Safety must always be paramount. Our large and heavy engines running at speed present a hazard in and of themselves - leaning across a running track working on an engine and being hit by a train running at full pelt in the other direction will hurt you (and quite likely the expensive engine too).
On this page you will find advice on fuel safety; how to safety-check live steam engines; boiler testing regulations and documentation; and a diagnostic procedure for fault finding on live steam engines.
Fuel-related risks include: working on meths and gas fired engines in enclosed spaces such as a garden shed, where explosive vapours can build up; spilling fuel whilst refuelling near a running line; knocking over fuel containers; and confusing fuel and water containers.
In one particularly serious incident, a contributory cause to the accident was the presence in the steaming bay of large-volume containers of alcohol fuel and boiler water. Although the fuel was coloured, the lack of visual and physical separation led to an error during an emergency situation when fuel was thrown rather than water.
Minimising fuel risk relies on two principles:Where size permits, fuel must be identified with a flame pictogram label
and/or black and yellow warning tape
.
The guidelines for testing and inspection of boilers place great emphasis upon a regular safety check of the boiler and its fittings. Fittings include any items which are screwed into or bolted onto the boiler that have access to the water space – e.g. steam and water feed pipes, regulators, control valves, check valves, water sight glass and mountings, safety valves, whistle valves as well as pressure gauges.
Just as one should regularly check the condition of your tyres, the engine oil, screen washer fluid, brake fluid and lights of your car, likewise even if you do not obtain a formal boiler hydraulic test certificate, or simply rely upon the manufacturer’s certificate that came with your locomotive, one should still examine it carefully from time to time and record the findings of the examination. The boiler documentation made available by the association allows the recording of this examination.
So, how does one go about it?
The examination should be carried out in two parts. Firstly when the boiler is cold, secondly when it is steamed. As an inspector, I would prefer the model to be shown to me in its running condition. By that, I do not want pipework polished, paintwork gleaming, as the cleaning process might remove tell-tale signs of seepage, etc. I want to see it, ‘warts and all’. Remember we are not judging a competition entry, but making a safety assessment.
At this examination the inspector is required to carry out the following as a minimum, together with such other inspections and tests as considered appropriate and necessary
The second part of the examination is required to be carried out with the boiler fully assembled and under steam. I like to observe the engine whilst steam is being raised. It is required that the boiler should be fired for the test as for normal service and that the pressure should be raised so as to lift the safety valve(s). At this examination the inspector is required to carry out the following as a minimum, together with such other inspections and tests as he considers appropriate and necessary.
So, to summarise, the safety examination is not onerous or difficult. Indeed, it could be done on a ‘buddy basis’. (I will examine your boiler, you check mine.) Certainly this could assist those members living any distance from a registered boiler inspector. It requires an enquiring inspection of the locomotive boiler and fittings. Any staining, evidence of seepage, or decay (green copper salts around bushes for example) should be investigated. Minor leaks from pipework joints are not in themselves cause for failure, but do indicate where work may be required. Finally do record the inspection and one’s findings. The record should be retained by the owner of the boiler and passed on to any subsequent owner. A boiler that has a full record of inspection will command a higher value than one with an unknown history.
Keith Bucklitch
Boiler inspector's personal record
Boiler test code volume 2 - Boilers under 3 bar litres (2018)
Boiler test code volume 3 - LPG tanks under 250ml (2018)
The challenge and the charm of live steam is that every engine is different and responds differently to ambient conditions: they have pesonality. Unfortunately this extends to those occasions when an engine refuses to run.
In Newsletter 173 (April 1997) Dick Moger and Barry Applegate (with support from Tony Hall-Patch) published a guide to fault finding in Gauge One engines in the form of annotated flowcharts which you can download here.