Bachmann 31-055

London & North Eastern Railway J72 68680 British Railways Lined Green with Early Emblem

Tooling

The LNER Class J72 (originally NER Class E1) was a small 0-6-0T shunting locomotive designed by Wilson Worsdell and built between 1898 and 1951. Its longevity and simplicity made it a popular subject for ready-to-run models. The first OO gauge J72 appeared in 1976 under the Mainline Railways brand, and when Bachmann entered the UK market in the early 1990s, they adopted this tooling for their Branchline range. This tooling remained in production until 2008, when a completely new model was introduced.

Tooling Features

  • Scale: OO gauge (1:76).
  • Construction: Plastic body shell with die-cast split chassis frame.
  • Detailing: Considered advanced for its time, featuring separately fitted wire handrails and fine livery application.
  • Couplings: Standard tension-lock couplers mounted on the chassis.

Mechanical & Electrical

  • Motor & Drive: Powered by a pancake motor mounted in the split chassis, driving all three axles.
  • Minimum Radius: Suitable for standard OO curves (approx. 2nd radius).
  • Lighting: None fitted.
  • Weighting: Moderate weight from die-cast chassis, aiding traction for shunting duties.

DCC Capability

The original tooling was not DCC ready. Conversion required significant modification or replacement chassis kits. Later Bachmann retooling (post-2008) introduced 8-pin and later 18-pin DCC sockets, but these were absent from the 1990-era models.

Liveries Produced

Across its production life, the ex-Mainline tooling appeared in a wide range of authentic schemes, including:

  • NER green
  • LNER lined black
  • LNER plain black
  • BR black (early and late crests)
  • BR lined black and green (specials)

These liveries reflected the prototype’s long service life under NER, LNER, and BR.

Performance & Reviews

While praised for its appearance and detailing, the model’s performance was often criticized. The split chassis design avoided wiper pickups but introduced reliability issues, and the pancake motor limited smooth running. Wheel quartering problems were common in early examples, though later friction-fit wheels improved matters slightly.

Media & Community Commentary

Enthusiasts frequently note the J72’s historical significance as one of the first highly detailed RTR tank engines in OO gauge. Social media and forums often describe the model as “charming but dated,” with many recommending chassis replacement kits for improved running. The tooling is fondly remembered for its role in raising detailing standards in the 1970s and 1980s.

Interesting Facts

  • The prototype J72 class was built over an extraordinary 53-year span, making it unique among British steam designs.
  • The Bachmann model retained the Mainline body tooling almost unchanged for nearly two decades before retooling in 2008.

Class & Prototype

  • Running Number: 68680
  • Name: -
  • Ordered By: North Eastern Railway
  • Built By: North Eastern Railway
  • Built At: Darlington
  • Built: 03/1899
  • Withdrawn: 10/1961
  • Length of Service: 62.6 years
  • Running Numbers: NER 1720, LNER 8680, BR 68680
  • Names: -

Operator & Livery

British Railways transformed Britain's fragmented rail network into a unified national system following nationalisation on 1st January 1948. Created from the "Big Four" companies under the Transport Act 1947, BR operated most of Great Britain's railways until rebranding as British Rail in 1965, managing over 20,000 route miles and inheriting nearly 20,000 locomotives of diverse designs.

The organisation pioneered standardisation through its revolutionary BR Standard locomotive programme (1951-1960), producing 999 advanced steam engines under Robert Riddles' direction. These included the versatile Britannia Pacifics, mighty 9F freight engines, and mixed-traffic classes that incorporated the best features from all predecessor companies. The 1955 Modernisation Plan accelerated diesel and electric traction development, creating fascinating mixed-traction operations.

Notable achievements included establishing unified locomotive classification systems, introducing distinctive corporate liveries, and managing the complex transition from steam to modern traction. BR's six regional structure preserved operational diversity whilst enabling standardisation of practices, signalling, and rolling stock that had eluded private enterprise for over a century.

The BR era represents steam traction's final flowering alongside emerging diesel technology, creating unparalleled locomotive variety. Today, this heritage remains highly popular with railway enthusiasts through extensive preserved fleets, heritage railway operations, and comprehensive model ranges from manufacturers like Hornby, Bachmann, and Dapol, making BR subjects essential for authentic post-war British railway modelling across all scales.

British Railways' lined green livery was designated for express passenger locomotives from 1949, painted in BS224 Deep Bronze Green (also known as Land Rover Deep Bronze Green) with orange and black lining, contrary to popular misconceptions about it being GWR Brunswick Green. Official BR documentation described this as "Dark Green lined Black and Orange" for selected express passenger steam locomotives, with the lining following GWR-style patterns but with distinct BR specifications. The "Lion and Wheel" emblem (nicknamed the "Cycling Lion") adorned these prestigious locomotives from early 1949, showing a lion standing over a spoked wheel with "British Railways" lettering across the centre.

Only the most powerful passenger classes received this elaborate livery—on the Western Region, this included Kings, Castles, and Stars, whilst other regions applied it to their premier express types like Coronations, A4s, A3s, A1s, and Merchant Navy Pacifics. Initially, the most prestigious locomotives of each region were actually painted in Sky Blue with black and white lining, but this proved unpopular and was quickly superseded by the green scheme. The emblem was positioned centrally on tender sides above the middle axle box, with regional variations in size preference—the Western Region favoured larger emblems whilst other regions typically used smaller versions. Lettering and numbering appeared in golden yellow Gill Sans Medium, normally outlined in black where the background wasn't black. This prestigious livery represented BR's finest locomotives until the corporate identity changed in 1956, making it essential for authentic early BR express passenger operations in model form.