Accurascale ACC3536-DCC

BR Class 37 - BR Blue - 37088 - DCC Sound

Manufacturer catalogue image - please note that pre-release images may be CAD renders or CGI/AI images rather than photographs

Prototype Era
Era 7 (1972 to 1982) British Rail Blue (TOPS)

Manufacturer description

37088 (ex-D6788) BR Blue

Ticking off two big boxes on many customer wishlists is 37088 which responds to the calls for more Robert Stephenson & Hawthorns-constructed locomotives and for a run-of-the-mill 1970-80s BR blue split headcode machine. Originally completed at Darlington in January 1963 as D6788, the Type 3 was first allocated to Gateshead but would also call Hull Dairycotes, Tinsley and York home before the end of the same decade. Renumbered under the TOPS system in February 1974 it moved to March in October 1976, losing its bodyside water filler and associated steps around the same time along with the changeover to domino headcodes. Still with an operational boiler the Class 37 saw regular use on Liverpool Street-Cambridge-Kings Lynn/Ipswich/Norwich services as well as freight and inter-regional and summer-dated passenger diagrams. While many of its colleagues started to see their bufferbeam cowling removed from the late 1970s, this particular example survived until its last classified repair under BR in February 1984. It was transferred to Eastfield just over a year later where it gained a car-style headlight for use on the West Highland line.

                  In July 1986 it became part of Motherwell’s dedicated Ravenscraig fleet. This saw it lose its boiler but receive a new Class 37/3 number 37323 and British Steel-themed name Clydesdale after the tube works in Mossend which sadly closed in 1991. It reverted to 37088 in September 1989 to avoid confusion with the new CP7 bogie-fitted Class 37/3s and was one of the lucky recipients of the much derided General Grey scheme in June 1990. It somehow retained this appearance until June 1993 and was the last Class 37 to have its livery amended with the yellow Civil Engineer’s ‘Dutch’ band. This look was further improved in 1995 with the addition of Transrail ‘big T’ logos which complemented the red nameplates nicely. It was in this condition that it was stored in June 1996 and officially withdrawn just over two years later. It was scrapped at CF Booth, Rotherham, in October 2002. Note that as well as the distinctive  ‘split’ cantrail grilles, our model correctly omits the small grab handles either side of the nose doors, a unique RSH feature usually missed by manufacturers.

Catalogue listing

Brand
Accurascale
Product Code
ACC3536-DCC
GTIN
0781005476570
RRP
£347.95
Release date
April 2027

Model details

Livery
BR Blue
DCC status
DCC Sound Fitted

Prototype information

Locomotive class*
Class 37

* Class names often change over the lifespan of a locomotive, so this is not necessarily the class name used by the operator in the period modelled.

Supplier Links

Accurascale website


Search on Amazon


Search on eBay

Supplier links are provided for your convenience and do not guarantee that the product is currently available. RailwayModels.uk is not a representative of these suppliers, but may receive a commission when purchases are made through links on this page.

Related products

Accurascale BR Class 37 – BR Blue – 37088 – DCC Sound is a 4 mm scale model of British Rail locomotive 37088, formerly numbered D6788. The kit is supplied in BR blue livery, fitted with DCC sound, and carries the manufacturer part number ACC3536‑DCC. It represents the locomotive as it appeared under the TOPS system in the 1970s‑80s.

The prototype was built by Robert Stephenson & Hawthorns and entered service on 1 January 1963, initially allocated to Gateshead. It later operated from Hull, Tinsley and York before being renumbered 37088 on 24 February 1974. In October 1976 the locomotive moved to March, lost its bodyside water filler and adopted domino headcodes. It remained in regular passenger and freight use until its last BR repair in February 1984, after which it was transferred to Eastfield and fitted with a car‑style headlight for the West Highland line.

From July 1986 the engine joined Motherwell’s Ravenscraig fleet, was re‑numbered 37323 and named Clydesdale, before reverting to 37088 in September 1989. It received the General Grey livery in June 1990, the yellow Civil Engineer’s “Dutch” band in June 1993, and Transrail “big T” logos in 1995. The locomotive was stored in June 1996, withdrawn in 1998 and scrapped at CF Booth, Rotherham in October 2002.

The model accurately reproduces the split‑headcode cantrail grilles and deliberately omits the small grab handles on either side of the nose doors, a detail often missed by other manufacturers.

RailwayModels.uk is a Good Stuff website.

Page generated in 0.01 seconds
216.73.216.116
Wed, 17 Jun 2026 19:30:37 +0100
Jurassic Aardvark