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#11
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On Jun 18, 11:03*pm, D7666 wrote:
IMHO what the Circle Line desperately needs is some kind of relief location where trains can be regulated. But old films are perhaps more interesting. I'm surprised no-one commented on Cambridge Oxford with Derby lightweights yet. -- Nick |
#12
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![]() "D7666" wrote But if you slightly displaced the suggested regulation locations clockwise around the Circle, you could use *Barbican* and South Ken. The latter has I think room for 4 tracks still within the existing structure/cutting, although it would need some shifting around of trackside kit. Thus a more sensible use of the redundant ''widened lines'' going east of Farringdon would be to diverge from the Met-City to 4 platforms through Barbican and converge back to 2 through lines through Moorgate. I suggest there is enough space to do this but would need a certain amount of significant work east of Barbican to achieve. Ideally for bifurcating working you need an island for each direction with both platform faces going the same way - neither South Ken nor Barbican would offer this, so any trains being recessed or tipping out would cause passenger to have to use crossways, but I suggest overall this is an advantage : it train X is in the existing platform train Y is stuck in tunnel behind. With 2 platform tracks, Y might get in allowing passengers to cross to X while Y recesses. Overall it keep passengers moving even if one train does not. The whole point of this suggestion is to address the fundamental weak point of the Circle - it has zero resilience. If you have 4 track locations it allows sort of elasticity for the operators. Far too subtle a point for uk.railway ''but we've always done it his way'' die hards of course. I can just about remember South Ken with 4 District/Circle platforms. What would be possible, and probably not too difficult, would be to put in an additional westbound (clockwise)track and platform at South Kensington, so that District trains have their own track, separate from the Circle, from here through Gloucester Road. Useful when Earls Court is blocked, perhaps with trains waiting for a change of driver, as Circle trains could overtake the queue. Exceptionally a District train could use the Circle track to overtake a queue if this helped regulating the service. If the westbound (anticlockwise} track through Barbican was diverted to the former Up Moorgate Widened line trains would simply call at the other side of the island platform. The existing westbound line could then be used as a recess line, or as a turnback line in either direction. At worst passengers on an eastbound train which was being turned back would be advised to change at Farringdon if they were travelling beyond Barbican, or have to cross the bridge at Barbican if they weren't given or didn't heed this advice. No worse than trains turning back at Mansion House or Tower Hill. Peter |
#13
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On Fri, 18 Jun 2010 15:03:37 -0700 (PDT), D7666
wrote: IMHO what the Circle Line desperately needs is some kind of relief location where trains can be regulated. Aldgate? Neil -- Neil Williams, Milton Keynes, UK |
#14
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On Jun 18, 11:30*pm, "Peter Masson" wrote:
I can just about remember South Ken with 4 District/Circle platforms. What would be possible, and probably not too difficult, would be to put in an additional westbound (clockwise)track and platform at South Kensington, so that District trains have their own track, separate from the Circle, from here through Gloucester Road. Useful when Earls Court is blocked, perhaps with trains waiting for a change of driver, as Circle trains could overtake the queue. Exceptionally a District train could use the Circle track to overtake a queue if this helped regulating the service. If the westbound (anticlockwise} track through Barbican was diverted to the former Up Moorgate Widened line trains would simply call at the other side of the island platform. The existing westbound line could then be used as a recess line, or as a turnback line in either direction. At worst passengers on an eastbound train which was being turned back would be advised to change at Farringdon if they were travelling beyond Barbican, or have to cross the bridge at Barbican if they weren't given or didn't heed this advice. No worse than trains turning back at Mansion House or Tower Hill. Aha! Someone understands what I'm on about ![]() Agreed with all you say. South Ken and Barbican offer as much relief to the District and Met. using the circle tracks as to the Circle Line, and Barbican + Moorgate + Aldgate or South Ken + Earls Court + HS Ken would give them all some serious service recovery options when things do go astray. -- Nick |
#15
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#16
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In message , Peter Masson
wrote: I can just about remember South Ken with 4 District/Circle platforms. What would be possible, and probably not too difficult, would be to put in an additional westbound (clockwise)track and platform at South Kensington, so that District trains have their own track, separate from the Circle, from here through Gloucester Road. Useful when Earls Court is blocked, perhaps with trains waiting for a change of driver, as Circle trains could overtake the queue. Exceptionally a District train could use the Circle track to overtake a queue if this helped regulating the service. This arrangement already exists, just starting immediately west of South Kensington rather that immediately east of it. I'm not at all convinced that the extra platform at SK would have benefit. -- Clive D.W. Feather | Home: Mobile: +44 7973 377646 | Web: http://www.davros.org Please reply to the Reply-To address, which is: |
#17
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![]() "Martin Rich" wrote also wondered what sort of freight, apart from meat to and from Smithfield, would have used the lines in the 1950s. Freight through to the Southern. 51 southbound trips a day in 1951 (I am not sure whether this includes trains to Smithfield). A bank engine was maintained at Farringdon to assist trains up to Ludgate Hill. Peter |
#18
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On 21 June, 12:18, wrote:
Not to sure of there locations but was it the Midland/LMS that had owned a couple of coal yards in *South London or a bit further that were only accessible along the tracks of southern companies? Would they have been a source of traffic for the Widened Lines route? Also when did pre-Thameslink-revival passenger services stop running over the Farringdon to/from Southern Region section, what services were latterly provided and by which BR Region(s) - or if pre-BR which Railway Company(ies) provided the services? -- gordon |
#19
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#20
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On Jun 21, 12:18*pm, wrote:
Not to sure of there locations but was it the Midland/LMS that had owned a couple of coal yards in *South London or a bit further that were only accessible along the tracks of southern companies? There were, but by far the *bulk* of traffic carried was simply cross London inter marshalling yard traffic, not to loading/unloading yards handling coal or other commodities. -- Nick |
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