Monday 16 December 2013

My Ding a Ling...

Well, having tripped over the new bell several times as it sat in my lounge, I thought that today (after a post end of term lie-in) would be a good day to get the bell onto 326. So a quick hop up the A1 was in order.

Once the short ladder was up the side of the cab, the tool kit came out. Firstly, the two tone horns needed relocating. When the bells were removed and these were fitted by the Home Office, they were mounted inside of the bell hanger on the cab roof so needed moving to the outside to make room for the new lump of brass.

Before - horns inside the bell hanger:


After - now on the outside:

Then it was off with the neat aluminium cover for the bell hanger and leather strap. These were obviously blocked off when the bells were removed to keep the rain out!


Once done and after a bit of faffing, the bell was on - no easy task given the weight of it and carefully operating at the top of a ladder!

Looks much more the part (even if they never had bells on Op Fresco!)... Probably the first time in 25 years that it has been fitted with a bell?


The view from the inside:


Once that was done and the work was admired, it was time to remove the bell again for the winter (given the value!) and to tidy up the tubing. The outside cable ties will be changed to black in due course:


Once that pleasing task was done, I then spent a few minutes placing orange cables ties on much of the fire kit to identify it when it's out. At big shows such as Derby when a lot of kit comes out of many vehicles, it will hopefully make it easier to find my stuff!


The last thing to do was to get the starting handle out to give the engine a few turns to keep it lubricated and to change which valves stay open:


I also brought the hearth kit home to keep it dry over the winter, however, the addition of three large silica bags to absorb any moisture appear to be doing the trick!


After that, it was time for home. A short and simple but pleasing few hours!



Tuesday 3 December 2013

Ding dong merrily on high...

Well, after keeping my eyes peeled on eBay and elsewhere for a bell, I have come up trumps!

Green goddesses were built in an era before 'blues and twos', having twin orange flashing lights above the windscreen and a bell mounted on the near side cab roof, operated by the person sat in the cab passenger seat via a leather strap dangling from the bell through a hole in the roof! As the world moved on, bells became less common, until the 1980s when they were finally removed from the green goddess fleet and replaced with flashing blue lights and two tone air horns. However, the bell hangers were left - handy for mounting the horns!

Well, although 326 remains (and will stay) in Op Fresco livery from 2002/2003, I did think that a bell might be a nice touch as a nod to the past. Proper GG bells - with the crown and ER cipher and date stamp - do pop up occasionally, but they are expensive so I wasn't going to pay too much! But I keep my eyes peeled nonetheless.

Cut to last Tuesday when a saved search on eBay ('fire bell') brought up a genuine GG bell. With a starting price of £50 and no bids! I immediately bid and hoped with nearly 5 days to go, it would stay that way. It did, until Saturday afternoon when I was outbid by £2. So, with bidding at £102, I upped mine again, securing the top bid. Time ticked on, so slowly. Minutes then seconds left. Would I be beaten or 'sniped'? I hovered over the bid button, but time ran out and it was mine - £104 plus postage. Result!

Anyway, it arrived today - a proper, pukka GG bell. Heavy, shiny, loud. I just have to swap the air horns to sit outside of the bell hanger, remove the cover from the hole in the roof and get it up the ladder and on!

The bell as it arrived:

The proof it's real - the crown and ER cipher with December 1952 date stamp: