The museum is home to several
locomotives from the National Collection, including a replica of Timothy Hackworth's
Sans Pareil. The original engine, built to compete in the
Rainhill Trials, is also at Shildon. The trials were to decide which engine should operate the passenger railway between
Liverpool and
Manchester. After a 175 years absence from the town, the locomotive was returned and is displayed in the Collection building.
LNER Class A4 4468 Mallard which is usually displayed in the NRM's York museum was temporarily displayed in the museum from June 2010 to July 2011. In 2014, ahead of the 75th-anniversary celebrations for Mallard's setting the world steam speed record, 8,000 visitors turned up to welcome five sister
A4 locomotives including
60008 "Dwight D Eisenhower" and
60010 "Dominion of Canada" that were repatriated from North America, the latter was given a cosmetic overhaul in Shildon's workshop. The main exhibition building houses most of the collection and includes the sole examples of the prototype
APT-E and
Deltic units. The museum has a
wind turbine which provides power to the
National Grid and an on-site
biodiesel bus for transporting visitors around the site. The NRM recommends checking with them in advance if going to see a particular exhibit. ==See also==