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#21
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"Paul Terry" wrote
I don't know if any really serious track bashers ever posted themselves in large cardboard containers to try to do the line. ![]() Several 'really serious track bashers' (including me) have ridden over (part of) the line. We had permission, so we didn't have to disguise ourselves as parcels! |
#22
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On Wed, May 26, 2010 at 04:56:23AM -0700, lonelytraveller wrote:
On 26 May, 07:18, Paul Terry wrote: the Post Office Railway doesn't have a straight enough alignment - it runs north of Oxford Street, curving up to Wimpole Street and then coming back south before the big loop up to Mount Pleasant. Straight enough for what? The curves are fairly gentle, even though the tube itself copes with curves like those at Shepherd's Bush The tube copes with lots of banging and rattling, and running very slowly. -- David Cantrell | Cake Smuggler Extraordinaire Fashion label: n: a liferaft for personalities which lack intrinsic buoyancy |
#23
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On Thu, 27 May 2010 02:09:07 +0100, Basil Jet
wrote: On 26/05/2010 15:04, Paul Terry wrote: In message , d writes Tunnels arn't dug with picks and shovels any more - a TBM won't care if it has to dig the whole tunnel itself or theres a small tunnel already there , it will take more or less the same time. The only difference will be in the amount of spoil needing to be carried away. Which reminds me that there were several proposals to use the Post Office Railway to remove spoil from the central area. I haven't heard anything more of the suggestion, though. Wouldn't it be easier to remove the spoil by the Crossrail tunnels they had just dug? Not necessarily. In most tunnelling projects you have conflicting movements of excavated spoil coming out and lining segments going in, with workers going in and out. If the spoil comes out via a separate route, it reduces conflicts and might improve progress. |
#24
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On 27/05/2010 11:21, John Salmon wrote:
"Paul Terry" wrote I don't know if any really serious track bashers ever posted themselves in large cardboard containers to try to do the line. ![]() Several 'really serious track bashers' (including me) have ridden over (part of) the line. We had permission, so we didn't have to disguise ourselves as parcels! What have they done with the line since its closure? I must say that I am surprised that they closed it, especially as London is trying to cut down on carbon emissions. The Post Office railway skirts through traffic, emits no exhaust fumes and could possibly carry much more than any lorrie -- or at least make much more frequent runs. |
#25
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#26
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On Thu, 27 May 2010 23:45:59 +0100
" wrote: What have they done with the line since its closure? I must say that I am surprised that they closed it, especially as London is trying to cut down on carbon emissions. The Post Office railway skirts through traffic, emits no exhaust fumes and could possibly carry much more than any lorrie -- or at least make much more frequent runs. Companies like the post office make all the right noises about being green but when it comes down to spending the money they're not quite so keen. Presumably lorries are a lot cheaper to run than a mini tube system. B2003 |
#27
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On Thu, 27 May 2010 23:45:59 +0100, "
wrote: What have they done with the line since its closure? I must say that I am surprised that they closed it, especially as London is trying to cut down on carbon emissions. So the electricity used to power the railway was zero carbon, was it? Didn't Britain have any coal, oil or gas fired power stations when the Post Office Railway operated? The Post Office railway skirts through traffic, emits no exhaust fumes and could possibly carry much more than any lorrie -- or at least make much more frequent runs. The exhaust fumes are at the power stations. Lorries and vans are needed to collect the mail and bring it to the railway, and then to distribute it. You would be deluded if you thought that the mail operation emitted no exhaust fumes because one small component of it is electric - and electricity means exhaust fumes from coal and gas fired power stations. |
#28
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On Fri, 28 May 2010 11:47:34 +0100
Bruce wrote: So the electricity used to power the railway was zero carbon, was it? Didn't Britain have any coal, oil or gas fired power stations when the Post Office Railway operated? Gas produces less CO2 per unit work than petrol or diesel. Also a significant amount still (despite the best efforts of the Campaign of Nuclear Dunces and Greenpratts) comes from nuclear power. The exhaust fumes are at the power stations. Lorries and vans are needed to collect the mail and bring it to the railway, and then to distribute it. The lorries are still being used to take the mail to the sorting offices the railway joins up. Except now they're needed inbetween those offices too. B2003 |
#29
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wrote in message
On Fri, 28 May 2010 11:47:34 +0100 Bruce wrote: So the electricity used to power the railway was zero carbon, was it? Didn't Britain have any coal, oil or gas fired power stations when the Post Office Railway operated? Gas produces less CO2 per unit work than petrol or diesel. Also a significant amount still (despite the best efforts of the Campaign of Nuclear Dunces and Greenpratts) comes from nuclear power. The exhaust fumes are at the power stations. Lorries and vans are needed to collect the mail and bring it to the railway, and then to distribute it. The lorries are still being used to take the mail to the sorting offices the railway joins up. Except now they're needed inbetween those offices too. I thought the main reason the PO railway shut was that the Royal Mail changed the way that it sorted mail, so that the old railway didn't serve the modern processes efficiently? |
#30
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![]() wrote in message ... On Thu, 27 May 2010 23:45:59 +0100 " wrote: What have they done with the line since its closure? I must say that I am surprised that they closed it, especially as London is trying to cut down on carbon emissions. The Post Office railway skirts through traffic, emits no exhaust fumes and could possibly carry much more than any lorrie -- or at least make much more frequent runs. Companies like the post office make all the right noises about being green but when it comes down to spending the money they're not quite so keen. Presumably lorries are a lot cheaper to run than a mini tube system. They are generally cheaper than the national main line rail system as well - I was just looking at all that postal infrastructure cluttering up East Croydon's platforms yesterday as it happens. I wonder how many main line stations around the country had such bridges and lifts, and how long they were used for after they were built. I can think of another eyesore at Bristol, but there must be many redundant installations... Paul S |
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