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An old Newbury Factory
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brian
June 23, 2011, 9:35pm Report to Moderator

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Well, we seem to have run out of pictures so here's one to think about. Answers on a postcard please.



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Brewmaster
June 24, 2011, 8:28am Report to Moderator

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Quoted from brian
Well, we seem to have run out of pictures so here's one to think about. Answers on a postcard please.

I've run out of stamps, but isn't this where the Travis Perkins complex in Bone Lane now stands?

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brian
June 24, 2011, 9:20am Report to Moderator

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Quoted from Brewmaster

I've run out of stamps, but isn't this where the Travis Perkins complex in Bone Lane now stands?



Nope
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Greenham Common
June 24, 2011, 12:18pm Report to Moderator

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Ain't it where Sainsbury's is now?
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brian
June 24, 2011, 1:04pm Report to Moderator

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Quoted from Greenham Common
Ain't it where Sainsbury's is now?


Yes, it's the Newbury Diesel Company where they made marine diesels for their parent company Everard Shipping. Actually to be pedantic, it's where the entrance to Sainsbury's and Scats is.

OK, why is the road there called "Hector's Way" and who or what was Hector.
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ChristopherE
June 24, 2011, 6:10pm Report to Moderator
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Clutching at straws here. "Some talk of Hector and Lysander". Did they assemble the famous agent dropping plane?
Did the British Grenadiers picket there? There was a vessel called the Hector that took colonists to Newburyport,Mass.(USA)
Roads nearby,thanks google are Connought and Denmark. That doesn't help the braincells said Poirot.
David Suchet recently garlanded. First job was at the Watermill. I have the programme of his first performance. Thanks Pentalith.

Anyway to cut a short ramble short I am stumped.
Kept me busy for the afternoon!
ce
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brian
June 24, 2011, 6:43pm Report to Moderator

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Poirot has little grey cells.
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Greenham Common
June 24, 2011, 6:50pm Report to Moderator

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Quoted from brian
Yes, it's the Newbury Diesel Company where they made marine diesels for their parent company Everard Shipping. Actually to be pedantic, it's where the entrance to Sainsbury's and Scats is. OK, why is the road there called "Hector's Way" and who or what was Hector.

The area to the right become a parking yard for the Royal Mail vans.
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dodgy
June 25, 2011, 12:04pm Report to Moderator

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The buildings were green.and good for a p--s behind!
Good...back to the more interesting things in Newbury..
Not that WBC twattle! which in fairness probably only interests the three of you!
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brian
June 25, 2011, 7:11pm Report to Moderator

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OK then, in 1938/39, just pre war, a company who manufactured mobile plant for road repair work, compressors etc suddenly found that the Mercedes engines, made in Germany were no longer available. Newbury Diesel Company designed and manufactured for that company small high speed diesel engines. The company was called 'Hector Engineering' and the engines built by NDC were known as Hector engines. Somebody did their homework when they were looking for a name for the road and the rest is history.
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Cognosco
June 25, 2011, 8:16pm Report to Moderator

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Quoted from brian
OK then, in 1938/39, just pre war, a company who manufactured mobile plant for road repair work, compressors etc suddenly found that the Mercedes engines, made in Germany were no longer available. Newbury Diesel Company designed and manufactured for that company small high speed diesel engines. The company was called 'Hector Engineering' and the engines built by NDC were known as Hector engines. Somebody did their homework when they were looking for a name for the road and the rest is history.


Obviously pre WBC then?  

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dodgy
June 26, 2011, 10:51am Report to Moderator

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Quoted from brian
OK then, in 1938/39, just pre war, a company who manufactured mobile plant for road repair work, compressors etc suddenly found that the Mercedes engines, made in Germany were no longer available. Newbury Diesel Company designed and manufactured for that company small high speed diesel engines. The company was called 'Hector Engineering' and the engines built by NDC were known as Hector engines. Somebody did their homework when they were looking for a name for the road and the rest is history.


Canniball Hector was my great grandfather.
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brian
July 16, 2011, 9:03pm Report to Moderator

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Just in case you wondered what went on in that big tin shed, here is part of the main assembly workshop. You can judge the size of the marine diesels they built by comparing their size on the right hand of the picture with the chappie standing by them in overalls.



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Greenham Common
July 16, 2011, 10:53pm Report to Moderator

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Quoted from brian
Just in case you wondered what went on in that big tin shed, here is part of the main assembly workshop. You can judge the size of the marine diesels they built by comparing their size on the right hand of the picture with the chappie standing by them in overalls.

Bloody hell, they look as if they could push a church over!  What was the spec?
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brian
July 18, 2011, 7:54am Report to Moderator

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Quoted from Greenham Common

Bloody hell, they look as if they could push a church over!  What was the spec?


They produced a range of slow speed(200 rpm) two stroke reversing diesels, this meant that to go from ahead to astern the engine was stopped and reversed. Took no more than 15secs to go from full ahead to full astern. In the fifties they produced 6 cylinder turbo charged versions rated at 1,600 bhp. This is a picture of the installation crew from Newbury, assisted by the builders, installing such an engine in the new ship MV Frederick T Everard at the Goole shipyard in 1954. The FT was a 265 ft 2,500 ton cargo. If you thought this engine was big, you should have seen some of the Doxford engines built up north for ocean going merchant ships. They were at least as tall as a three storey house.
If you want the full Newbury Diesel Company story look here  http://rowifi.com/ndc/index.html




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