The Biggest Little Railway in the World explained

The
Biggest Little Railway
in the World
Status:Closed
Locale:Scottish Highlands
Start:Corpach
End:Inverness Castle[1]
Stations:2
Character:Model railway
Stock:Gas-Steam, Battery-Electric, Wooden
Linelength Mi:71[2]
Tracklength Mi:74[3]
Tracks:1
Speed Mph:3
Signalling:Vocal
Map Name:BLR Route Diagram
Map State:collapsed

The Biggest Little Railway in the World (BLR) was a temporary 71 mile (114 km) 1.25 inches (32 mm) O-gauge model railway from Fort William to the City of Inverness, the two largest settlements in the Scottish Highlands. It has been described as a crackpot project to run a model train the length of the Great Glen Way by an army of madcap enthusiasts, geeks, and engineers in the best spirit of eccentric Britishness.[4] [2]

Project

The project was headed by Dick Strawbridge, MBE.[2] It was backed by a television production with the same name as the railway. The production team and security staff were also needed to assist with the project.[5]

Project management

The project took months of planning. It was described as an operation of fiendish complexity.[2] Calls were made for the 56 volunteers determined to be needed for the project.[6] There were planning meetings at the start of each day.[2] Some disagreements occurred but were overcome by a spirit of gusto and camaraderie.[2]

Team

Engineers Claire Barratt and Hadrian Spooner who had worked on engineering projects such as Scrapheap Challenge and Salvage Squad also acted as part of the credited professional team.[3]

A team of 56 volunteers constructed and operated the line with help from local volunteers.[4]

Community involvement

The local community also assisted the enterprise at various points including the Inverness and District Model Railway Club provisioning a model station and castle for the train's arrival.[1]

Related projects

The Invergarry and Fort Augustus Railway, opened by the Victorians in 1903 and closed in 1946, had connected to the main line at Spean Bridge. It was speculated the ultimate aim was the same as the BLR's, to reach Inverness though the attempt was abandoned.[2] In 2009 James May attempted to beat the longest OO Gauge record.[7]

Route

The route began at Corpach Double Lock near Fort William and tracked the Great Glen Way past Fort Augustus to Inverness terminating at Inverness Castle. The track and infrastructure have been lifted and little evidence remains of the line.

On leaving Corpach Double Lock the track followed the south bank of the Caledonian canal for about a mile to a ferry pontoon at Banavie. A ferry crossing was required under road and railway bridges to the first lock of the Neptune Staircase. The route continued on the south bank of the canal to Gairlochy before crossing to the north bank. Following the north shore of Loch Lochy through some winding and challenging terrain and forest the line finally reached some good ground before just prior to the River Arkaig. Following nearly ten miles of good fast track the line crossed to the south bank at Laggan Locks over a truss bridge. The line joined the path of the Invergarry and Fort Augustus Railway through the Loch Oich tunnel and along the shoreline to cross the Calendonian Canal at the Aberchalder Swing Bridge. Five miles of fast straight track to Fort Augustus ensued including crossing the spectacular Aberchalder Spillway Viaduct. After Fort Augustus the line entered hilly and mountainous terrain. The Inchnacardon Canyon trestle bridge lead to Inch Mountain which the train ascended by means of a counterbalance railway system. Tracking the north west side of Loch Ness before rounding the Sron na Muic (snout of the pig) mountain the line descended down into Invermoriston. The zig-zag on Invermoriston Mountain was overcome by railway winch systems before further running alongside Loch Ness before descending down into Drumnadrochit. The original rack and pinion system used to ascend Creag Nay was discarded and the trains had to be assisted by means of temporary winches. Ten further miles mostly along Loch Ness brought the line close to Mac Gruer's Pond where the City of Inverness first came into view. The line descended past the Asylum, across to the helix spiral to which raised it up to the canal towpath. The line finally passed through Ness Islands before the final mile to the Terminus at Inverness Castle.

Engineering

The BLR had to overcome obstacles of canals, fields, paths, lochs, drops, mountains, hills and obstacles.[8]

Major challenges

Track

Finding suitable track. Conventional track cost about £7 per metre making the 70 miles unfeasible from a cost viewpoint alone. Without a viable track solution the project would have been a nonstarter. A suggestion to extrude the track meant 32 tonnes of recycled PVC could be pushed through dies for 40,000 straights and curves which solved the problem economically and effectively and enabled the scheme to pass beyond the idea stage[5]

Banavie Bridges

The BLR overcame the obstacles of main line railway swing bridge followed by a road crossing at Banavie by construction and operation of a derrick and train ferry to assist over a water hiatus.[8]

Laggan Locks canal crossing

The railway needed to cross the canal at Laggan 57.033°N -4.813°W. The A82 road at this point uses a swing bridge and it was determined The Biggest Little Railway in the World would not use this. The solution was to use a truss bridge. The bridge was later re-used at the Caledonian Helix.

Aberchalder Spillway

Crossing the Aberchalder Spillway 57.0954°N -4.7416°W, which was bridged with a 60m (200feet) viaduct. The team are outraged when Dick Strawbridge insists the Battery Electric Little John relief locomotive is used for the iconic crossing.[9]

The feature was initially variously termed a ford or a weir by the project whereas spillway seems correct, the weir being further to the southwest.[10] [11]

Inchnacardoch Canyon

The railway faced the difficulty of bridging a gap over Inchnacardoch Canyon 57.1538°N -4.6842°W just north of Fort Augustus. The Great Glen Way used a footpath unviable for the railway around this feature. A suspension bridge was not an option as a curve was needed between the entry and exit points. Uneven ground contours increased the challenge. The solution chosen was a trestle bridge. The trackbed was secured to a series of connected bespoke a-frames giving great strength while using a minimal quantity of wood. The entrance and exit points were on a different levels with a smooth gradient required throughout. The construction team used Archimedes' principle and a long clear tube filled with fluid to establish a datum height across any two points on the site so a consistent gradient could be calculated. When the build was underway it was discovered the exit would require a curve of too tight a radius for a train to circumnavigate. The solution was to extend the bridge further to a different point where a suitable curve could be achieved on exit. The resulting structure was a 905inches reverse curved wooden swerving trestle bridge which proved even able to support a 65kg (143lb) man. Silver Lady negotiated the Bridge successfully with careful driving by Andy though the lack of a parapet could have proved disastrous in the event of a derailment.[9]

Inch Mountain

Inch mountain is the BLR name for the Great Glen Way's ascent to height in Inchnacardoch forest. 57.1538°N -4.6842°W The incline exceeds even the 17% maximum gradient of Silver Lady. As the route could be divided into a small number of relatively straight sections a counterbalance railway solution was chosen. This is a form of cable railway with a train of near equal weight descending on a parallel track attached by a cable through a pulley at the top of the climb. In this implementation a sister locomotive Silver Lady II was used as counterweight and the locomotives achieved sufficient adhesion to bring Silver Lady up the inclines.

Invermoriston Mountain

The challenge on Invermoriston Mountain 57.2176°N -4.6067°W was to overcome a series of zig-zag gradients. The solution chosen was to construct a hand cranked winch that could be attached to the locomotive via a cable. The navvies found an efficient method of track construction at this site by getting quad bikes to drop bundles of track at the top of a slope allowing the navvy to simply join lengths of track at the top in a sitting position and gravity feed the track down the slope. In practice the winch system proved to be very effective.

Creag Nay

The ascent of Creag Nay 57.36°N -4.41°W presented issues of curling tracks, poor terrain and steep ascents. It was decided a rack and pinion system would be most effective. Flexible cogged belt was stuck on a wooden baton which was glued to the centre of a track. This engaged with a cog wheel fitted on the axle of the Silver Lady. The navvies completed the construction successfully, albeit the wet climatic conditions interfering with the adhesive. Testing with a supplied gear wheel proved successful but unfortunately there was no testing with a real locomotive before the first train came to pass. When tried operationally it was found that while successfully causing the locomotive to climb the gradient the centre tooth belt was set too high meaning the locomotive was not properly resting on both rails and having an extreme propensity to toppling over. The belt was therefore ripped out and an improvised winch system based on an electric drill used to assist the locomotive up the slope.

Caledonian Helix

At the point the Great Glen Way rejoins the Caledonian Canal on the outskirts of Inverness there was 5m (16feet) near vertical climb in a restricted space. This was solved by a spiral loop solution matching Silver Lady's 2 ft minimum curve radius and restricting to an 8% maximum gradient. The solution also re-used the truss bridge from the Laggan Locks canal crossing.

Rolling stock

(All Locomotives built and supplied by Roundhouse Engineering Co Ltd)

Silver Lady Class

Silver Lady[12]
Powertype:Steam
Builder:Roundhouse Engineering Co Ltd, Doncaster.
Whytetype:0-6-0T
Gauge:
convertible
Minimumcurve:2feet[13]
Over Bufferbeams:315mm
Width:125mm
Height:160mm
Locoweight:3.3kg (07.3lb)
Fueltype:Gas
Boilerpressure:40 psi[14]
Valvegear:Walschaerts (simplified)
Maxspeed:3mph+
Operator:BLR
Preservedunits:1
Notes:
The Biggest Little Railway in the World
Above:Additional Specifications
Label1:Suspension
Data1:fullysprung
Label2:Control
Data2:R/C
Label3:Max. forward gradient
Data3:12%
Label4:Max. curve gradient
Data4:8%
Label5:Max. reverse gradient
Data5:17%

The Silver Lady Class locomotive was a development of the Lady Anne Class but featuring a sprung chassis, water top up system and other detail refinements.[12]

Silver Lady

Silver Lady completed the run from Fort William to Inverness whilst being relieved by Little John for a couple of sections.

Silver Lady II

An additional Silver Lady class locomotive was used in support. It was fitted with patterned wheels needed for extreme climbing performance. As well as use on the counterbalance climb it was used as the relief locomotive on hill climbing sections and where urgent repairs were needed to the main locomotive.[14]

Lady Anne Class

The Lady Anne Class was a classic design and the precursor to the Silver Lady Class.

Lady Anne

The Lady Anne was used for driver training and evaluation at the main depot. It also participated in evaluating prototype design testing for the Caledonian Helix and stood in for Silver Lady on a photoshoot of the Aberchalder Viaduct.[14]

Little John Class

The Little John Class is a 0-4-0 battery-electric locomotive modeled on a diesel shunter.

Little John

Little John was the yellow class leader that substituted for Silver Lady while she was undergoing service or when steam support engineers were not available on the longer overnight catch-up runs. Little John was also involved in Special ops support operations such as filming from a locomotive driver's eyeline.[14]

James

This grey Little John class locomotive was used to test the Inchnacardoch Canyon trellis.[15]

Coaching Stock

Wooden styled coaching stock operated near Fort William only. At least one coach was built by volunteer Paul. The coaches were susceptible to blowing over in the wind, throwing the whole train onto its side. Additional ballast weights placed under one coach may have contributed to the axle dislocation and the coach becoming unserviceable.

Operations

Support staff, needed to keep the project going and the train operational, meant the total number of people involved, excluding local community volunteers, was approximately 171.[5]

Tracklaying

The tracklaying teams were challenged to try to lay an average of 5miles of track each day.[3]

Train operations

The original scheme was to share locomotive driving amongst the volunteers, however as Silver Lady began to fall critically behind schedule it was deemed necessary to predominately use a top-link team composed of live-steam experienced people who could operate the locomotive smoothly and efficiently.[5] [1] [14] This included Andy, a professional train driver, model rail hobbyist and volunteer driver on the Severn Valley Railway,[16] [1] and Cameron, engineering ambassador alumnus of St Helens College, miniature steam train driver, and founder of his own heritage engineering restoration business at age 17.[17] [18]

Train schedule

Only one journey was ever made on The Biggest Little Railway in the World, and while the train experienced delays en-route the final arrival at Inverness Castle was approximately on time.

! Location! 57.1452°N -4.6808°W! Distance(approx)! Planned! Actual! Delay! Notes
Corpach Double Lock (d)56.842°N -5.123°W0miles23 June 13:0023 June 13:00-1 hrDay 4 start, Load one carriage
MP 0.250.25miles15m-1 hr
Banavie ferry pontoon56.8435°N -5.0986°W1miles23 June23 June-1 hr
Ferry (launch)56.8435°N -5.0986°W1miles23 June23 June
Neptune's Staircase ferry terminal56.845°N -5.0958°W1.1miles23 June23 June 16:00Following recovery
Neptune's Staircase ferry turntable56.845°N -5.0958°W1.1miles23 June24 June 11:20align="center"-1 dayDay 5 start, 20m delay water in gas burner
Muirshearlich56.8771°N -5.0529°W4miles23 June24 June
Moy Bridge (a)-->56.8983°N -5.0188°W6miles24 June
Moy Bridge (d)56.8983°N -5.0188°W6miles25 JuneDay 6 start
R. Lochy Weir bridge56.8983°N -5.0188°W6.9miles25 June
Gairlochy swingbridge56.913°N -4.9973°W7.3miles25 June
Gairlochy Bay56.916°N -4.9952°W7.6miles<-- 0.25 From Gairlochy Swingbridge .. alt route possible?? TBC -->25 June17% incline - first reverse climb
Gairlochy Bay Summit25 JuneOnly about 100m or even less.
D Bridge56.9246°N -4.9805°W<-- Right cords for wrong stream? -->8.6miles25 JuneOne of these streams, jerky ride
Salmon Point North (a)56.9394°N -4.987°W9.6miles25 JunePrevious terrain described by Dick as positively evil
Salmon Point North (d)56.9394°N -4.987°W9.6miles26 JuneDay 7 start
Achnacarry Interchange56.8771°N -5.0528°W9.9miles26 JuneBoiler water empty 100m later, 3hr stoppage
River Arkaig56.9457°N -4.9816°W10.5miles26 June
Clunes Forest Parkway56.954°N -4.9552°W11.6miles26 JuneNext Loch Lochy NW shore
Dearg Allt (a)56.988°N -4.894°W15.1miles26 June 11:0026 June 18:00In S. Laggan Forest, L. Lochy shore
Dearg Allt (d)56.988°N -4.894°W<-- Day 8 startpoint : VERIFIED as somewhere reasonably nearby NW shore L.Lochy -->15.1miles27 June 08:00Day 8 start, continuing Loch Lochy NW shore
Laggan Lochs57.0259°N -4.8254°W19miles27 JuneTruss bridge
Great Glen Water Park57.0433°N -4.8039°W20.5miles27 June
Invergarry railway station57.046°N -4.797°W20.8miles27 June
Loch Oich tunnel57.083°N -4.749°W24.1miles27 June61m (200feet)
Easter Aberchalder Hydro Bridge57.0874°N -4.7435°W24.4miles27 June
Aberchalder Swing Bridge (a)57.0927°N -4.7444°W24.8miles28 June 00:05Stopped after midnight after crossing bridge
Aberchalder Swing Bridge (d)57.0927°N -4.7444°W24.8miles28 JuneDay 9 start, Little John takes over
Aberchalder Spillway Viaduct57.0954°N -4.7416°W25miles<--0.5mi from Aberchalder S.B. -->28 June
Cullochy Lock57.098°N -4.74°W25.2miles28 June350 m past lock Silver Lady takes over after refuelling fire
Kytra Lock57.1226°N -4.7224°W27.2miles28 June
Fort Augustus57.1452°N -4.6808°W29.2miles<-- 0.9 miles from the Canyon -->28 June 11:10
Inchnacardoch Canyon57.1538°N -4.6842°W<-- Needs Xcheck -->30.1miles28 JuneTrestle bridge
Inch Mountain Summit57.1626°N -4.6596°W<-- Needs Xcheck -->31.5miles<-- 2.3 ml to Portclair Burn 1.4ml from the Canyon-->28 JuneClimbed by counterbalance
Portclair Burn Bridge57.1874°N -4.6274°W33.8miles<-- 0.3ml from Innerack Burn Bridge -->28 JuneApproaching side of 'Snout of the Pig' mountain
Innerack Burn Bridge57.191°N -4.623°W<-- 2.3ml to Moriston Bridge long way ... 2ml more less steep shortcut may have been used -->34.1miles28 JuneSignificant derailment and crash
River Moriston Bridge57.2123°N -4.618°W38.7miles<-- 1.4ml to Summit -->28 JuneInvermoriston village
Invermoriston Summit Bridge57.2176°N -4.6067°W <-- Contour checked No reliable info as to actual location -->40.2miles<-- 0.5ml to Lower Viewpoint Halt, 1.4 from Moirston Bridge-->28 June
Lower Viewpoint Halt (a)57.2142°N -4.6033°W40.7miles<-- 2.4 ml to Alltsigh Bridge. 0.5 from Summit. Twee rounding-->28 June
Lower Viewpoint Halt (d)57.2142°N -4.6033°W40.7miles<-- 2.4 ml to Alltsigh Bridge -->29 June 07:55Day 10 start
Alltsigh Bridge57.2369°N -4.56°W42.2miles<-- circa 2.5ml+ to Allt Ghiubhais -->29 June
Allt Ghiubhais Bridge57.2567°N -4.5356°W43.8miles<-- 2.3/2.4ml Grotaig Clay Works -->29 June
Grotaig Burn Bridge57.2789°N -4.5063°W48miles<-- 4 Miles to R. Coiltie -->29 JuneClay Works and cafe
River Coiltie57.328°N -4.4718°W52miles<-- Actually circa 1.4m to R.Errick but rounded -->30 June 02:15Day 11, Hadrian does not know what day it is
River Errick57.3372°N -4.4802°W52.5miles30 June
Drumnadrochit Nessieland57.3377°N -4.4804°W52.6miles30 June
Drumnadrochit RNLI57.3369°N -4.4444°W53.9miles<-- Back from MP56 ... -->30 June
Milepost 5657.36°N -4.41°W56miles30 June
Allt Coire Foitaneas 57.3647°N -4.4135°W57miles <-- VERY TBC - Creag Nay Summit - 13mi from Invermoriston - 15 miles to Inverness TBC-->30 June
Allt Lon na Fiodhaige57.3855°N -4.4304°W 59miles30 June
Abriachan Eco Cafe57.3954°N -4.421°W60miles<-- A tad over 4 miles before MP64... could be 4.25 ml -->30 June
Milepost 64 (a)57.4355°N -4.3486°W<-- About Here -->64miles30 June1 Julyalign="center"-5hr+Little John finishes
Milepost 64 (d)57.4355°N -4.3486°W64miles1 July 07:001 July 07:00Day 12 start, Silver Lady resumes
Mac Gruer's Pond57.464°N -4.288°W67miles1 July1 JulyInverness in sight
Inverness District Asylum57.468°N -4.248°W67.5miles1 July1 July
Great Glen House57.468°N -4.248°W67.7miles01 July01 July
Caledonian Helix57.468°N -4.248°W69miles1 July1 July
Ness Islands57.463°N -4.232°W70miles1 July1 JulyChange for Ness Islands Railway
Inverness Castle57.4759°N -4.2253°W71miles1 July 14:001 July 14:30align="center"-0.5hr
[14]

Incidents

A number of incidents occurred during the construction and operation of the railway:

Health and safety

Health and safety was a major consideration on the project.[3]

Television series

The project was recorded and supported by a television production of the same name. Love Productions was commissioned by Channel 4 to produce the series.[20]

Notes and References

  1. News: Miniature train completes epic journey through Great Glen Way. limited. Jamie. McKenzie. The Press and Journal (Scotland). 8 February 2018.
  2. Dick Strawbridge fronts a race against the clock to lay a model railway line from Fort William to Inverness in The Biggest Little Railway in the World. limited. 5 January 2018. Benjie. Goodhart. Saga Magazine. Saga plc.
  3. News: How the world's longest model railway showed that train enthusiasts don't mind going off the rails. limited. Tom. Ough. 7 January 2018. 8 February 2018. The Daily Telegraph.
  4. News: TV review: Kiri, inside No. 9, and The Biggest Little in the World. limited. Church Times. 2 February 2018. Craig. Gillean. 6 February 2018.
  5. Web site: The Biggest Little Railway in the World, Channel 4. limited. 5 January 2018. 8 February 2018. Broadcast.
  6. Web site: Exciting new C4 series needs your help!. Women In Rail. 10 February 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20180210024753/http://womeninrail.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/C4-Model-Railway-Series-Volunteers-Flyer-JPEG.jpg. live. 10 February 2018.
  7. Book: James May's Toy Stories. Undoing Beeching. 978-1844861071. 5 October 2009. Conway. registration.
  8. News: The biggest little railway in world' Model train fans build 71-mile track across Great Glen. limited. McIver. Brian. Daily Record (Scotland). 21 January 2018. 8 February 2018.
  9. The Biggest Little Railway in the World - Series 1 Episode 4. 10 February 2018. Radio Times. Butcher. David.
  10. Web site: Aberchalder Weir. CANMORE National Record of the Historic Environment. 14 February 2018. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20180214192039/https://canmore.org.uk/site/333954/aberchalder-weir. 14 February 2018.
  11. Web site: Aberchalder Spillway. CANMORE National Record of the Historic Environment. 14 February 2018. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20180214134942/https://canmore.org.uk/site/333955/aberchalder-spillway. 14 February 2018.
  12. Web site: Technical specifications for 'Silver Lady'. 10 February 2018. Roundhouse. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20180210082929/http://www.roundhouse-eng.com/silverlady.htm. 10 February 2018.
  13. Web site: Roundhouse Silver Lady 0-6-0T Live Steam Locomotive. 15 June 2020. live. 15 June 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200615013010/https://www.track-shack.com/garden-railways/roundhouse-16mm-live-steam/roundhouse-silver-lady-0-6-0t-live-steam-locomotive-roundhouse-silver-lady.
  14. Web site: Silver Lady in Scotland. An account of her journey, as featured in 'The Biggest Little Railway In The World'. Lee. Chris. Roundhouse. 17 February 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180217163545/http://www.roundhouse-eng.com/slscotland.htm. live. 17 February 2018.
  15. The Biggest Little Train In the World. Andy. Christie. Garden Rail. Cover and feature article. March 2018. 283.
  16. Web site: CrossCountry gives a new meaning to 'meals on wheels'. limited. 22 February 2017. bbpmedia.
  17. Web site: Cameron James Stephenson - "St Helens College is the place where I found my passion for the future". St Helens College. 8 February 2018. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20180208215129/http://sthelens.ac.uk/Cameron. 8 February 2018.
  18. News: Engineer Cameron makes TV debut in model rail show. limited. 12 January 2018. Liam. Soutar. Johnston Press. 8 February 2018.
  19. News: Lochaber midges prove fierce obstacle to biggest little railway. limited. 11 January 2018. The Oban Times.
  20. Web site: C4 orders model railway series from Love Productions. 22 March 2018. 20 April 2017. Real Screen. Chignall. Selina. limited.