Destructively Tested (NDT), and a list of tasks to bring it up to scratch for a further 10 years can be created. It is interesting to compare the mud hole doors at the bottom end of the throatplate. The centre section was replaced during its first overhaul, the corners were not.
Bottom edge of the throatplate |
Centre mudhole door |
One of the corner mudhole doors |
Needle gunning isn't exactly everybody's favourite job. By the time that you have festooned yourself with ear defenders, goggles, dust mask, gloves etc, you are very much in your own little cocoon, not the most sociable of activities. Fortunately, these days, health & safety regulations require that you only do such things for relatively short periods of time, white finger syndrome being the outcome if you over do it.
David F, needle gunning the boiler barrel |
Safety valveattachment pad |
After a fair bit of needle gunning |
David H priming some of the areas that David F had needle gunned earlier |
Meanwhile, Eleanor was ploughing a lonely furrow in the David Page shed, removing accumulated grease from the front running plates, which will soon be sent off for grit blasting and priming.
Eleanor, de-greasing 3850's front running plates |
Beyond repair |
Wire brushing the chimney |
Dinmore Manor's tender |
Mark measuring up before fabricating the new guard irons |
4270 has apparently been suffering from a steam leak from the driver's side piston valve, so that was removed for a bit of fettling.
Piston valve removed |
The piston valve, on the bench, after whatever remedial work had been undertaken... |
...re-installed and a warming fire put in, ready for a steam test on Sunday |
By the ash pit... |
...outside the office... |
...and in the workshop. |
Tom(l) with inspector Irving. |
Congratulations Tom on making the grade.
I'm sure I've seen a laser being used to derust metal, is this too far gone for this method?
ReplyDeleteHi Gordon,
ReplyDeleteI rummaged about for a link and found this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CLaBFkeHG0A
It looks absolutely marvelous, the only slight drawback is the $600,000 price tag, which is substantially more than the projected budget for the entire restoration of 3850. It isn't impossible that prices will drop in the fullness of time, but it would need to be by a couple of orders of magnitude before we would consider it.
Kind regards
Ray
Could you have a word with the diesel dept. please, as I cannot see a comments doodah on their page; but they are still advertising "Diesels in July" and we are now nearly out of August. Just a note. BTW St Blazey turntable looks much better now it's weed & litter free and being used. Regards, Paul.
ReplyDeleteHello Paul,
DeleteI'm afraid that I have no idea regarding who to contact in the diesel dept. Hopefully one of them will spot this message and give whoever is responsible a bit of a nudge.
Kind regards
Ray