The BR standard class 3 prairie tank was among the first British outline loco I bought when I started to dabble in modelling the British scene.
The model ran quite well straight out of the box on my test track. Unfortunately after a short while the Walschaerts valve gear decided to part company from the chassis on the fireman’s side of the loco. I’m pleased to say it was easily fixed with a few careful applications of super glue and has worked perfectly ever since.
In reality 45 of these locomotives were built at Swindon between 1952 and 1955. The first ten and the last fifteen were allocated to the Western Region. The had a similar power output to a small prairie, although physically much larger. The locos were fitted with a pipe mounted just under the roof at the back of the cab that sprayed water over the coal to lay the dust.
Back to fiction we find 82020 running bunker first arriving at Broadoak with a couple of cement wagons. They are then shunted into the Medusa Cement Company’s silo were the cement is loaded into the huge silos. Some is used locally and some is bagged and later distributed on pallets by lorries or in railway vans.
This set up gives an excuse for more wagon movements thus increasing the operating potential.



This last picture shows the coal watering pipe quite well.

Peter M