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321 Products Found

BR Conflat Container Wagon

‘Conflat A’ Container Wagon with BD container (diagram 3/050) 4500 were built in 1955/56 purely to carry containers. The BD was the most common general merchandise container on BR. Over 9000 were built to this diagram.
These finely moulded plastic wagon kits come complete with pin point axle wheels and bearings. Glue and paint will be required, along with appropriate transfers . Additional parts to enable the vehicle to be modelled incorporating modifications made to the prototypes during their working life are included where appropriate.

BR FM Container

Diagram 3/201; a Conflat wagon or road vehicle load. As supplied with Conflat A Container Wagon kit PC46.

BR Grampus Engineers Wagon

Over 700 of these vacuum braked Grampus (diagram 1/572) were built around 1960 to carry track materials. This kit can also make the air braked Rudd, built from the early 1990s. These finely moulded plastic wagon kits come complete with pin point axle wheels and bearings. Glue and paint will be required, along with appropriate transfers. Additional parts to enable the vehicle to be modelled incorporating modifications made to the prototypes during their working life are included where appropriate.

BR Rudd 21ton Ballast Wagon

Built on ex-hopper chassis, these wagons carry mainly waste ballast. Drop side doors are a feature of this design. These finely moulded plastic wagon kits come complete with pin point axle wheels and bearings. Glue and paint will be required, along with appropriate transfers. Additional parts to enable the vehicle to be modelled incorporating modifications made to the prototypes during their working life are included where appropriate.

BR Shock Absorbing Open Wagon

Introduced 1955-1958, these wagons (diagram 1/050) carried fragile traffic from earthenware pipes to whisky barrels. Our model features adjustable body and tarpaulin rail. These finely moulded plastic wagon kits come complete with pin point axle wheels and bearings. Glue and paint will be required, along with appropriate transfers. Additional parts to enable the vehicle to be modelled incorporating modifications made to the prototypes during their working life are included where appropriate.

BR Shock Absorbing Wagon

Introduced 1953 - 1956, these vans (diagram 1/209) carried fragile traffics such as biscuits, whisky and china and lasted in service until the late 1970s. These finely moulded plastic wagon kits come complete with pin point axle wheels and bearings. Glue and paint will be required, along with appropriate transfers. Additional parts to enable the vehicle to be modelled incorporating modifications made to the prototypes during their working life are included where appropriate.

BR Van 'Vanwide' with Air Brake

VEA ex Vanwide (Air Brake and FAT19 Suspension) In the late 1970s several hundred Vanwides were upgraded with air brakes and improved suspension for use in Speedlink trains. Used into the 1990s. These finely moulded plastic wagon kits come complete with pin point axle wheels and bearings. Glue and paint will be required, along with appropriate transfers. Additional parts to enable the vehicle to be modelled incorporating modifications made to the prototypes during their working life are included where appropriate.

BR Wagon Tarpaulin

OO Scale BR wagon tarpaulin, produced from a material that convincingly replicates the texture and look of canvas tarpaulins once commonly used on open wagons, to protect the contents underneath. Each product contains 8 tarpaulins.

BR/RCH 9 foot Wagon Chassis kit (Unfitted) - Double Brake

Kit and scratch builders accessory; as included in the 16 ton Mineral Wagon kit PC22.

BR/RCH 9 foot Wagon Chassis kit (Unfitted) - Morton Brake

Kit and scratch builders accessory; as included in the 16 ton Mineral Wagon kit PC21.

Brake 3rd Observation Bogie Coach

These finely moulded plastic wagon kits come complete with pin point axle wheels. Glue and paint will be required, along with appropriate transfers.

British Railways 13 Ton Steel Body Hopper (LNER)

Over 2,600 of these wagons were built for use on British Railways, between 1949 and 1953. They became synonymous with the North East Region, where coal drop staithes were commonly provided in the station goods yard, so a bottom-discharge hopper was the obvious type to use. Although intended for transporting coal, in later life they became more nomadic around the UK and were used for carrying other materials such as stone and sand. The last examples lingered in service until the early 1980s.

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