Wabtec Rail Limited is part of the Fortune 500 Wabtec Corporation headquartered in Pittsburgh, US. The corporation employs ...
The life of a Doncaster man who drove world famous city locomotives Mallard and Flying Scotsman will come under the spotlight ...
Flying Scotsman is back on the mainline this Monday (17th March) as it heads to the National Railway Museum in York.
LUKE LITTLER fired an incredible nine-dart finish at the Players Championship Five as he continued his fairy tale 2025. But ...
No 4472 Flying Scotsman is a Pacific steam locomotive built in1923 for the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) at the Doncaster Works. It cost £7,944, weighed 97 tons and was was retired from ...
The Flying Spur now has 782bhp. As standard. That got your attention. It's not a sledgehammer sports-saloon like some big Brabus Mercedes, nor a pillowy uber-lux limo like a Rolls-Royce.
4472 Flying Scotsman at the British Empire Exhibition in Wembley in 1924. Peter Tuffrey collection It was declared the locomotive was a striking example of the progress of a century of British ...
At the time, LNER A3 Pacific No. 4472 Flying Scotsman was owned by Sir William McAlpine and in 1974 he became a shareholder in the company making Carnforth the locomotive’s home. Sir William ...
All the recent aviation disasters and close calls have people worried about the safety of flying. The midair collision that killed 67 near Washington D.C. last month was the worst disaster.
The Flying Scotsman was built in 1923 at Doncaster Works which cost £7,944 and was officially the first locomotive to reach 100mph and to circumnavigate the world. It first went into service on ...
The Flying Scotsman has made its first passenger journeys of the year to commemorate the anniversary of British Railways. Train fans were photographed smiling from the vintage carriages behind the ...
It's also among the boldest, boasting of being capable of delivering the "world's first flying car" that is more of a car and less of an oversized drone slash helicopter hybrid. Technically ...