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#21
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On Dec 22, 10:15*am, Clive Page wrote:
In message , D7666 writes No services can now call at City Thameslink because of treacherous conditions. I cannot imagine why they thought they had to close City Thameslink: it is a station entirely underground, with both entrances well protected from the weather beneath office blocks, one in a mini-shopping mall. The message I saw claimed there was too much ice: I'd have thought that the only place ice could form would be on the pavement outside the entrance. Does anyone understand this at all? * It's particularly unfortunate to close it, since Blackfriars is also closed, and Farringdon beset by building works. Assemble to following words in the correct order capital brewey organise connect drinking first organise a can't session in Very well put. -- Clive Page I apologise for the delayed arrival of this post......... I can add a bit of back ground to Monday morning......... Core route blocked Friday night (I assume 22.00 ish?) power off all weekend (3rd rail) Herne Hill to Farringdon. switch it all on 50 + hours later and watch the first train train up th bank into Blackfriars fail to gain traction. Stick another 8 car on the back of that and the ice/snow stops that one as well. Northbound train (05.09 ex Brighton I assume was the first, it is normally) at around the same time struggles to get anywhere near Elephant & Castle. Assist that with another 8 car, well try to anyway. From what I overheard there were 4 traiins stuck from start of service until well after 08.00 (I beleive it was more like 09.00 but don't want to do a Kay Burley). A work colleauge was getting regular updates from his wife on the Northbound Brighton which ultimately got de iced by ground staff and got back to Herne Hill where they got into London via SET to Victoria. Net result core closed, side effect, City Thameslink hardly used (if ?) at all...... Tuesday morning, run a through service. People get off (and on as well ?) at City Thameslink and find a slippery surface - very very slippry apparently. So slippery they had to close. Now whether this is because three days have passed with no use and damp platforms froze, or if there was another reason, I know not but it seemed to be closed a very long time if it was just putting kill frost down. I know it's a glossy tile surface so am guessing the dreaded terrazo ? Richard |
#22
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In message , Clive Page
writes I cannot imagine why they thought they had to close City Thameslink: it is a station entirely underground, with both entrances well protected from the weather beneath office blocks, one in a mini-shopping mall. The message I saw claimed there was too much ice: I'd have thought that the only place ice could form would be on the pavement outside the entrance. Does anyone understand this at all? I wonder if the problem is the open-air section just south of City Thameslink - there's a steep rising gradient on the approach to Blackfriars. -- Paul Terry |
#23
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On Dec 22, 1:22*pm, Fat richard wrote:
I can add a bit of back ground to Monday morning......... Core route blocked Friday night (I assume 22.00 ish?) power off all weekend (3rd rail) Herne Hill to Farringdon. switch it all on 50 + hours later and watch the first train train up th bank into Blackfriars fail to gain traction. Stick another 8 car on the back of that and the ice/snow stops that one as well. Northbound train (05.09 ex Brighton I assume was the first, it is normally) at around the same time struggles to get anywhere near Elephant & Castle. Assist that with another 8 car, well try to anyway. From what I overheard there were 4 traiins stuck from start of service until well after 08.00 (I beleive it was more like 09.00 but don't want to do a Kay Burley). A work colleauge was getting regular updates from his wife on the Northbound Brighton which ultimately got de iced by ground staff and got back to Herne Hill where they got into London via SET to Victoria. Thanks. At least that makes sense after the chaos on Monday morning. Tuesday morning, run a through service. People get off (and on as well ?) at City Thameslink and find a slippery surface - very very slippry apparently. So slippery they had to close. Now whether this is because three days have passed with no use and damp platforms froze, or if there was another reason, I know not but it seemed to be closed a very long time if it was just putting kill frost down. I know it's a glossy tile surface so am guessing the dreaded terrazo ? Interesting. One hopes now then they do somehting about not allowing a repeat occurence. I am wonder what happens over the xmas shutdown and service restart, not just FCC TL but the whole network if weather carries on as it is. At least I'm not back to work until Jan 4th. -- Nick |
#24
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Today, this morning, 48 h after ''problems'' started, 84 h after the
last snow fell in this area, and 36 h after the alleged emergency service was put in place, I actually found this emergency service in place and working and corresponding to what they were advertising in their web updates. With flexitime and avoiding the peaks I did on time Up 09:25 off LUT to WHP, and Down on 16:05 off ZFD to LUT. Up train barely half full, Down train ~3/4 full, perhaps people have given up. FCC TL are keeping the same basic 4 TPH emergency service in 23/12 and 24/12 according to their web site now, but I assume there will be a further twiddling on 24/12 towards xmas run down. EDIT QUOTE Major disruption Service update 22/23/24 December Thameslink route We are continuing to run a revised timetable. East Midlands Trains is stopping its services at Bedford this morning and City Thameslink station is open. Please check the Live train updates page before you set out. With Southeastern, we are operating a half hourly service between City Thameslink and Sevenoaks via Catford leaving Sevenoaks at '02 & '32 and City Thameslink at '09 & '39. .... Service update 23 and 24 December Both the Thameslink and Great Northern routes will be running a revised service in the two days before Christmas to reflect the recent impact of the weather. The timetable for Thursday can be found he Thameslink timetable and Great Northern timetable. END QUOTE And I am still unable to find out exactly what the north of Thames issue is. I could guess NR want plain line running i.e. no use of points so no turnbacks at Luton or St.Albans nor FL/SL switching, but that don't explain why just 4 TPH nor the stopping pattern they are using. Or maybe the is an OLE speed limit, but that again don't imply the 4 TPH pattern. -- Nick |
#25
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![]() On Dec 22, 8:13*pm, Paul Corfield wrote: On Wed, 22 Dec 2010 10:43:04 -0800 (PST), D7666 wrote: Today, this morning, 48 h after ''problems'' started, 84 h after the last snow fell in this area, and 36 h after the alleged emergency service was put in place, I actually found this emergency service in place and working and corresponding to what they were advertising in their web updates. [snip] And I am still unable to find out exactly what the north of Thames issue is. I could guess NR want plain line running i.e. no use of points so no turnbacks at Luton or St.Albans nor FL/SL switching, but that don't explain why just 4 TPH nor the stopping pattern they are using. Or maybe the is an OLE speed limit, but that again don't imply the 4 TPH pattern. You have to worry what on earth will happen to the Thameslink service when it is finally upgraded and linked to the GN and a much wider set of destinations. The current set up seems incapable of surviving any real level of disruption either from the weather or from railway induced failings (track, wires, rolling stock etc). Reading some of the earlier posts and what apparently "failed" you have to wonder about the combined planning and contingency skills of the operator and Network Rail. Given the proposed intensity of service and probably much more complex rolling stock and lots of dips, tunnels and connections all over the place I doubt the service would survive one snowflake falling out of sky never mind real winter weather. *I know it's a long time until the expanded service comes into use but I wonder if anyone is doing some thinking and learning from recent failings so there might be something more robust put in place in terms of the trains and infrastructure so the service might be able to keep going in the event of serious disruption. When it works, Thameslink can be an amazingly useful service - I should add that I'm looking at it in particular from a London 'metro' perspective - but when something goes wrong, it all just seems to fall apart. My normal advice to anyone is that at times like this (i.e. anytime things are looking shaky), Thameslink is best avoided if possible (particularly south of St Pancras - but as D7666/Nick says, they can balls it up north of St P too). I hope that things improve - I dunno if there's an attitude that the Thameslink Programme works are somehow going to wave a magic wand and make the TL route 'just work' after completion, but if so that'd be just a little hopeful. |
#26
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- Show quoted text -
http://www.firstcapitalconnect.co.uk...train-updates/ Does anybody here think this is helpful or user friendly ? -- Nick |
#27
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In message
, D7666 writes - Show quoted text - http://www.firstcapitalconnect.co.uk...train-updates/ Does anybody here think this is helpful or user friendly ? I don't think it is either. It shows every sign of having been programmed by idiots, but we know that FCC seems to have a plentiful supply of them on hand. -- Clive Page |
#28
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On Dec 22, 11:26*pm, Mizter T wrote:
When it works, Key words those. Thameslink can be an amazingly useful service - I should add that I'm looking at it in particular from a London 'metro' perspective - but when something goes wrong, it all just seems to fall apart. Exactly. It now seems to go into total collapse at the slightest perturbation. It does not seem to be able to sustain 10 TPH off peak in anything less than perfect running in perfect weather when traincrew aren't in need of half term or shopping or football days off en masse. They've lost 4 points of resilience - Moorgate, St.Pancras HL, Blackfriars bays and Farringdon crossover, so thare are no system failed chageover bolt holes - I know all that and know the reason why - but they have gained other resilience that the previous incumbent did not have i.e. extra platforms with both way reversibility, at Kentish Town, SPILL crossover and reversibility from the north, and Herne Hill turnback. and AC wires to City (SB only at the moment). How this route is ever going to sustain 24 TPH with a 16:8 split over the junction at SPILL I do not know. No amount of ATO or dwell management is ever going to work if perturbations on the network as a whole cause deck of cards type collapse like we have had for the past 2 years now AND they don't put more effort (i.e. more crew) into mitigating delays with these continuous tight traincrew turnarounds. -- Nick |
#29
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D7666 wrote:
On Dec 22, 11:26*pm, Mizter T wrote: When it works, Key words those. Thameslink can be an amazingly useful service - I should add that I'm looking at it in particular from a London 'metro' perspective - but when something goes wrong, it all just seems to fall apart. Exactly. It now seems to go into total collapse at the slightest perturbation. It does not seem to be able to sustain 10 TPH off peak in anything less than perfect running in perfect weather when traincrew aren't in need of half term or shopping or football days off en masse. They've lost 4 points of resilience - Moorgate, St.Pancras HL, Blackfriars bays and Farringdon crossover, so thare are no system failed chageover bolt holes - I know all that and know the reason why - but they have gained other resilience that the previous incumbent did not have i.e. extra platforms with both way reversibility, at Kentish Town, SPILL crossover and reversibility from the north, and Herne Hill turnback. and AC wires to City (SB only at the moment). How this route is ever going to sustain 24 TPH with a 16:8 split over the junction at SPILL I do not know. No amount of ATO or dwell management is ever going to work if perturbations on the network as a whole cause deck of cards type collapse like we have had for the past 2 years now AND they don't put more effort (i.e. more crew) into mitigating delays with these continuous tight traincrew turnarounds. The problems can probably be cured, and 24 TPH is probably achievable, but only with a different TOC. First Group puts shareholder value above all else. As long as there are no really serious (8 figure) financial penalties for a franchise holder's non-performance, nothing is going to change and 24 TPH is just a pipe dream. First Group has a uniquely deep contempt for its paying customers. That culture isn't ever going to change unless DfT Rail makes the sort of threats that brought First Great Western to heel in similar circumstances. Sadly, I see no sign of that happening with FCC. |
#30
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On Dec 23, 6:32*pm, Bruce wrote:
Thameslink can be an amazingly useful How this route is ever going to sustain 24 TPH First Group puts shareholder value above all else. *As long as there are no really serious (8 figure) financial penalties for a franchise holder's non-performance, nothing is going to change and 24 TPH is just a pipe dream. * First Group has a uniquely deep contempt for its paying customers. That culture isn't ever going to change unless DfT Rail makes the sort of threats that brought First Great Western to heel in similar circumstances. *Sadly, I see no sign of that happening with FCC. heh ![]() I deliberately worded my comments in terms of route not TOC to prompt response - but indeed your words are exactly what i really think about it. I do not know how First get away with what they do. Oh wait a minute yes I do, we've had an election since the last riot where Adonis threatened removing the TL/GN franchise form them - so its all been forgotten. I do not understand how the been getitng away with the 4 TPH for days service. Oh. Yes I do. They blame limited service on Networkrail but I suggest it is more than that - like they are using it to mask traincrew shortage and/or pay less overtime in the xmas run up. GoVia at least ran every 10 minutes emergency service, all trains all station north of Thames, thats far far better for *all* passengers than whats in place now. As for PIS and web data ... don;t get me started ... And there are still no paper timetables from 12.12.10 at most FCC stations. Indeed, are there any ? I've not seen any yet, I've resorted to printing out Table 52 pages from NRTT. -- Nick |
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