AT THE HEART OF THE ROAD TRANSPORT INDUSTRY.

Call our Sales Team on 0208 912 2120

Loch-Light comes to Scotland

28th November 1958
Page 57
Page 57, 28th November 1958 — Loch-Light comes to Scotland
Close
Noticed an error?
If you've noticed an error in this article please click here to report it so we can fix it.

Which of the following most accurately describes the problem?

and Austin horse-power helps to bring it

DOWER ENOUGH to keep a town the size of Aberdeen going— IF that will be the daily output of electricity fforn the lreadalbarie Project (part of the vast Scottish hydro-electric cheme), now nearing completion.

That power will come from thousands of tons of water; water collected from the mountain streams of Perthshire and channelled through an elaborate system of tunnels to Glen Lyon. Here, at the threshold of the Highlands, a mighty dam is almost finished. Here the pipelined tunnels converge after cutting through mountain and rock for up to 9 miles. And here the waters arc already held in check. a great man-made loch now stretches miles back between gaunt mountain slopes.

The rocky road to Glen Lyon To reach construction sites, 22 miles of road had to be cut over the mountains between Glen Dochart and Glen Lyon. With alarming hairpin bends, the single track zig-zags perilously up the bare hillside. Overall gradient on this road is 1. in 5. Steepest drags are i in 3.

Twice a day, 51 days a week, an Austin 7 tonner climbs this steep, rocky road, carrying wet sand. The sand is collected at Donne, over so miles from the site. Over 2,000 tons of it have been delivered so far. And, clocking up a daily average of 225 miles, over 35,000 miles have been covered by this one lorry on this job alone. "Aye, I will that." Of its performance, owner Walter Knights, haulage contractor of Fintry, Stirlingshire, says: "I bought the Austin in May 1957 from Mr. Carlisle of Carlaw (Cars) Ltd., Glasgow. Since then it has given me no trouble, but for one or two footery wee things. I'm getting 15 miles to the gallon out of it the now and I'm very well satisfied with it." Asked if he would buy another Austin, Mr. Knights was emphatic. "Aye, I will that," he said.