Bachmann 32-492

Class 40 Disc Headcode 40039 BR Green (Full Yellow Ends) (Weathered)

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

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

Manufacturer description

The Class 40 Diesel Locomotive has long been a highlight of the Bachmann Branchline OO scale fleet, and for 2023 this popular model has been upgraded to bring you more features than ever before. Finished in BR Green livery with Full Yellow Ends we have No. 40039, a Class 40 with disc headcodes which has received its TOPS number, but still carries BR Green livery. The work-worn condition of the prototype is replicated on this Branchline model using complex weathering and fading techniques.

With the DCC decoder interface upgraded to Plux22; new lighting features and enhanced speaker arrangements have also been employed on the Class 40 to enhance the operating experience. On track the model has a mighty presence, just like the real locomotives and, with its five pole, twin flywheel motor powering all six driving wheels, you can be sure of a performance to match too. This Class 40’s good looks are enriched by the superb livery application using true-to-prototype colours, fonts and logos to produce a model fit for any collection.

 

 

DETAIL VARIATIONS SPECIFIC TO THIS MODEL

 

BACHMANN BRANCHLINE CLASS 40 SPECIFICATION

MECHANISM:

DETAILING:

LIGHTING:

DCC:

SOUND:

LIVERY APPLICATION:

 

CLASS 40 HISTORY

The British Rail Class 40 is a British Railways diesel-electric locomotive, rated at 2,000 hp and classified as a Type 4. A total of 200 were built by English Electric between 1958 and 1962 and numbered in the series D200-D399. They were for a time the pride of the British Rail early diesel fleet. Despite their initial success, by the time the last examples were entering service they were already being replaced on some top-link duties by more powerful locomotives. As they were slowly relegated from express passenger uses, the type found work on secondary passenger and freight services where they worked for many years. The final locomotives ended regular service in 1985.

Class 40s operated in all areas of British Railways although Western and Southern Region workings were less common. After the early trials, the majority of Class 40s were based at depots in northern England; notably Longsight, Carlisle Kingmoor, and Wigan Springs Branch on the Midland Region, and Thornaby and Gateshead on the Eastern Region.

The heyday of the Class was in the early 1960s when they hauled top-link expresses on the West Coast Main Line and in East Anglia. However, the arrival of more powerful diesel locomotives, such as Class 47s and Class 55s, together with the electrification of the West Coast Main Line, meant that the fleet was gradually relegated to more mundane duties. In later life, the locomotives were mainly to be found hauling heavy freight and passenger trains in the north of England and Scotland. As additional new rolling stock was introduced, their passenger work decreased, partly due to their lack of electric train heating for newer passenger coaches. They lost their last front-line passenger duties - in Scotland - in 1980, and the last regular use on passenger trains was on the North Wales Coast Line between Holyhead, Crewe and Manchester, along with regular forays across the Pennines on Liverpool to York and Newcastle services.

Throughout the early 1980s Class 40s were common performers on relief, day excursion (adex) and holidaymaker services along with deputising for electric traction, especially on Sundays between Manchester and Birmingham. This resulted in visits to many distant parts of the network. It would be fair to say that few routes in the London Midland and Eastern regions did not see Class 40-worked passenger services from time to time. Regular destinations included the seaside resorts of Scarborough, Skegness and Cleethorpes on the Eastern region, with Blackpool and Stranraer being regularly visited on the West Coast.

Catalogue listing

Brand
Bachmann
Range
Branchline
Product Code
32-492
GTIN
803393072353
RRP
£239.95
Catalogue
Summer 2023
Release date
September 2023

Model details

Finish
Weathered
Tooling date
2023
DCC status
DCC Ready PluX22 socket
Motor
5 pole & twin flywheel
Livery
Green with Late Crest
Based on preserved
No
Minimum radius curve
2nd Radius (438mm)
Coupling
NEM
Minimum radius
Radius 2
Passenger figures
No
Chassis construction
Plastic & metal
Scale
OO Gauge (1:76 Scale)
Coupling type
Tension lock
Coupling mount
NEM pockets
Features
Interior lighting
Directional lighting
Pickup in tender

Prototype information

Locomotive type
Diesel-Electric
Builder
English Electric at Vulcan Foundry
Robert Stephenson & Hawthorns
Build dates
1958 to 1962
Total built
200
Tractive effort
52,000 lbf
Wheel configuration
1Co-Co1
Operated by
British Rail
Main duties
Mixed Traffic
In service until
1985
Locomotive class*
Class 40
Motive power
Diesel

* 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.

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The Bachmann Branchline OO scale Class 40 locomotive No. 40039 has been released in a weathered BR Green livery with Full Yellow Ends. This model is part of the Branchline range and features a five pole, twin flywheel motor with drive to both bogies, allowing for authentic running speeds and haulage capabilities. The model is DCC ready with a Plux22 socket and features directional and interior lighting, as well as a rotating radiator fan and separately applied metal detail parts.

The model is designed to operate on curves of second radius or greater and has a length of 285mm. It is equipped with a Plux22 DCC decoder interface, allowing for easy installation of a DCC decoder. The model also features authentic light colours and temperatures, with directional lighting, including headlights and high intensity headlights, switchable on/off at either end on DCC or analogue control.

This model is part of the Class 40 history, a British Railways diesel-electric locomotive built between 1958 and 1962. A total of 200 were built, and they were initially the pride of the British Rail early diesel fleet. They were later relegated to secondary passenger and freight services, where they worked for many years before ending regular service in 1985.

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