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Whats up with the Met line these days?
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Whats up with the Met line these days?
On Sat, 12 Feb 2011 02:01:05 -0000
"Jack Taylor" wrote: AFAIK they lifted it near farringdon to build that works ramp but last time I was at Barbican - which admittedly was about 6 months back - it was all still in situ. Perhaps thats changed, though the scrap value of the track surely can't be worth the hassle of lifting it now theres no rail connection to that branch. It's still there and the westbound line has now had all manner of detritus dumped on it, including the monitors that used to be on the platforms. Sounds like vandals have got in. How much of a loser do you have to be to entertain yourself by climbing onto a railway and smashing stuff up? Still, why NR left perfectly working monitors behind is anyones guess I suppose. B2003 |
Whats up with the Met line these days?
|
Whats up with the Met line these days?
On Sun, 13 Feb 2011 14:03:29 -0000
"Jack Taylor" wrote: Sounds like vandals have got in. How much of a loser do you have to be to entertain yourself by climbing onto a railway and smashing stuff up? No, it's clearly been stripped by contractors and dumped in the four foot to await collection and disposal. Some of the stuff is bagged up in cubic metre bags, it's just the bigger stuff like the CRT monitors, signalling equipment, pieces of catenary and some sections of rail (cut into shorter lengths) that have been left loose. Fair enough. Seems a pity they decided not to re-use the equipment or at least keep it in a state whereby it could be stored for possibly future use. B2003 |
Whats up with the Met line these days?
On Feb 14, 8:38*pm, wrote:
Sounds like vandals have got in. How much of a loser do you have to be to entertain yourself by climbing onto a railway and smashing stuff up? No, it's clearly been stripped by contractors and dumped in the four foot to await collection and disposal. Some of the stuff is bagged up in cubic metre bags, it's just the bigger stuff like the CRT monitors, signalling equipment, pieces of catenary and some sections of rail (cut into shorter lengths) that have been left loose. Fair enough. Seems a pity they decided not to re-use the equipment or at least keep it in a state whereby it could be stored for possibly future use. I'm not sure there's much you can do with a CRT monitor[*] or a random assortment of early-20th-century signalling equipment, though. I assume the metal stuff will be sold for scrap (after all, if it's worth scrotes' while to nick it, then it's got to be worth NR's while to sell it). [*] at least, from the number of presumably-functional CRT monitors and TVs I see left out on the street. Fairly sure the residual value of any CRT-based display unit is now zero... -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org |
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