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Northern Counties Committee
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====Railcars==== Four [[railcar]]s entered service on the NCC's lines between 1933 and 1938. They were all double-ended single units with underfloor engines and running on two four-wheel bogies. The first of these, No.1, was {{convert|56|ft|m|abbr=on}} long and seated 61 passengers. It had a traditionally constructed wooden body and was powered by two [[Leyland Motors|Leyland]] {{convert|130|bhp|abbr=on}} petrol engines with hydraulic transmission in the form of [[Lysholm-Smith]] [[torque converter]]s. No.1 was re-engined with Leyland diesels in 1947 and again in 1959. The next car, No.2, introduced in 1934, was to a radically different design. An ungainly looking machine, it had a {{convert|62|ft|m|abbr=on}} long, slab-sided lightweight body that was to prove problematic. To eliminate the need to run round its trailer at termini, it was equipped with an elevated driving position at each end (similar to some [[Micheline (railcar)|French railcars]]) so that the driver could see over the top of a trailer that was being propelled. No.2 could seat 75 third class and five first class passengers and was powered by two {{convert|125|bhp|abbr=on}} Leyland Diesel engines with a similar transmission to No.1. No.2's looks were improved somewhat when the raised drivers' cabs were removed during its NCC service. Railcars Nos.3 and 4 were built in 1935 and 1938 respectively and were virtually identical. Like No.2, they were {{convert|62|ft|m|abbr=on}} long with elevated driving positions but there the similarity ended as the cars had "air smoothed" bodywork. Each seating 80 passengers, they too were powered by two {{convert|125|bhp|abbr=on}} Leyland Diesel engines with hydraulic transmission. In 1934, two railcar trailers emerged from York Road works. Of light weight construction, they weighed only 17 tons (17 tonne) but each could seat 100 passengers. They had a low roof profile so that the railcar driver in his elevated cab could more easily see ahead when propelling them. Elderly former BNCR Class I1 bogie brake tricomposite coaches dating from the 1890s supplemented the purpose-built trailers and provided an interesting contrast between the latest technology and Victorian design. Besides pulling their trailers, the railcars could also be seen hauling 4-wheel vans. With top speeds of around {{convert|60|mph|km/h|abbr=on}}, the railcars were not restricted to branch lines but could also work stopping trains on the main lines. Railcar No.2 was withdrawn in 1954 and No.3 was destroyed by fire in 1957 but the remaining two cars were to continue in service until the mid-1960s.
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