Dapol 4D-005-009S

Class 59 59104 Hanson Village of Great Elm Diesel Locomotive - DCC Sound

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

Prototype Era
Era 10 (2005 to 2015) Rebuilding of the Railways

Manufacturer description

Based on the huge success of the first production run of OO Gauge Class 59’s Dapol have decided to announce the launch of the second production run of this fantastic model. Dapol will be releasing five liveries, with DCC Ready, DCC Fitted, DCC Sound Fitted, DCC Smoke Fitted and DCC Sound & Smoke Fitted options being available to pre-order.

The Class 59 is a Co-Co formation diesel locomotive and the first US produced, privately-owned locomotive to operate regularly in the UK. The ordering of the first Class 59 was a result of quarry company Foster Yeomans dissatisfaction with the performance of the BR Class 56. The first 4 locomotives built by GMs Electromotive Division were delivered to Foster Yeoman during 1986 and 59005 in 1989. Proving very successful; one locomotive setting a new UK haulage record for a single locomotive of 4639 tonnes. Foster Yeomans rivals, Amey Roadstone Corp. (ARC) also ordered four modified Class 59s (59/1) as did National Power, who ordered six (59/2). GM invested in this initial UK success by extensively modifying the class 59 internally to produce the Class 66, also hugely successful, within both the UK and Continental Europe. Other than 59003 (which after return from loan to HHPI in Germany, is operated by GBRf), the Class 59 fleet is operated today by DB Schenker and Mendip Rail (an ARC and FY joint venture).

Features of the Class 59 include:

DC & DCC Lighting Capabilities

Catalogue listing

Brand
Dapol
Product Code
4D-005-009S
GTIN
5016927071318
RRP
£309.86
Release date
January 2026

Model details

DCC status
DCC Sound
Tooling date
2022
Minimum radius
Radius 2
Coupling type
Tension lock
Coupling mount
NEM pockets
Chassis construction
Heavy diecast
Scale
OO Gauge (1:76 Scale)
Finish
Pristine
Livery
Blue
Name
Village of Great Elm
Running number
59104
Features
Interior lighting

Prototype information

In service until
Present
Main duties
Heavy Freight
Operated by
ARC
DB Cargo
EWS
GB Railfreight
Foster Yeoman
Freightliner
Mendip Rail
National Power
Wheel configuration
Co-Co
Tractive effort
122,000 lbf
Build dates
1985 to 1995
Builder
General Motors Electro Motive Division
Locomotive type
Diesel-Electric
Total built
15
Locomotive class*
Class 59
Motive power
Diesel
Built
1985-1995
Total produced
15

* 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

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Related products

Dapol Class 59 59104 Hanson Village of Great Elm diesel locomotive is supplied in OO gauge with DCC sound fitted and interior cab lighting. The model carries the manufacturer part number 4D-005-009S and represents the period of the rebuilding of the railways.

Following the success of the first production run, Dapol announced a second production run of this model. Five liveries will be offered and customers can pre‑order versions that are DCC ready, DCC fitted, DCC sound fitted, DCC smoke fitted or DCC sound and smoke fitted.

The Class 59 is a Co‑Co formation diesel locomotive, the first US‑built privately owned locomotive to operate regularly in the United Kingdom. The original order came from quarry operator Foster Yeoman in 1986 after dissatisfaction with the BR Class 56, and the first four locomotives set a UK haulage record of 4 639 tonnes. Subsequent orders were placed by Amey Roadstone Corp (ARC) and National Power. Today the class is operated by DB Schenker, Mendip Rail and GBRf.

Key features include a finely moulded body with applied details, printed name plates (etched plates supplied separately), cast wheels with fine relief and appropriate colour, a heavy die‑cast chassis with full wheel pick‑up, standard NEM sockets and optional diesel exhaust smoke effect. Lighting is fully independent in both DC and DCC operation, with separate control of head‑ and tail‑lights, day/night lamp selection, marker lamps and cab illumination, and DCC models can also simulate clag smoke on initial acceleration.

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