From
The I“You’re going where?” a bemused rail passenger asks me as we’re standing at Bristol Parkway station on a Saturday morning; they’re waiting for a train to Swindon while I’m here for service that will take me into Wales.
Not for the first time in my life, I’ve had to explain to an inquisitive traveller what it means when a passenger information screen displays the message “charter train, calling at charter train only”.
Normally, I’d merrily say that I am off to York, Edinburgh, Stratford-upon-Avon or another picture-postcard destination for a day trip aboard a special train hauled by a steam locomotive. But, on this occasion, my destination is, er, a recycling centre just outside Newport behind a diesel locomotive that would normally haul freight trains.
Good and very long article - worth a read. But some of it is opinion
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Sims Metals is one of the largest recycling companies in the world – in 2023, the firm recycled eight million tonnes of metal globally – and operates 28 sites in the UK▸ .
Its Newport Docks facility has a certain notoriety among railway enthusiasts as it scraps, among other things, surplu-to -requirement trains. Among these are the 70s-built InterCity 125 trains that, until they were replaced a few years ago, would operate services along the East Coast, Great Western and Midland main lines.
There is a view that they weren't surplus to requirements and those of us who suffer from "more that normal trains requiring repair at the same time" perhaps feel that there may be trains cut up which were really not surplus to requirements ...