Renown Repulse Restoration Group

 
   

If it moved under its own power on the railway then it almost certainly had a nickname. The list we have gathered needs adding to, especially with explanations of the origin of certain nicknames. If you can think of any we have missed out then get in touch and we'll add your suggestions to this page.

 

Class Nickname & Reason
01 Breakwaters
The last two were used (or at least one of them, the other might have been just for spares) on the breakwater branch at Holyhead, which in the end was not connected to the national rail network
03 Minigronk
Mini class 08

Flower Pot
Shape of the exhaust

08 Gronk
Sound they make

Jocko

Turtle

Rod

09 Super Gronk
Souped up class 08

Turtle

13 Double Gronk
A class 13 is two class 08s permanently coupled

Master and Slave
How the two 08s operated

14 Teddy Bear
Cab in the middle made the loco look like a teddy bear from head on 
17 Clayton
Manufacturer of the loco
20 Chopper
Sound they make

Wardrobes
Lots of body side doors

Bombs

Slaps

Rollerskate
Sort of looks like a roller skate side on (think of the cab as the heel end and the nose as the toes of your foot!)

Chibbles
Way they sound at idle

Whistling Wardrobes
Combination of all those body side doors and the noise they make

22 Baby Warship
The first few were effectively half a D600 Warship mechanically speaking; the production batch were half a North British D800 Warship
23 Baby Deltic
Although they had different power units with fewer cylinders than the class 55, the refurbished locos with centre headcode boxes and two-tone green paintwork did look rather like a miniature Deltic.
24 RAT
RATeable thrash once the as-built silencer systems started failing and were removed

Fruit Machines
Driver's desk power controller slides back and forward like a fruit machine handle

25 As for Class 24
25912 Ice Cream Van
Livery the loco carried
26 As for Class 24 with the Mc denoting their allocation to Scotland i.e. McRAT
27 As for Class 26
28 Metrovicks
Manufacturer

Co-Bo
Wheel Arrangement

Bread Loaf
Body Shape

31 Peds
Pedestrian - lack of power, especially ETH 31/4s!
Rancid Peds from Immingham Shed - Derogatory term
31/0 Skinhead
Because it looks like one head on. Later variants had head code boxes mounted above the cabs which broke up the skinhead lines

Toffee Apple
Shape of driver's power controller

Goyle
After Gargoyles because they looked ugly

33 Cromptons
Manufacturer of the Electrics

Shredder

Derogatory term used especially by 50 fans!

Woodlice
Due to their rounded roofs

33/1 Bagpipes
Loads of push-pull working equipment cables and pipes on the buffer bar
33/2 Slim Jims
Narrowed body profile for working on lines with a narrow loading gauge
35 Hymeks
Mekhydro hydraulic transmission
37 Tractors
The noise they make

Ploughs
Corruption of the tractor name

Syphon
Syphons were the name for a type of China Clay wagon the 37s could be found hauling

Growler
The noise they make

Rotcarts - Derogratory term for the condition of recent DBS /4s!

Nosepeds - Referred to by some as 31's with noses!

37/7 Heavyweights
Extra ballast for better adhesion makes them tip the scales at 120 tonnes
37/9 Slugs
Power build up is slow - as in 37906 "Slug 6"
40 Whistlers
Turbo noise

Bucket
Derogatory (possibly to do with them being the first locos to have on-board driver's lavatory)

42/43 Warships
Members of the class were named after famous warships
43
(HST or 125)
Tram
Unidirectional and frequency of services using them

Flying Bananas
Original livery; now refers to the Network Rail track test HST in its all over yellow livery

Zing

Toy

44 Peaks
Locos named after hills and mountains such as 'Great Gable'

Wagons
Plenty of wheels, they had a 1Co-Co1 arrangement

45 As class 44
46 As class 44
47 Duffs
Self explanatory

Spoons
Something to do with the horn sound

Brushes

Manufacturer Brush Traction

47401-
47420
Generators

These prototype machines D1500-D1519 were purely DC machines, unlike later 47/4 ETH-equipped locos which had AC alternator ETH equipment and rectifier kit.

47/7 Shove-Duffs
Push-pull equipped for use on Glasgow to Edinburgh services

Smokey Joes
In late Network South East days the remaining 47's (ex ScR 47/7's) that plied between Paddington and Oxford/Newbury; used by those who frequented Didcot station at the time and were used to getting lost in the smog of a worn out 47/7 struggling to get load 9 moving.

47/8 Twanks
TWin fuel tANKS for long range working
50 Hoover/Vac
Sound they made before refurbishment

50/50s
Dodgy reliability, there were also 50 class members.

Log
Body Shape, Smoking Log as a derogatory term

Dub Dubs
Due to noise made

50033 Smokey Joe
Because it did, fixed in the end by the Plymouth Laira apprentices a few years before its final withdrawal
52 Thousands
Numbered in the D1000 number range

Westerns
Names given to the locos such as 'Western Courier' and 'Western Champion', also Wessie and Whizzo as a corruption

Lawnmower/Oil Slosher
Derogatory

55 Deltics
Name of the Napier engine because a cross section of the cylinders looked like the Greek delta letter

Boat/Gunboat
The Napier "Deltic" engine was originally developed as propulsion for Royal Navy MTB's (Motor Torpedo Boats), craft that were supposed to do fast hit and run attacks against enemy shipping. The high revving engines were ideal for that purpose, later on someone had the bright idea to fit them in the first high speed diesel locomotives for fast passenger workings on the ECML.

56 Grids
Body louvres compared to a Class 47. Grid at front of loco behind which is the air horns

Xmas Trees
When they where new locos did not have as many lights as they do now.

57 Heinz
57 varieties (geddit?)

Bodysnatcher
A class 57 is a class 47 with all a lot of its mechanical and electrical items completely replaced

Zombie
For the same reason as Bodysnatcher

Ronnies

Named after 57601, especially used for ETH-fitted examples.

57/3 Thunderbird
Virgin's chosen branding and naming policy for its locomotives used for rescuing failed trains and piloting trains when the overhead is switched off 
57601 Purple Ronnie
Named after the cartoon character when painted into Porterbrook Leasing's purple livery
58 Bones
Look like a bone when viewed from above

Egg Timers
Look like an egg timer when viewed from above

Fitted Wardrobe
All those body side doors

59 GMs
Made by General Motors in Canada and has tones of being Genetically Modified due to the, at the time, amazing amount of power produced.
60 Doughnuts
You can see right through the loco

Politicians
See through them easily!

Tugs

66 Sheds
Because of the corrugated body sides

Cheeseburgers
Due to the EWS red and yellow livery

Ying Yings
Sound they make - apparently they sound impressive when the silencer has broken

Dreds
Name given to DRS 66s because there are so many of them around. Corruption of Sheds

66/5 Freds
Freightliner Sheds, the original 66 order was for EWS
66/7 Bluebirds
Colour scheme
67 Skip
Looks like a skip turned upside down and put on wheels due to the sloping front cabs

Ned

Super Shed
Reference to the Class 66s

Cyclops
Only have one cab window as in "Cyclops the ugly super shed"

70 Dominos
Reference to the light clusters on front looking like a domino!
70 (E) Hornby
73 Eds, Mr Ed, Little Ed
Short for Electro Diesel

Shoebox
It is a bit rectangular

Biscuit Tin

JA's for 73/0s, JB's for 73/1s

74 Big Ed
76 Tommy
81-85 Roarer
81-87 Sparky
Overhead electric locomotives
86 Cans
87 Vans

UFOs
Pronounced "oofs" (like a horses hoof without the "h").
This was due to their three lights that are in a perfect row looking like o O o in the dark which made them look like a UFO

Lasers
The original headlight was like a laser. Round and very bright.

Pifcos
Later, a couple of 87s were fitted with the now standard "square" headlight and these were affectionately known as "Pifcos". This was due to their torch-like headlight (Pifco manufactured torches at the time)

89 Flying Badger
This unique loco made by Brush had a cab that looked like a snout at both ends
90 Skoda

Carpet Slipper
They have a tendency to wheelslip in damp conditions when hauling heavy trains. Carpet Slippers have no grip in the wet either!

91 Stealth Bomber/Stealths
When painted in dark blue GNER livery

Electras

Ladas

141-144 Pacers/Skippers
Official names given to these DMUs by British Rail. Skipper was only ever used in Cornwall.

Bouncy Castle
Pacers have only 4 wheels on each carriage which on any below par track gives a very bouncy ride especially when the suspension and dampers start to wear.

Jungle Bus
When it's bad it feels like you are riding down a jungle track in some doddery old bus rather than being on a train on a flat railway line.

142 Nodding Donkeys
When you get a bit of rough riding the train seems to go up and down like a nodding donkey oil well
153 Skateboard/Bubble Car/Brick/Burger Vans
Single motorised carriage (DMU) mostly to be found on rural branchlines but not infrequently used on longer distance services

Dogboxes
Believed to arise from the small cabs at the number 2 ends. When they were converted from 2-car 155s the new cab put in the non-driving end of the original DMU coach had to be significantly smaller to fit the available space; the drivers hate them

Mini-cabs
Go quite fast but don't carry a lot of people

Scud
Arises from analogies to crude self-propelled missiles; you're fine until the engine cuts out!

158 Coffin Express
Shape of the front end and also refers to no opening windows in the passenger compartment

Scud

165 Plastic
205/207 Thumpers
Noise the diesel engine makes on these DEMUs
220 Shop or 4-SHOP

The latter is by analogy to Southern Region unit codes.

Vomit Comet
Very fast but make any self-respecting rail fan sick

221 Super Shop
323 Zoidbergs

Toffas
365/465 Notworkers
Unreliable Networker EMUs