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#21
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"Paul Corfield" wrote in message
On Mon, 24 Jan 2011 18:55:23 +0000, " wrote: It'd also be cool if they would start offering service on the NLL from Camden Town at least to Queen's Park. But I guess that's more of a dream. Not quite fulfilling your wish list but during the upcoming blockade in late February the NLL trains run Stratford - Watford Junction via Primrose Hill. You can dig out details of trains on the NR website - the service seems to be every 20 mins or so. So it'll be possible to catch a direct train from the 2012 Olympics site to the sites of both the 1948 *and* 1908 Olympics (via both the Central Line and Overground when it's running). Of course, the 1908 Olympics site already has regular connections to both the 1948 and 2012 Olympic sites, so for that brief period, all three Olympic sites will have direct rail links. This certainly wouldn't be possible anywhere else in the world, and not often even in London. And you can do it all on an Oyster card, too. Maybe people will be attempting Olympic triangle records, with Oyster recording the times? |
#22
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On Wed, 26 Jan 2011 20:14:54 -0000, "Recliner"
wrote: "Paul Corfield" wrote in message On Mon, 24 Jan 2011 18:55:23 +0000, " wrote: It'd also be cool if they would start offering service on the NLL from Camden Town at least to Queen's Park. But I guess that's more of a dream. Not quite fulfilling your wish list but during the upcoming blockade in late February the NLL trains run Stratford - Watford Junction via Primrose Hill. You can dig out details of trains on the NR website - the service seems to be every 20 mins or so. So it'll be possible to catch a direct train from the 2012 Olympics site to the sites of both the 1948 *and* 1908 Olympics (via both the Central Line and Overground when it's running). Not quite. Wembley Central is a bit of a schlep from the Wembley Stadium estate, Wembley Park is on the edge as is Wembley HillComplexetc. and Wembley Stadium is somewhere under a load of weeds. Of course, the 1908 Olympics site already has regular connections to both the 1948 and 2012 Olympic sites, so for that brief period, all three Olympic sites will have direct rail links. This certainly wouldn't be possible anywhere else in the world, and not often even in London. And you can do it all on an Oyster card, too. Maybe people will be attempting Olympic triangle records, with Oyster recording the times? |
#23
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On Jan 25, 11:33*am, Andy wrote:
On Jan 25, 9:10*am, 1506 wrote: On Jan 24, 12:25*pm, "Paul Scott" wrote: wrote in message ... Did I hear at some point, however, that they may eventually extend ELL out to Canden town? Don't think it has ever been proposed officially. *The track layout is not designed to allow for extending the ELL west of Highbury & Islington anyway. Between there and Camden Rd it is laid out as a two track railway in the centre of the formation with long *passing loops for freight on the outside. Before the works were slightly reduced, there was a plan for a third platform at Camden Rd, but this was to allow a Stratford - Camden Rd shuttle to run. There are two main reasons it won't happen, IMHO. *Firstly, the NLL capacity is only 8 tph in the peak, and 6 tph offpeak, to allow for the freight traffic, so there is no room for additional trains from the ELL without reducing the NLL service. *If paths were available, eastbound trains towards the ELL would have to cross westbound passenger and freight trains trains from the Stratford direction, this would not allow a robust timetable.. The freight loops are a problem. *If they could be moved elsewhere, it should be possible for the ELL to utliize the southern pair to Camden Road and Primrose hill. *Freight and the NLL would run on the northern pair. *It would mean new signalling, a reinstated bridge, and new platforms. It would also need a piece of new bridge/viaduct (over Kentish Town Road) at the western end of Camden Road, between the station and the junction. Otherwise all the trains will still be sharing a short piece of double track where the junction is. I've proposed this several times, as it seems quite a no-brainer to me to give a totally segregated DC metro service from Watford Junction to Surrey Quays and the branches following it. If more of the freight could be diverted via the Goblin and Hampstead Heath (or better yet, via some other route bypassing inner London), then the issue of the fright loops becomes moot. The LO lines are no different to the SSL lines, and we all know what capacities are possible on those. However, this will become impossible thanks to the strange choice of method chosen to link HS2 to HS1. They are proposing to tunnel a single-track tunnel from Old Oak Common all the way to Primrose Hill, then rise up and take over one of the tracks (widened to UIC gauge) onward to St. Pancras. I suspect the widening required might require the removal of the other track over the viaducts though. Why they don't just continue the tunnel a few hundred metres more to St. Pancras is beyond me. Sure it will save a tiny fraction of the cost, but you're crippling the LO network's future prospects. |
#24
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![]() "Jamie Thompson" wrote I've proposed this several times, as it seems quite a no-brainer to me to give a totally segregated DC metro service from Watford Junction to Surrey Quays and the branches following it. If more of the freight could be diverted via the Goblin and Hampstead Heath (or better yet, via some other route bypassing inner London), then the issue of the fright loops becomes moot. The LO lines are no different to the SSL lines, and we all know what capacities are possible on those. Freight from the GEML can't realistically use Goblin, which in any event will be heavily used from Ripple Lane and the new port at Thames Haven, and potentially from HS1 via the Rainham freight link. The freight via Goblin is likely to need all available paths via Hampstead Heath, though there is a need for freight from the GEML bound for the GWML, the SWML, or the WLL to run via Camden Road and Hampstead Heath. This means that freight from the GEML to Willesden or the WCML has to run via Primrose Hill. Then your segregation of the ELLX to run via Primrose Hill, and the NLL via Camden Road and Hampstead Heath will be compromised by freight crossing between the two lines Between Highbury and Camden Road, or at Camden Road. If a passenger service is to be reinstated over the Primrose Hill link, a much better arrangement would be for the ELLX to continue to terminate at Highbury & Islington or Dalston Junction, with NLL services running Stratford to Richmond via Hampstead Heath, and Stratford to the DC lines via Primrose Hill. Electrification of Goblin and alterations at Gospel Oak might also allow a Barking to Clapham Junction service. Peter |
#25
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On Fri, 28 Jan 2011 16:54:06 -0800 (PST), Jamie Thompson
wrote: I've proposed this several times, as it seems quite a no-brainer to me to give a totally segregated DC metro service from Watford Junction to Surrey Quays and the branches following it. I have to ask where the demand is for such a long service? Would people really travel on a DC stopping service via East London from Watford to South London? Surely the imperative is to boost WLL capacity and add a second Southern service per hour? I also cannot see hundreds of millions of pounds being spent to change an alignment on which hundreds of millions have just been spent to provide sufficient capacity for Overground and freight services over the NLL. While there does seem to be a level of demand for a service via Primrose Hill does it really need to be hugely frequent? Could not a x30 shuttle from Willesden Junction to Camden Road not suffice? OK people will need to change but there will be frequent services at both points to allow that to happen. I may be a tad out of date about platform / turnback provision at Willesden Low Level and Camden Road (3rd platform) so my idea might not work. If more of the freight could be diverted via the Goblin and Hampstead Heath (or better yet, via some other route bypassing inner London), then the issue of the fright loops becomes moot. And what happens to the GOBLIN service level if yet more freight has to be pumped along that line? It might be possible to raise line speed a bit and possibly squash some more signalling capacity out. Network Rail opted not to fix the decaying bridges, that result in permanent speed restrictions, during the recent upgrade works so where will the funding come from to fix them? TfL and the DfT cannot or won't find £250k to progress design work for electrification so I doubt we will see any more money being spent on the GOBLIN for a long time - more's the pity as it's a local line for me. I also think we need some brave thinking about local North / East London services linking down to Stratford via Lea Bridge. Again partly local self interest but a service from Chingford via Low Hall curve and from Enfield via South Tottenham to Stratford would generate patronage and aid local mobility. The Enfield proposal would create a potential capacity problem at South Tottenham given conflicting moves so that would need some thought. Heck you can run it with light rail vehicles for all I care - please just provide the services. They could sensibly be run and marketed as part of London Overground. The LO lines are no different to the SSL lines, and we all know what capacities are possible on those. Well the SSL lines don't have to cope with freight. They also have far higher demand levels than the Overground and have trains that are twice as long. There are other remedies like longer trains on parts of the Overground that will raise capacity before you start resignalling and track realignment. Didn't Ian Brown have a vision of 5 car trains on the NLL, WLL and DCs? Not sure about ELL but that is scheduled to have 16 tph on the core section when the new SLL opens in late 2012. I think it will take a long time to exhaust the capacity of 16 tph on the ELL although the southern branches may be fuller south of NXG. However, this will become impossible thanks to the strange choice of method chosen to link HS2 to HS1. They are proposing to tunnel a single-track tunnel from Old Oak Common all the way to Primrose Hill, then rise up and take over one of the tracks (widened to UIC gauge) onward to St. Pancras. I suspect the widening required might require the removal of the other track over the viaducts though. Why they don't just continue the tunnel a few hundred metres more to St. Pancras is beyond me. Sure it will save a tiny fraction of the cost, but you're crippling the LO network's future prospects. I think you need to define what you the LO network's future prospects are before you can conclude that a HS2 link tunnel will cripple them. -- Paul C |
#26
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On Jan 29, 10:55*am, Paul Corfield wrote:
I have to ask where the demand is for such a long service? *Would people really travel on a DC stopping service via East London from Watford to South London? *Surely the imperative is to boost WLL capacity and add a second Southern service per hour? I agree with you, I don't see end-to-end journeys as the target, precisely for the reasons you state. The LO service use in my experience is primarily a local one. Passengers travel for ~6 stations or so at most before interchanging, be it to buses or other rail services. Case in point, short of disruption, no-one north of Harrow & Wealdstone takes the LO to Euston outside of disruption. Operating it as a simple end-to-end service with reversal points would be just an operational convenience to minimise performance pollution. Arbitrary services could be Watford Junction-New Cross, Harrow & Wealdstone- Crystal Palace, Willesden Junction-West Croydon and Dalston Junction- Clapham Junction (which gives the core as Willesden Junction to Surrey Quays). I also cannot see hundreds of millions of pounds being spent to change an alignment on which hundreds of millions have just been spent to provide sufficient capacity for Overground and freight services over the NLL. Well, yes. That said, the infrastructure would hardly be wasted though, would it? You'd be plain-lining the points at H&I and largely finishing the works through Camden Road they planned to do anyway. A higher service frequency needs more intensive signalling so perhaps that would need looking at again. I'm not sure what the limits are on the new stuff they've just put in. The only real new major infrastructure required would be for 20m or so of the bridge widening west of Camden Road, and I can't see that costing more than a few million quid at worst. While there does seem to be a level of demand for a service via Primrose Hill does it really need to be hugely frequent? *Could not a x30 shuttle from Willesden Junction to Camden Road not suffice? *OK people will need to change but there will be frequent services at both points to allow that to happen. * I may be a tad out of date about platform / turnback provision at Willesden Low Level and Camden Road (3rd platform) so my idea might not work. It would probably work were the turnbacks to be added, yes. The ambition is to ditch the LO service into Euston though, so you need somewhere for that to go. A turnback at Camden Road could probably handle the 3tph fine, but ideally you want to be increasing service levels beyond that. Look at the usage the Watford branch of the Met gets versus the LO service and you'll see that market is there (though admittedly the Met has the advantage of being faster past HotH, whilst the LO would require the change at H&W for the same). People round my way (Watford) mostly don't use the LO for spontaneous trips because it's a 20 minute wait. Drop that to 10 or (at worst, 15 minutes), and you have a different usage mentality. And what happens to the GOBLIN service level if yet more freight has to be pumped along that line? *It might be possible to raise line speed a bit and possibly squash some more signalling capacity out. Network Rail opted not to fix the decaying bridges, that result in permanent speed restrictions, during the recent upgrade works so where will the funding come from to fix them? TfL and the DfT cannot or won't find 250k to progress design work for electrification so I doubt we will see any more money being spent on the GOBLIN for a long time - more's the pity as it's a local line for me. The state of the Goblin is indeed a sad thing. It has a lot of potential given some investment...there's not much more that can be said. We all know what's required. I also think we need some brave thinking about local North / East London services linking down to Stratford via Lea Bridge. Again partly local self interest but a service from Chingford via Low Hall curve and from Enfield via South Tottenham to Stratford would generate patronage and aid local mobility. The Enfield proposal would create a potential capacity problem at South Tottenham given conflicting moves so that would need some thought. Heck you can run it with light rail vehicles for all I care - please just provide the services. *They could sensibly be run and marketed as part of London Overground. All worth looking into. Well the SSL lines don't have to cope with freight. No they don't, and neither would a segregated DC line from WJ to Surrey Quays if you came up with something from the City loop at Willesden to Wembley Yard. It somewhat shifts the pressure onto the NLL, but with the ELL covering the heavy section between Camden and Dalston at increased frequencies, it should cope. Hell, be brave and consider running the NLL fast through that section to increase capacity if need be; change at Camden Road, Highbury or Dalston (OSI) for the ELL. Probably unpopular, but gives a bit more of a point to running two parallel services from non-adjacent platforms. *They also have far higher demand levels than the Overground and have trains that are twice as long. They do indeed. I'm not proposing 32 8-car tph ![]() There are other remedies like longer trains on parts of the Overground that will raise capacity before you start resignalling and track realignment. *Didn't Ian Brown have a vision of 5 car trains on the NLL, WLL and DCs? Increased frequencies need to come before longer trains. Get passengers used to the tube-like mentality that you can wait for the next one if this one is too full. That's not going to happen when the next one is 20 minutes away. If you increase the length of trains, you need to resignal things. Overlaps change, point clearances, etc. all need looking into. Unless the current work was done with that in mind, (tell me it was....) more work will be required. I heard the 5-car thing as well, but haven't seen anything I can recall right now first hand. Not sure about ELL but that is scheduled to have 16 tph on the core section when the new SLL opens in late 2012. I think it will take a long time to exhaust the capacity of 16 tph on the ELL although the southern branches may be fuller south of NXG. Indeed. It's a lot of capacity, and my initial proposal is to extend half the terminating trains from Dalston to Willesden, half the H&I terminators to Harrow, and the rest to Watford. That gives your 15- minute frequency from Watford to Harrow, and removes the need for the Bakerloo to Harrow as you will have 8tph between there and Willesden Junction. However, this will become impossible thanks to the strange choice of method chosen to link HS2 to HS1. They are proposing to tunnel a single-track tunnel from Old Oak Common all the way to Primrose Hill, then rise up and take over one of the tracks (widened to UIC gauge) onward to St. Pancras. I suspect the widening required might require the removal of the other track over the viaducts though. Why they don't just continue the tunnel a few hundred metres more to St. Pancras is beyond me. Sure it will save a tiny fraction of the cost, but you're crippling the LO network's future prospects. I think you need to define what you the LO network's future prospects are before you can conclude that a HS2 link tunnel will cripple them. I define the prospects as taking advantage of the Primrose Hill link, which connects two parts of the LO network on either end. Severing that link and removing the service to Euston (replacing north of Queens Park with the Bakerloo) means closing Kilburn High Street and South Hampstead. A simple, linear LO line from Watford to West Croydon with short terminal branches to New Cross and Crystal Palace is very simple for passengers to understand. Primrose Hill also offers a opportunity to build an interchange with Chalk Farm, improving usage on that section of line, and saving a good few pointless trips through Euston for those wanting Camden. As I say, I see the LO as SSL lines, just without the tunnelled core sections, and I think they should be treated as such. |
#27
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On Jan 29, 2:41*pm, Jamie Thompson wrote:
On Jan 29, 10:55*am, Paul Corfield wrote: I have to ask where the demand is for such a long service? *Would people really travel on a DC stopping service via East London from Watford to South London? *Surely the imperative is to boost WLL capacity and add a second Southern service per hour? I agree with you, I don't see end-to-end journeys as the target, precisely for the reasons you state. The LO service use in my experience is primarily a local one. Passengers travel for ~6 stations or so at most before interchanging, be it to buses or other rail services. Case in point, short of disruption, no-one north of Harrow & Wealdstone takes the LO to Euston outside of disruption. I would disagree with this statement, for much of the day it is still quicker to get the DC line train all the way from Euston to the stations between Harrow & Wealdstone and Bushey and I certainly see passengers traveling from stations such as Carpenders Park and Headstone Lane to/from Euston on these services. Operating it as a simple end-to-end service with reversal points would be just an operational convenience to minimise performance pollution. Arbitrary services could be Watford Junction-New Cross, Harrow & Wealdstone- Crystal Palace, Willesden Junction-West Croydon and Dalston Junction- Clapham Junction (which gives the core as Willesden Junction to Surrey Quays). I also cannot see hundreds of millions of pounds being spent to change an alignment on which hundreds of millions have just been spent to provide sufficient capacity for Overground and freight services over the NLL. Well, yes. That said, the infrastructure would hardly be wasted though, would it? You'd be plain-lining the points at H&I and largely finishing the works through Camden Road they planned to do anyway. But the track arrangement would also need to be altered between Highbury and Camden Road; with the NLL tracks shifted to use the northern most pair of tracks. At the moment they use the central two tracks and currently at Caledonian Road and Barnesbury station there is only a platform between the middle tracks, so more infrastructure work would be needed here. A higher service frequency needs more intensive signalling so perhaps that would need looking at again. I'm not sure what the limits are on the new stuff they've just put in. The only real new major infrastructure required would be for 20m or so of the bridge widening west of Camden Road, and I can't see that costing more than a few million quid at worst. The would also depend on how cheap it is to break out of the viaduct on the existing NLL formation to connect with new section needed and demolish the buildings in the way. While there does seem to be a level of demand for a service via Primrose Hill does it really need to be hugely frequent? *Could not a x30 shuttle from Willesden Junction to Camden Road not suffice? *OK people will need to change but there will be frequent services at both points to allow that to happen. * I may be a tad out of date about platform / turnback provision at Willesden Low Level and Camden Road (3rd platform) so my idea might not work. It would probably work were the turnbacks to be added, yes. The ambition is to ditch the LO service into Euston though, so you need somewhere for that to go. A turnback at Camden Road could probably handle the 3tph fine, but ideally you want to be increasing service levels beyond that. Look at the usage the Watford branch of the Met gets versus the LO service and you'll see that market is there (though admittedly the Met has the advantage of being faster past HotH, whilst the LO would require the change at H&W for the same). People round my way (Watford) mostly don't use the LO for spontaneous trips because it's a 20 minute wait. Drop that to 10 or (at worst, 15 minutes), and you have a different usage mentality. Increasing the frequency of the DC line trains would certainly be a good first step, but my understanding is that this needs resignalling first, at least south of Harrow. And what happens to the GOBLIN service level if yet more freight has to be pumped along that line? *It might be possible to raise line speed a bit and possibly squash some more signalling capacity out. Network Rail opted not to fix the decaying bridges, that result in permanent speed restrictions, during the recent upgrade works so where will the funding come from to fix them? TfL and the DfT cannot or won't find 250k to progress design work for electrification so I doubt we will see any more money being spent on the GOBLIN for a long time - more's the pity as it's a local line for me. The state of the Goblin is indeed a sad thing. It has a lot of potential given some investment...there's not much more that can be said. We all know what's required. I also think we need some brave thinking about local North / East London services linking down to Stratford via Lea Bridge. Again partly local self interest but a service from Chingford via Low Hall curve and from Enfield via South Tottenham to Stratford would generate patronage and aid local mobility. The Enfield proposal would create a potential capacity problem at South Tottenham given conflicting moves so that would need some thought. Heck you can run it with light rail vehicles for all I care - please just provide the services. *They could sensibly be run and marketed as part of London Overground. All worth looking into. Well the SSL lines don't have to cope with freight. No they don't, and neither would a segregated DC line from WJ to Surrey Quays if you came up with something from the City loop at Willesden to Wembley Yard. It somewhat shifts the pressure onto the NLL, but with the ELL covering the heavy section between Camden and Dalston at increased frequencies, it should cope. Hell, be brave and consider running the NLL fast through that section to increase capacity if need be; change at Camden Road, Highbury or Dalston (OSI) for the ELL. Probably unpopular, but gives a bit more of a point to running two parallel services from non-adjacent platforms. You also need to consider the freight connections from the East Coast mainline. At the moment freight can't access GOBLIN from the ECML without undertaking a double shunt (going the other way is OK), however access via Camden Road is comparatively easy and only overlaps with the NLL through Camden Road station itself. *They also have far higher demand levels than the Overground and have trains that are twice as long. Well about 40% longer as an 8 car S-stock train is 133m, whilst a 4 car class 378 is 80 meters (and the potential five car class 378 would be 100m or 75% of the length). They do indeed. I'm not proposing 32 8-car tph ![]() There are other remedies like longer trains on parts of the Overground that will raise capacity before you start resignalling and track realignment. *Didn't Ian Brown have a vision of 5 car trains on the NLL, WLL and DCs? Increased frequencies need to come before longer trains. Get passengers used to the tube-like mentality that you can wait for the next one if this one is too full. That's not going to happen when the next one is 20 minutes away. I agree that increased frequencies are a good idea. If you increase the length of trains, you need to resignal things. Overlaps change, point clearances, etc. all need looking into. Unless the current work was done with that in mind, (tell me it was....) more work will be required. I heard the 5-car thing as well, but haven't seen anything I can recall right now first hand. But you'd also need to resignal to increase the frequencies. Much of the recent work done has included passive provision for 5 car trains (the platform extensions etc. are long enough for example). Not sure about ELL but that is scheduled to have 16 tph on the core section when the new SLL opens in late 2012. I think it will take a long time to exhaust the capacity of 16 tph on the ELL although the southern branches may be fuller south of NXG. Indeed. It's a lot of capacity, and my initial proposal is to extend half the terminating trains from Dalston to Willesden, half the H&I terminators to Harrow, and the rest to Watford. That gives your 15- minute frequency from Watford to Harrow, and removes the need for the Bakerloo to Harrow as you will have 8tph between there and Willesden Junction. The Bakerloo might struggle to reverse all its service at Queens Park as only the central roads of the north shed can be used for reversals (the two through tracks don't have access to the other platform). Harrow does have the advantage that it has a central reversing siding, which is not present at Stonebridge Park (where some of the Bakerloo trains reverse at the moment). However, this will become impossible thanks to the strange choice of method chosen to link HS2 to HS1. They are proposing to tunnel a single-track tunnel from Old Oak Common all the way to Primrose Hill, then rise up and take over one of the tracks (widened to UIC gauge) onward to St. Pancras. I suspect the widening required might require the removal of the other track over the viaducts though. Why they don't just continue the tunnel a few hundred metres more to St. Pancras is beyond me. Sure it will save a tiny fraction of the cost, but you're crippling the LO network's future prospects. I think you need to define what you the LO network's future prospects are before you can conclude that a HS2 link tunnel will cripple them. I define the prospects as taking advantage of the Primrose Hill link, which connects two parts of the LO network on either end. Severing that link and removing the service to Euston (replacing north of Queens Park with the Bakerloo) means closing Kilburn High Street and South Hampstead. A simple, linear LO line from Watford to West Croydon with short terminal branches to New Cross and Crystal Palace is very simple for passengers to understand. Primrose Hill also offers a opportunity to build an interchange with Chalk Farm, improving usage on that section of line, and saving a good few pointless trips through Euston for those wanting Camden. But disrupting the journeys of those passengers who want the Euston area rather than Camden; Kilburn High Road and South Hampstead are quite busy with just the existing services from Euston. As I say, I see the LO as SSL lines, just without the tunnelled core sections, and I think they should be treated as such. |
#28
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On 29/01/2011 17:04, Andy wrote:
On Jan 29, 2:41 pm, Jamie wrote: On Jan 29, 10:55 am, Paul wrote: I have to ask where the demand is for such a long service? Would people really travel on a DC stopping service via East London from Watford to South London? Surely the imperative is to boost WLL capacity and add a second Southern service per hour? I agree with you, I don't see end-to-end journeys as the target, precisely for the reasons you state. The LO service use in my experience is primarily a local one. Passengers travel for ~6 stations or so at most before interchanging, be it to buses or other rail services. Case in point, short of disruption, no-one north of Harrow& Wealdstone takes the LO to Euston outside of disruption. I would disagree with this statement, for much of the day it is still quicker to get the DC line train all the way from Euston to the stations between Harrow& Wealdstone and Bushey and I certainly see passengers traveling from stations such as Carpenders Park and Headstone Lane to/from Euston on these services. Operating it as a simple end-to-end service with reversal points would be just an operational convenience to minimise performance pollution. Arbitrary services could be Watford Junction-New Cross, Harrow& Wealdstone- Crystal Palace, Willesden Junction-West Croydon and Dalston Junction- Clapham Junction (which gives the core as Willesden Junction to Surrey Quays). I also cannot see hundreds of millions of pounds being spent to change an alignment on which hundreds of millions have just been spent to provide sufficient capacity for Overground and freight services over the NLL. Well, yes. That said, the infrastructure would hardly be wasted though, would it? You'd be plain-lining the points at H&I and largely finishing the works through Camden Road they planned to do anyway. But the track arrangement would also need to be altered between Highbury and Camden Road; with the NLL tracks shifted to use the northern most pair of tracks. At the moment they use the central two tracks and currently at Caledonian Road and Barnesbury station there is only a platform between the middle tracks, so more infrastructure work would be needed here. A higher service frequency needs more intensive signalling so perhaps that would need looking at again. I'm not sure what the limits are on the new stuff they've just put in. The only real new major infrastructure required would be for 20m or so of the bridge widening west of Camden Road, and I can't see that costing more than a few million quid at worst. The would also depend on how cheap it is to break out of the viaduct on the existing NLL formation to connect with new section needed and demolish the buildings in the way. While there does seem to be a level of demand for a service via Primrose Hill does it really need to be hugely frequent? Could not a x30 shuttle from Willesden Junction to Camden Road not suffice? OK people will need to change but there will be frequent services at both points to allow that to happen. I may be a tad out of date about platform / turnback provision at Willesden Low Level and Camden Road (3rd platform) so my idea might not work. It would probably work were the turnbacks to be added, yes. The ambition is to ditch the LO service into Euston though, so you need somewhere for that to go. A turnback at Camden Road could probably handle the 3tph fine, but ideally you want to be increasing service levels beyond that. Look at the usage the Watford branch of the Met gets versus the LO service and you'll see that market is there (though admittedly the Met has the advantage of being faster past HotH, whilst the LO would require the change at H&W for the same). People round my way (Watford) mostly don't use the LO for spontaneous trips because it's a 20 minute wait. Drop that to 10 or (at worst, 15 minutes), and you have a different usage mentality. Increasing the frequency of the DC line trains would certainly be a good first step, but my understanding is that this needs resignalling first, at least south of Harrow. And what happens to the GOBLIN service level if yet more freight has to be pumped along that line? It might be possible to raise line speed a bit and possibly squash some more signalling capacity out. Network Rail opted not to fix the decaying bridges, that result in permanent speed restrictions, during the recent upgrade works so where will the funding come from to fix them? TfL and the DfT cannot or won't find 250k to progress design work for electrification so I doubt we will see any more money being spent on the GOBLIN for a long time - more's the pity as it's a local line for me. The state of the Goblin is indeed a sad thing. It has a lot of potential given some investment...there's not much more that can be said. We all know what's required. I also think we need some brave thinking about local North / East London services linking down to Stratford via Lea Bridge. Again partly local self interest but a service from Chingford via Low Hall curve and from Enfield via South Tottenham to Stratford would generate patronage and aid local mobility. The Enfield proposal would create a potential capacity problem at South Tottenham given conflicting moves so that would need some thought. Heck you can run it with light rail vehicles for all I care - please just provide the services. They could sensibly be run and marketed as part of London Overground. All worth looking into. Well the SSL lines don't have to cope with freight. No they don't, and neither would a segregated DC line from WJ to Surrey Quays if you came up with something from the City loop at Willesden to Wembley Yard. It somewhat shifts the pressure onto the NLL, but with the ELL covering the heavy section between Camden and Dalston at increased frequencies, it should cope. Hell, be brave and consider running the NLL fast through that section to increase capacity if need be; change at Camden Road, Highbury or Dalston (OSI) for the ELL. Probably unpopular, but gives a bit more of a point to running two parallel services from non-adjacent platforms. You also need to consider the freight connections from the East Coast mainline. At the moment freight can't access GOBLIN from the ECML without undertaking a double shunt (going the other way is OK), however access via Camden Road is comparatively easy and only overlaps with the NLL through Camden Road station itself. They also have far higher demand levels than the Overground and have trains that are twice as long. Well about 40% longer as an 8 car S-stock train is 133m, whilst a 4 car class 378 is 80 meters (and the potential five car class 378 would be 100m or 75% of the length). They do indeed. I'm not proposing 32 8-car tph ![]() There are other remedies like longer trains on parts of the Overground that will raise capacity before you start resignalling and track realignment. Didn't Ian Brown have a vision of 5 car trains on the NLL, WLL and DCs? Increased frequencies need to come before longer trains. Get passengers used to the tube-like mentality that you can wait for the next one if this one is too full. That's not going to happen when the next one is 20 minutes away. I agree that increased frequencies are a good idea. If you increase the length of trains, you need to resignal things. Overlaps change, point clearances, etc. all need looking into. Unless the current work was done with that in mind, (tell me it was....) more work will be required. I heard the 5-car thing as well, but haven't seen anything I can recall right now first hand. But you'd also need to resignal to increase the frequencies. Much of the recent work done has included passive provision for 5 car trains (the platform extensions etc. are long enough for example). Not sure about ELL but that is scheduled to have 16 tph on the core section when the new SLL opens in late 2012. I think it will take a long time to exhaust the capacity of 16 tph on the ELL although the southern branches may be fuller south of NXG. Indeed. It's a lot of capacity, and my initial proposal is to extend half the terminating trains from Dalston to Willesden, half the H&I terminators to Harrow, and the rest to Watford. That gives your 15- minute frequency from Watford to Harrow, and removes the need for the Bakerloo to Harrow as you will have 8tph between there and Willesden Junction. The Bakerloo might struggle to reverse all its service at Queens Park as only the central roads of the north shed can be used for reversals (the two through tracks don't have access to the other platform). Harrow does have the advantage that it has a central reversing siding, which is not present at Stonebridge Park (where some of the Bakerloo trains reverse at the moment). However, this will become impossible thanks to the strange choice of method chosen to link HS2 to HS1. They are proposing to tunnel a single-track tunnel from Old Oak Common all the way to Primrose Hill, then rise up and take over one of the tracks (widened to UIC gauge) onward to St. Pancras. I suspect the widening required might require the removal of the other track over the viaducts though. Why they don't just continue the tunnel a few hundred metres more to St. Pancras is beyond me. Sure it will save a tiny fraction of the cost, but you're crippling the LO network's future prospects. I think you need to define what you the LO network's future prospects are before you can conclude that a HS2 link tunnel will cripple them. I define the prospects as taking advantage of the Primrose Hill link, which connects two parts of the LO network on either end. Severing that link and removing the service to Euston (replacing north of Queens Park with the Bakerloo) means closing Kilburn High Street and South Hampstead. A simple, linear LO line from Watford to West Croydon with short terminal branches to New Cross and Crystal Palace is very simple for passengers to understand. Primrose Hill also offers a opportunity to build an interchange with Chalk Farm, improving usage on that section of line, and saving a good few pointless trips through Euston for those wanting Camden. But disrupting the journeys of those passengers who want the Euston area rather than Camden; Kilburn High Road and South Hampstead are quite busy with just the existing services from Euston. As I say, I see the LO as SSL lines, just without the tunnelled core sections, and I think they should be treated as such. Imagine the carnage when that lot hit town. |
#29
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On Sun, 30 Jan 2011 14:34:54 +0000, Martin Edwards
wrote: $BIG QUOTE {nothing in particular} Please don't quote 240 lines of text just to add a one line quip! (Well, not if you want anyone to read what you say) |
#30
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Ivor wrote:
On Sun, 30 Jan 2011 14:34:54 +0000, Martin Edwards wrote: $BIG QUOTE {nothing in particular} Please don't quote 240 lines of text just to add a one line quip! (Well, not if you want anyone to read what you say) In for a penny, in for a pound... -- http://gallery120232.fotopic.net/p10743107.html (A mixed class 108/101 6-car train at Shrewsbury, 1982) |
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