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#11
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![]() If it is 13 years late by your reckoning it was 1994 when it ought to have been approved - but it was not - by a Tory government. The previous study that made as far as a Bill were presented in 1991 to a Tory gov finally rejected in 1994 by a Tory gov. How do you think now then ? Well therein lies the difference Tories said we're not doing it and doing it they did not. New Labour said we are doing it and doing it they did not. The difference we now call spin. |
#12
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D7666 wrote:
On Mar 15, 10:53*am, Mizter T wrote: Tunnel boring So, it's finally really happening. Most days I travel one way or the other through Paddington on the Hamcity & Mersmith line and I've been watching the machinery being assembled bit by bit. Its impressive kit. I don't recall the channel tunnel machinery being as impressive but maybe grey cells are decaying. The Channel Tunnel machinery was crude and simplistic on the British side, but extremely sophisticated and impressive on the French side. The British tunnelling engineers laughed at the French machines, claiming that they were absurdly complex and would make very slow progress compared to the much simpler machines on the British side. In the final reckoning, the French machines were very reliable and worked faster than expected despite encountering ground conditions that were much worse than expected. Meanwhile, the British machines struggled in better ground that the French had to deal with and proved unreliable and inadequate. The planned meeting point between the British and French tunnel drives had to be moved towards Kent several times (and by significant distances) because the French machines made such rapid progress compared to ours. |
#13
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On 15/03/2012 20:48, Bruce wrote:
wrote: On Mar 15, 10:53 am, Mizter wrote: Tunnel boring So, it's finally really happening. Most days I travel one way or the other through Paddington on the Hamcity& Mersmith line and I've been watching the machinery being assembled bit by bit. Its impressive kit. I don't recall the channel tunnel machinery being as impressive but maybe grey cells are decaying. The Channel Tunnel machinery was crude and simplistic on the British side, but extremely sophisticated and impressive on the French side. The British tunnelling engineers laughed at the French machines, Which engineers, and how do you know that they did? It doesn't seen the sort of thing that engineers (real engineers, rather than repairmen or shopkeepers) who I've come across would do, as most seem to find different approaches to specific problems to be quite interesting. -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
#14
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On Thu, 15 Mar 2012 11:11:40 +0000, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 10:55:45 on Thu, 15 Mar 2012, d remarked: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-17365934 There doesn't seem to be much distance between the 2 bores. Surely they won't be that close the entire route? Looks like it would collapse. The tunnel is concrete-lined as the machine moves forward. I'm fairly sure the tunnel segments are up to the job, they're probably similar to the chunnel ones, or even the HS1 ones. I'm more interested in them apparently using GPS 38m underground! I expect that's a simple throw away line that means rather less than it sounds. I expect that "navigation" is going to be driven by laser sightings out of the rear of the machines, along the tunnel bores using intermediate survey points, to a datum point outside the tunnel bore. The datum point might be fixed by gps, although for a fixed point where absolute accuracy is needed, I suspect that it will be physically surveyed. Although the co-ordinates of various surveying points will be known, the fact that gps systems can use / display such co-ordinates doesn't mean that other systems that use such co-ordinates are gps, which is what I suspect that someone failed to understand when writing that. I wouldn't trust a gps derived position underground even if I could receive the signals - you don't know how much bouncing about it's done getting through the soil, pipes, rocks of various types, cables etc above you, and every signal bounce is a loss of accuracy. Rgds Denis McMahon |
#15
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![]() The Channel Tunnel machinery was crude and simplistic on the British side, but extremely sophisticated and impressive on the French side. Yes, you can always rely on the French to be a bunch of poseurs. Pity they aren’t so good at armies. Mind you, I bet they wouldn’t have needed £17bn to build HS2. |
#16
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On 15/03/2012 11:11, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 10:55:45 on Thu, 15 Mar 2012, d remarked: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-17365934 There doesn't seem to be much distance between the 2 bores. Surely they won't be that close the entire route? Looks like it would collapse. The tunnel is concrete-lined as the machine moves forward. I'm more interested in them apparently using GPS 38m underground! Did they ever choose names for them? |
#17
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On Mar 15, 8:44*pm, allantracy wrote:
New Labour said we are doing it and doing it they did not. Explain. What did they not do ? NO WAY was a project like this ever going to get authorised underway and completed in one term of government. If you really think that you are more in cloud cuckoo land than I thought. there has been an election, but that does not undo what was done before. -- Nick .. |
#18
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allantracy wrote:
Bruce wrote: The Channel Tunnel machinery was crude and simplistic on the British side, but extremely sophisticated and impressive on the French side. Yes, you can always rely on the French to be a bunch of poseurs. Laugh as much as you want, but it seems you can rely on the French to get the job done. Actually, they not only got *their* job done, they bored and lined a lot of the tunnel that was supposed to be built from the English side, so they did quite a lot of *ours* too. If it hadn't been for the ability and efforts of the French, the overall project would have taken much longer to complete and the final cost would have been even further over budget. |
#20
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