Cars Built Between 1927 and 1952
Car numbers | Type (as built) | Year built | Builder | Seats | Truck | Motors | Controllers |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Enclosed | 1927 | Cravens | 24/37 | Peckham P22 | MV 102 2x50hp | BTH B510 |
2-35 | Enclosed | 1928-30 | SCT | 24/37 | Peckham P22 | MV 102 2x50hp | BTH B510 |
36-60 | Enclosed | 1924-25 | Brush | Brush | Peckham P22 | BTH 503 2x40hp | BTH B510 |
61-130 | Enclosed | 1930-33 | SCT | 24/37 | Peckham P22 | MV 102DR 2x50hp | BTH B510 |
131-155 | Enclosed | 1929-30 | Hill | 24/37 | Peckham P22 | MV 102 2x50hp | BTH B510 |
156-230 | Enclosed | 1933-35 | SCT | 24/37 | Peckham P22 | MV 102DR 2x50hp | BTH B510 |
231-242 | Enclosed | 1936 | SCT | 24/37 | Peckham P22 | MV 102DR 2x50hp | BTH B510 |
243-248 | Enclosed | 1936 | SCT | 24/37 | Peckham P22 | WT 286 or MV 116DR 2x50hp | BTH B510 |
249-303 | Enclosed | 1936-39 | SCT | 24/37 | Peckham P22 | MV 102DR 2x50hp | BTH B510 |
336-350 | Enclosed | 1907 | UEC | 22/36 | Peckham P22 | various 2x40hp | BTH B510 |
352-365 | Snow-ploughs | various | various | Brill 21E | GE 58 2x35hp | various | |
311-324 | Enclosed | 1901 (1941) | Hurst Nelson | 24/36 | Brill 21E | BTH GE58 2x35hp | BTH B3 |
325-334 | Enclosed | 1920-21 (1943) | EE | 19/40 | Brill 21E | EE DK 31A 2x50hp | DK DB1 |
501 | Jubilee | 1946 | SCT | 26/36 | M&T588 | MV 102DR3 2x65hp | BTH B510 |
502-536 | Jubilee | 1950-52 | Roberts | 26/36 | M&T588 | MV 102DR3 2x65hp | BTH B510 |
Read more about this topic: Tramcars Of The Sheffield Tramway
Famous quotes containing the words cars and/or built:
“Billboards, billboards, drink this, eat that, use all manner of things, everyone, the best, the cheapest, the purest and most satisfying of all their available counterparts. Red lights flicker on every horizon, airplanes beware; cars flash by, more lights. Workers repair the gas main. Signs, signs, lights, lights, streets, streets.”
—Neal Cassady (19261968)
“Nor aught availed him now
To have built in heavn high towrs; nor did he scape
By all his engines, but was headlong sent
With his industrious crew to build in hell.”
—John Milton (16081674)