Given it has been 40 years since XPTs starting earning their keep on NSW rails, I thought I would pin up a selection of photos from their service. I have always been pretty ambivalent about XPTs - their Pommy heritage, the lousy food, the crappy seats and particularly poor sleepers, the fact that they were used to clear out mail trains and reduce services in regional areas - I could go on.
Over the years my opposition to them has mellowed somewhat. They were given a task to do which was beyond them basically because they are unsuited to our rail system. And the alternative was a Greyhound or a Corolla so I think you could call me a fan out of necessity. I am probably responsible for wearing one of them out, through work and holidays. And the crews have always been fantastic, charming and willing for a chat or to give help when I needed it.
Anyway, onto the photos.... here's a few from the first decade.
Exiting Sydney Steam Terminal on 28 November 1982 (and obscuring 3214 in doing so).
Memory suggests that this is the down Riverina Express - at Gib Tunnel in October 1982.
Crew change at Bathurst in 1983. Shortly after I stuffed the shot of the goods train. But always liked this shot for the way the guys are chatting calmly.
Photographed while avoiding frostbite off the footbridge railing on a bitterly cold July day in 1984.
West XPT about to head to the sheds at Meeks Road, around about the time that the West Mail was heading off. Mid 1980s, before the Greiner purge.
Up North and West XPTs at the end of their journeys. Mid 1980s again.
I am about to jump on this service to return me to Moss Vale, after a kangaroo stuck its head through the radiator of my Holden Gemini in February 1985.
Here's a Canberra service on 11 March 1987, running through the then rural setting of Wilton.
By 1991 the Countrylink livery was starting to make an appearance. Here is a mixed bunch of liveries on the up North XPT absolutely flattening it through Blandford on 25 October 1991. We had spent two days photographing 48s, 44s and 45s climb Ardglen bank - very slowly. The speed of the XPT caught me right out, hence the going away shot.
But, thanks to track alignments and speed restrictions, we did catach up with this train at Maitland. A huge electrical storm rolled through Maitland just after this photo was taken.
Don
Thanks Don for the memories
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