Condor (express freight)
The Condor was an overnight fast freight train service in Great Britain. It operated between London and Glasgow, and all freight was carried in containers. The name was derived from 'CONtainers DOoR-to-Door'.
Modernisation of British Railways
Following the :en:1955 Modernisation Plan|1955 Modernisation Plan, British Railways embarked on a series of modernisation plans in all areas of operation, including freight.Faster freight services had been a goal as far back as the end of the Great War, with fast, overnight services between major marshalling yards. 'Liner' or trunked services were scheduled long-haul freight services, between regional freight depots, usually run overnight. If a wagon load was in the marshalling yard that day, it could have a guaranteed next-day arrival at a similar yard, even travelling the length of the country. Part of the goal was to reduce marshalling for the railway company, who wished to concentrate freight marshalling at fewer, larger and better equipped marshalling yards. In 1928, the LNER had introduced their 'Green Arrow' service.
By the 1950s, there were additional target goals: still a faster freight service to be more attractive than the growing competition from road haulage, but mostly a reduction in operating costs by reducing the manual effort needed in handling freight. A key part of this was to be containerisation, replacing the network of railway goods sheds and manual loading in and out of vans, by pre-loaded containers from the customer factories loaded onto railway wagons by mechanical cranes. There would also be a centralisation of freight services: as well as the increasing development of and investment in marshalling yards, as much freight as possible would become block trains, where a single rake of freight wagons shuttled continuously between two large depots, without needing to stop for shunting operations. Containers were key to this: road haulage would provide local flexibility to move the loads to and from the customer warehouses and the rail operation would concentrate on rapid transfers between a handful of large depots.
The 'container' to be used for this traffic was not the modern familiar stackable :en:intermodal container|intermodal container or TEU, but a much earlier version, the railway Conflat. These were smaller, lighter, wooden containers which resembled a demounted railway wagon body, included the curved roof. They dated from the 1920s in design and were sized for lifting by the mobile cranes of the day. The Conflat wagons were four-wheeled, vacuum-braked, and could carry either one Type B container or two smaller Type A.
''Condor''
Condor was the exemplar service for this new containerised operation. A single route would operate, linking the manufacturing base of Glasgow with the consumers of central London. Return traffic was largely imported raw materials, supplied from London's docks.The route was from Hendon in north-west London, on the Midland Main Line, to Gushetfaulds freight depot, near :en:Glasgow South Side railway station|Glasgow South Side railway station.
Each Condor train was of 27 four-wheeled Conflats, of a new design with roller bearing axles to allow the fastest running and without the risk of stopping for a 'hot box'. Each could carry one or two containers, the containers carrying up to 8 tons. The Conflats for Condor were heavier at 35.5 tons than earlier examples and were later given their own TOPS code of FC. The train's gross weight could be up to 550 tons. The cost of hiring a container in 1962 was £16 or £18, depending on size, and this included road pickup and delivery by British Road Services lorries, inside Greater London or within 10 miles of Glasgow.
The service ran daily, one each way, and ran overnight to obtain the clearest running. Both left almost simultaneously, after 7 pm and would arrive some time before 6 am. The 10 hour long service required a very brief, two minute, stop at :en:Carlisle Citadel railway station|Carlisle, at the change of a crew shift, rather than any limitation of the train.
Haulage
The first Condor services were hauled by pairs of the newly built :en:Metro-Vick Type 2 Co-Bo locomotive|Metro-Vick Type 2 Co-Bo locomotives, later known as the :en:BR Class 28|class 28. These were 1,200 bhp locomotives, used in pairs. Pairs were needed as the dieselisation process was still new to Britain and the more powerful Type 4 locomotives were in short supply and in demand for passenger services. The Type 28 had a relatively high tractive effort for a Type 2 loco, of 50,000 lbf compared to 42,000 lbf for the Sulzer Type 2. They also had five driven axles, rather than four, giving good traction without wheelslip. The Metro-Vicks were fitted for multiple working, so although two locos were needed, there was only one crew. Their 'Red Circle' connection system of multiple working was not widely used on BR, compared to the contemporary 'Blue Star', and few other classes used it; hence the Metro-Vicks were used throughout. The Condor service was well-suited to the Metro-Vicks, as the night working allowed a relatively constant power output, with little other traffic to cause signals checks.Their Crossley two-stroke engines were unreliable though, and prone to black smoke when throttling up. A further, more unusual, problem with the Metro-Vicks was with their front windscreens. These wrapped around the corners of the cab, to give a better view to the sides, but the engine's vibration could be enough to make the glass panes fall out of their frames. When cracking problems with their crankcases became evident after a few years, the locomotives were withdrawn from service and the engines rebuilt by Crossley.
If a locomotive failed, it was replaced by another, and often this would be a Sulzer Type 2 as the Metro-Vicks were only stabled at the ends of the service, not inbetween. In rare cases, a steam locomotive might be all that was available, usually a Black 5. In either case there could be no multiple working and an extra crew was required.
In service
1959
The first Condor services began in the Spring of 1959.The service was not an immediate success. By August 1959, the formation had been cut in half, now being hauled by only a single locomotive. Traffic grew though and within a year it was running at full traffic capacity.
1961
In 1961, the unreliable Metro-Vicks were all withdrawn temporarily for their engines to be refurbished by the makers, :en:Crossley|Crossley, in the hope of avoiding their problems. A further problem had developed, that of crankcase cracking in one particular corner. Derby-Sulzer Type 2s, later renumbered as the :en:British Rail Class 24|Class 24s, took over the Condor.When the Class 28s returned, they had also had their distinctive wrap-around windshields replaced with flat glass, which no longer tended to fall out. The class was redeployed to the :en:Barrow-in-Furness railway station|Barrow depot, where they worked out the rest of their short careers mostly on passenger services until they were all withdrawn by 1968.
1963
In 1963 an additional service from Birmingham to Glasgow was added. This ran from :en:Aston|Aston in Birmingham to Glasgow. Class 24s were the usual motive power from its introduction on 17 January 1963, when D5082 hauled the Down train and D5083 the up train, until replaced by the first :en:Freightliner Group#History|Freightliner service in 1965.After the Class 28s and Class 24s, the Condor was hauled by a single Type 4 locomotive.
Freightliner
Condor was successful, and to some extent this individual service became a victim of its own success. Beeching's 1963 report The Reshaping of British Railways is better known for the cuts it imposed on the branch line network, but it also advocated a shift in almost all freight traffic to replace wagonload traffic with container services. However these containers would be the newly popular stackable rectangular containers, rather than the older railway standard containers, as used by Condor.In the mid-1960s, BR's emphasis shifted to the new Freightliner service. Beeching's plan was for a national network of 55 container depots and by 1968, 17 of these were in operation, including Gushetfauld. Condor was withdrawn in 1965. Most of the early adopters were existing customers, sending bulk trainload cargoes, although now packed into containers. An important one was :en:Ford of Britain|Ford, who used this to integrate car production across Europe, shipping bodyshells for final assembly across the Channel, by the Dover - Dunkerque train ferry. The introduction of the new TOPS computer system also allowed all operations to be tracked as registered freight, between all depots.