Hornby R3906
British Rail Class 47/7 47739 GB Railfreight Rail Services
Class & Prototype
- Class: British Rail Class 47/7
- Traction: Diesel
- Transmission: Electric
- Built: 1979-1984
- Total Built: -
The British Rail Class 47, or Brush Type 4, built 1962-1968, represents Britain's most numerous mainline diesel with 512 locomotives constructed by Brush Traction and BR Crewe Works. Despite early reliability problems, a mid-1960s decision to derate engines from 2,750 to 2,580 bhp transformed the class into Britain's most dependable mixed-traffic locomotive, achieving 55+ years service. Operating across all BR regions hauling everything from royal trains to coal hoppers, Class 47s wore over 30 distinct liveries spanning BR green through colourful sector schemes to privatisation colours. Currently, Bachmann and Heljan produce exceptional OO gauge models with motorised fans, ESU LokSound V5 sound, and 150+ detail parts, while Graham Farish dominates N gauge. With 32 preserved locomotives and continuing heritage operations, the "Duff" remains an iconic part of British railway heritage.
No prototype found.
Operator & Livery
- Operator: GB Railfreight
- Livery: Rail Services
GB Railfreight (GBRf) is the UK's third-largest rail freight operator, established in 1999 and currently owned by Infracapital (M&G plc subsidiary). Operating over 2,000 trainloads weekly with an exceptional 99% reliability rate, the company moves approximately 23% of Britain's rail freight using a fleet of 170 locomotives and 1,800 wagons. GBRf serves major ports including Felixstowe, Southampton, and London Gateway with 54 daily intermodal services nationally, whilst also providing vital infrastructure services for Network Rail, London Underground, and major construction projects like HS2.
The company is renowned for pioneering the innovative Class 69 conversion programme, transforming redundant Class 56 locomotives with modern EMD 710 engines, and for operating diverse heritage livery schemes that celebrate British railway history. With headquarters and control centre in Peterborough and maintenance facilities at Tonbridge, GB Railfreight employs over 1,400 people and has committed to achieving net-zero operations by 2050, positioning itself as a leader in sustainable freight transport whilst maintaining strong partnerships with customers including Network Rail, Drax, Aggregate Industries, and major shipping lines.
The GBRf Rail Services livery was introduced to distinguish locomotives employed on non-freight duties such as stock moves, test trains, and infrastructure support. Based on the familiar GBRf blue and orange corporate colours, it featured a dark blue body with orange cantrail stripes, orange cab sides, and yellow warning panels. The key difference lay in the branding: large bodyside lettering carried the full “GB Railfreight” name on one side and “Rail Services” on the other, setting these locomotives apart from the main freight fleet. Applied to a small number of Class 66s and Class 73s during the Europorte era, the livery reflected GBRf’s expanding presence in specialist and passenger-related rail operations while maintaining a clear visual link to its corporate identity.