
R40520 Mark 1 TSO Second Open BR Green S3827
Expected Delivery Q2 2026 (Subject to Change at Manufacturer's Discretion).
Previously advertised as Mark 1 TSO Second Open BR Maroon S3827, this is now Mark 1 TSO Second Open BR Green S3827 S34257
The Mk1 was BR’s first standardised design of railway carriage with thousands built across BR’s carriage works in Derby, Wolverton, Doncaster, York, Eastleigh, and Swindon between 1951 and 1963. The design was also used on first generation Diesel Multiple Units (DMUs) until 1974 and for non-passenger stock such as parcel vans and full brake vehicles.
The new coaches gradually replaced older designs inherited from the ‘Big Four’ at nationalisation in 1968 and were used on all British Railways regions. The standard underframe length was 63ft 5in (19.33m) with gangwayed bodies 64ft 6in (19.7m), though suburban coaches and parcel vans were shorter.
Coaches were either fully open or were corridor coaches with seating compartments. Bodywork was of steel panels on wooden frames, with a separate underframe consisting of heavy steel sections braced with steel trusses, originally mounted on ‘BR1’ bogies, though these were superseded by a new cast-steel design from 1958 known as the ‘Commonwealth’ bogie. Later examples utilised a Swindon-designed ‘B4’ bogie which gave a much-improved ride and was adopted for use on Southern Region Mk1 Electric Multiple Units (EMUs).
This is a highly detailed OO gauge scale model of a second class open coach from the Southern Region.
What's Inside
- 1x Model Passenger Coach
- 1x Accessory Pack
Original: $60.34
-65%$60.34
$21.12Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Expected Delivery Q2 2026 (Subject to Change at Manufacturer's Discretion).
Previously advertised as Mark 1 TSO Second Open BR Maroon S3827, this is now Mark 1 TSO Second Open BR Green S3827 S34257
The Mk1 was BR’s first standardised design of railway carriage with thousands built across BR’s carriage works in Derby, Wolverton, Doncaster, York, Eastleigh, and Swindon between 1951 and 1963. The design was also used on first generation Diesel Multiple Units (DMUs) until 1974 and for non-passenger stock such as parcel vans and full brake vehicles.
The new coaches gradually replaced older designs inherited from the ‘Big Four’ at nationalisation in 1968 and were used on all British Railways regions. The standard underframe length was 63ft 5in (19.33m) with gangwayed bodies 64ft 6in (19.7m), though suburban coaches and parcel vans were shorter.
Coaches were either fully open or were corridor coaches with seating compartments. Bodywork was of steel panels on wooden frames, with a separate underframe consisting of heavy steel sections braced with steel trusses, originally mounted on ‘BR1’ bogies, though these were superseded by a new cast-steel design from 1958 known as the ‘Commonwealth’ bogie. Later examples utilised a Swindon-designed ‘B4’ bogie which gave a much-improved ride and was adopted for use on Southern Region Mk1 Electric Multiple Units (EMUs).
This is a highly detailed OO gauge scale model of a second class open coach from the Southern Region.
What's Inside
- 1x Model Passenger Coach
- 1x Accessory Pack


















