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Chance to ride the Watford North curve
"Tim Roll-Pickering" wrote:
Recliner wrote: For anyone who would like to ride the Watford North curve on a normal service train, TfL has an Easter present for you. Most of the Met will be closed for track work over the four day weekend, but TfL says a "special Metropolitan line train service operates between Northwood and Chesham/Amersham via Watford". There will be replacement bus services covering the closed parts of the line not covered by other LU lines. I took a ride on this today and whilst it was great to use it the wider experience suggests TfL needs to drastically overhaul its information strategies. Firstly most of the Met was down but rather than basing rail replacement buses on the Met's own route they instead ran to connect to a variety of other lines. However getting information about these buses at non-Met tube stations was almost impossible. Secondly a lot of stations did little to properly direct people to the RRBs. Watford was one of the worst with no signage at all and just a staffer giving vague directions to a bus stop that has no indication whatsoever that it's where RRBs will stop en route to Watford Junction. Worse still it's accessed via the carpark rather than the main approach. Thirdly it was very hard to get consistent information as to what the service was. The engineering works map shows the services disrupted and not as running. Knowledge of the curve is rare and it doesn't appear on any map so many people couldn't understand that a train would serve both Watford and Chesham/Amersham. It didn't help with the service using a mix of special and automatic notices that confuse the hell out of people. So at Northwick the platform indicators explained it would be a combined service every fifteen minutes with alternating destinations and a c5 minute stopover at Watford. However the train that arrived had onboard indicators saying it was for Watford and only switching to the alternate service at Watford itself. Announncements both on the train and platform at Moor Park and were telling passengers to switch here for Chesham/Amersham despite that side of the triangle being closed. Similarly some announcements around Rickmansworth seem to have assumed through running to Moor Park. Many passengers were utterly confused and onboard train announcements did little to help. One woman called a helpline that seemed to assume the normal service rather than explain the special one. The biggies for future engineering specials must be: * Information posters must show the route as it is not as it isn't * Electronic displays must use a single way to display the service. * Automatic announcements must be turned off. * RRBs should go to the stations themselves in all but exceptional circumstances and clear maps and signs must show where the RRB stop is. Yes, I went on it too, and observed some of the same points. At Northwood, the signs weren't clear enough to stop southbound pax entering the station and heading down to the southbound platform, and then being confused by announcements telling them to go back up and get a bus from outside -- I wonder how their Oyster cards were charged? There should have been someone stopping them at entry and redirecting them to the rail replacement bus stop. Also, trains waiting to reverse spent pointless time in the southbound platform, rather than going straight to the siding and returning to wait in the northbound platform. At least the station announcements were correct and informative. At Watford, I didn't leave the station, but didn't see any signs on the platforms. The electronic signs just said the usual default thing about the platforms being for southbound trains: normally true when no trains are expected, but not necessarily so this weekend. They should have either updated the PIS or turned it off. I heard at least one automated station announcement saying that the Met and all other LU lines had a good service. This was a classic case of being technically true (ie, the limited services were running as planned), but highly misleading to a normal passenger. As you say, such announcements should be turned off if they can't be updated, which shouldn't be all that difficult for a long-planned four-day closure. In contrast, the onboard announcements on the trains I went on were OK, but with no mention of the rare route. I didn't spot any other track bashers. The North curve track was smooth and felt like any other service track. It's interesting that this little-used line was never singled. I'd obviously researched the rail replacement bus routes in advance, but I think it was confusing for those who hadn't. The bus stops weren't always clearly marked, either. Maps showing the actual open rail and replacement bus routes would have been very useful, but I saw none. Harrow bus station is also closed over Easter, as it's being used for access to the line, which caused further confusion, as buses stopped further up the road; needless to say, the rail replacement buses didn't go anywhere near the bus station. So someone arriving by local bus and needing to then use a rail replacement bus had to cross the closed line via the station overbridge. And just to add to the fun, the WCML was also shut through Watford Junction, and there were road closures around the station so the bridge could be reconstructed. |
Chance to ride the Watford North curve
On 03/04/2015 22:50, Recliner wrote: "Tim Roll-Pickering" wrote: [Watford North curve service] I took a ride on this today and whilst it was great to use it the wider experience suggests TfL needs to drastically overhaul its information strategies. Yes, I went on it too, and observed some of the same points. I haven't been on it, but I'm disappointed to hear about the lack of information provision. However, without even having been anywhere near it I can still add to the complaints about poor presentation of information. On the TfL service status page, the information about replacement buses is all presented in one solid block of text, with no formatting whatsoever - so it's a bit of work just to see that there are four different replacement bus services (A to D) running. In days gone by, leaflets with maps showing the bus services overlayed on to the Tube map have been produced, and these maps (or at least the whole leaflet as a PDF) have been made available on the TfL website. I used to find such things genuinely helpful as a way of visualising what was going on. It seems that in this brave new world, such special leaflets are a rarity or just non-existent (see discussion about Christmas services and lack of leaflet) as information provision is all on the web - unfortunately, often it also seems that no-one is making an effort to present the information with clarity on the web, as well as the lack of info on the ground. For reference, this is the text on the service status page for the Metropolitan line for the long Easter weekend: ---quote--- METROPOLITAN LINE: Good Friday 3, Saturday 4, Sunday 5 and Easter Monday 6 April, no service between Aldgate and Northwood / Uxbridge. A special Metropolitan line train service operates between Northwood and Chesham / Amersham via Watford, and there will be additional Piccadilly line services to Uxbridge. No Chiltern Railways service between Marylebone and Great Missenden. Replacement bus services operate. London Underground replacement buses operate Service A: Kenton (for Bakerloo line and London Overground) - Harrow-on-the-Hill - West Harrow (Pinner Road) - North Harrow - Rayners Lane (for Piccadilly line for stations to/from Uxbridge and Central London) Service B: Wembley Park - Preston Road - Kenton (for Bakerloo line and London Overground) - Northwick Park - Harrow-on-the-Hill - West Harrow (Pinner Road) - North Harrow - Pinner - Northwood Hills - Northwood Service C: Stonebridge Park (for Bakerloo line and London Overground) - Wembley Park, on Easter Monday, buses continue to Kingsbury - Queensbury - Canons Park (Honeypot Lane) - Stanmore Service D: Baker Street - St John's Wood - Swiss Cottage - Finchley Road - West Hampstead - Kilburn - Willesden Green - Dollis Hill - Neasden - Wembley Park Service E: West Ruislip (for Central line and Chiltern Railways) - Ruislip (for Piccadilly line), served by buses towards Watford Junction only due to roadworks in Ruislip High Street - Rickmansworth - Croxley - Watford - Watford Junction (for London Overground and National Rail) Chiltern Railways replacement service Great Missenden - Amersham - Beaconsfield (for connections to London Marylebone) ---/quote--- Regardless of anything else, how much do a few line breaks cost?! The final destinations end up running into the next bus route (e.g. [...] Northwood Hills - Northwood Service C: Stonebridge Park [...]). It's all just comes across as a bit half arsed. |
Chance to ride the Watford North curve
"Recliner" wrote in message ... "tim....." wrote: "Recliner" wrote in message ... "tim....." wrote: "Recliner" wrote in message ... wrote: On Thu, 2 Apr 2015 15:29:44 +0000 (UTC) Recliner wrote: Mizter T wrote: But as both Amersham and Watford are well outside London, it's hard to see why TfL and the London mayor would want to subsidise such services. Would If they're served by the tube then there's no reason why TfL shouldn't cough up if the route is viable since they're getting ticket revenue from non london residents. Otherwise put the buffers at Harrow and let chiltern take over the rest of the line. I don't think the fare revenue from an Amersham Watford Junction shuttle would even cover the operating costs, let alone the capital cost of a couple of additional S8 trains. That's a strange meaning of "Operating costs" that doesn't include the costs of the stock Why is it strange? It's completely normal. Is it? It wouldn't be if the item being operated was a car (taxi) or a bus. Why not? You'd have the fixed cost to lease the asset, and the variable operating costs to run it. That's exactly how trucks, buses, trains or planes are accounted for. Some planes and aircraft engines are charged on a power-by-the-hour basis, which includes all those costs in on single payment, which is how taxi fares work. Operating costs and capital costs are usually quoted separately for an asset. But it's a depreciating asset. It's not the same as the track. It's good for 30 years use at which time you throw it away. The lease cost takes that into account. It includes the interest on the original loan, and the depreciation. I know it does that's why the lease cost is an operational cost It a cost that occurs , on a day to day basis, just to run the service. If you decide not to run the service you can avoid that cost by using the asset elsewhere for a different service or by giving it back to the lease company and not paying for it at all. You can't do that with the track. tim |
Chance to ride the Watford North curve
"Tim Roll-Pickering" wrote in message ... Recliner wrote: For anyone who would like to ride the Watford North curve on a normal service train, TfL has an Easter present for you. Most of the Met will be closed for track work over the four day weekend, but TfL says a "special Metropolitan line train service operates between Northwood and Chesham/Amersham via Watford". There will be replacement bus services covering the closed parts of the line not covered by other LU lines. I took a ride on this today and whilst it was great to use it the wider experience suggests TfL needs to drastically overhaul its information strategies. Firstly most of the Met was down but rather than basing rail replacement buses on the Met's own route they instead ran to connect to a variety of other lines. However getting information about these buses at non-Met tube stations was almost impossible. welcome to the world of replacement buses. With some national rail service you can't even get information on the buses from the stations that they replace. Some higher up contracts the buses to run and after that they are managed by the bus company. The railway take no interest at all in the operation on the day with their staff knowing nothing tim |
Chance to ride the Watford North curve
Recliner wrote:
Regarding the seemingly hard to financially justify (and increasingly expensive) Croxley Link, one is again minded to think of the more adventurous possibilities of (Chiltern) services from Aylesbury to Watford Jn via the new route. Yes, that's certainly been suggested. A more likely possibility, but very hard for TfL to justify financially, would be a 2tph Amersham to Watford Junction shuttle. That would replace the services diverted to Chesham, and let Amersham pax transfer to Chesham services to London, as well as going to Watford. It's probably a few years too late now but one possibility might have been to convert the old Chesham shuttle into a Chesham to Watford route and keep Amersham's 4tph. This could have solved the problems of the S stock being to long for the Chalfont & Latimer bay, the lack of interchange between the Watford branch and Chiltern north of Harrow, the journey length without semi-fasts and the difficulties of serving both Amersham and Chesham. Of course this would probably fail on stock availability and it may have been hard to find the pax from Rickmansworth wanting to go to Croxley and Cassiobridge, but it might have solved some other problems. Now it would doubtessly bring howls from Chesham at the loss of through services to London. But as both Amersham and Watford are well outside London, it's hard to see why TfL and the London mayor would want to subsidise such services. Would Bucks and Herts councils want to jointly subsidise such a service? Somehow, I can't see it. By that reasoning one could just stop the tube at border stations - so the Met terminating at Moor Park or even Northwood and the Central at Loughton/Buckhurst Hill. Howls of pain from pax beyond but they would have no say in the Mayor's ballot box. -- My blog: http://adf.ly/4hi4c |
Chance to ride the Watford North curve
On Sat, 4 Apr 2015 10:28:00 +0100, "tim....."
wrote: "Recliner" wrote in message ... "tim....." wrote: "Recliner" wrote in message ... "tim....." wrote: "Recliner" wrote in message ... wrote: On Thu, 2 Apr 2015 15:29:44 +0000 (UTC) Recliner wrote: Mizter T wrote: But as both Amersham and Watford are well outside London, it's hard to see why TfL and the London mayor would want to subsidise such services. Would If they're served by the tube then there's no reason why TfL shouldn't cough up if the route is viable since they're getting ticket revenue from non london residents. Otherwise put the buffers at Harrow and let chiltern take over the rest of the line. I don't think the fare revenue from an Amersham Watford Junction shuttle would even cover the operating costs, let alone the capital cost of a couple of additional S8 trains. That's a strange meaning of "Operating costs" that doesn't include the costs of the stock Why is it strange? It's completely normal. Is it? It wouldn't be if the item being operated was a car (taxi) or a bus. Why not? You'd have the fixed cost to lease the asset, and the variable operating costs to run it. That's exactly how trucks, buses, trains or planes are accounted for. Some planes and aircraft engines are charged on a power-by-the-hour basis, which includes all those costs in on single payment, which is how taxi fares work. Operating costs and capital costs are usually quoted separately for an asset. But it's a depreciating asset. It's not the same as the track. It's good for 30 years use at which time you throw it away. The lease cost takes that into account. It includes the interest on the original loan, and the depreciation. I know it does that's why the lease cost is an operational cost It's the servicing and repayment of a capital cost, not an operating cost. It a cost that occurs , on a day to day basis, just to run the service. No, that's the point. It's a cost that occurs on a monthly or annual basis, whether you run the service or not. If you decide not to run the service you can avoid that cost by using the asset elsewhere for a different service or by giving it back to the lease company and not paying for it at all. You can't do that with the track. If you decide not to run the service, you save the operating cost, but not the capital cost. So you don't have to power, clean or maintain the train, or pay the staff to run it, but you're still lumbered with the fixed capital cost (as well as other fixed costs, like insurance and stabling). You can't just send it back to the lease company, as you'll be locked into a long-term lease, or will have bought it outright. For specialised assets like S stock trains, which have no market other than on LU, you'd be locked into a life-of-train lease of, say, 25 years. It's different with assets that have other markets (eg, a car or standard airliner), where the minimum lease may be for, say, five years. |
Chance to ride the Watford North curve
On Sat, 4 Apr 2015 11:11:06 +0100, "Tim Roll-Pickering"
wrote: Recliner wrote: Regarding the seemingly hard to financially justify (and increasingly expensive) Croxley Link, one is again minded to think of the more adventurous possibilities of (Chiltern) services from Aylesbury to Watford Jn via the new route. Yes, that's certainly been suggested. A more likely possibility, but very hard for TfL to justify financially, would be a 2tph Amersham to Watford Junction shuttle. That would replace the services diverted to Chesham, and let Amersham pax transfer to Chesham services to London, as well as going to Watford. It's probably a few years too late now but one possibility might have been to convert the old Chesham shuttle into a Chesham to Watford route and keep Amersham's 4tph. This could have solved the problems of the S stock being to long for the Chalfont & Latimer bay, the lack of interchange between the Watford branch and Chiltern north of Harrow, the journey length without semi-fasts and the difficulties of serving both Amersham and Chesham. Of course this would probably fail on stock availability and it may have been hard to find the pax from Rickmansworth wanting to go to Croxley and Cassiobridge, but it might have solved some other problems. Now it would doubtessly bring howls from Chesham at the loss of through services to London. Yes, I think that would have been a very good plan, and might be a better idea even now than an Amersham (or Aylesbury) to Watford Junction shuttle. I don't think the Chesham commuters would lose much, and some may even value a direct link to Watford, as would some Amersham residents. But as both Amersham and Watford are well outside London, it's hard to see why TfL and the London mayor would want to subsidise such services. Would Bucks and Herts councils want to jointly subsidise such a service? Somehow, I can't see it. By that reasoning one could just stop the tube at border stations - so the Met terminating at Moor Park or even Northwood and the Central at Loughton/Buckhurst Hill. Howls of pain from pax beyond but they would have no say in the Mayor's ballot box. It's one reason why the Ongar line died, when Essex refused to stump up more subsidy. I don't know if Herts and Bucks councils make any contribution to TfL, or if the services into those counties are financially self-supporting. Or does central government chip in on behalf of the home counties? |
Chance to ride the Watford North curve
Recliner wrote:
Yes, I think that would have been a very good plan, and might be a better idea even now than an Amersham (or Aylesbury) to Watford Junction shuttle. I don't think the Chesham commuters would lose much, and some may even value a direct link to Watford, as would some Amersham residents. Of course Watford High Street and Watford Junction are a different prospect. Finding people who want to travel to the outskirts of Watford is a different matter. The last attempt to make the Croxley Green branch work wound up as a farce as empty trains ran back and forth during the day. (Was the branch ever hooked up to other lines to provide through services that people wanted? ISTR reading there were trains to Broad Street but was that actually a popular commuter route or just a way to run extra trains on the DC lines without clogging Watford Junction?) -- My blog: http://adf.ly/4hi4c |
Chance to ride the Watford North curve
"Tim Roll-Pickering" wrote:
Recliner wrote: Yes, I think that would have been a very good plan, and might be a better idea even now than an Amersham (or Aylesbury) to Watford Junction shuttle. I don't think the Chesham commuters would lose much, and some may even value a direct link to Watford, as would some Amersham residents. Of course Watford High Street and Watford Junction are a different prospect. Finding people who want to travel to the outskirts of Watford is a different matter. The last attempt to make the Croxley Green branch work wound up as a farce as empty trains ran back and forth during the day. I think Croxley Green wasn't near anywhere useful then; the area has been developed a lot recently, and people are now less likely to want to use cars. But it's the connection to the Met that will make the line much busier, not the limited traffic from the new Cassiobridge station. (Was the branch ever hooked up to other lines to provide through services that people wanted? ISTR reading there were trains to Broad Street but was that actually a popular commuter route or just a way to run extra trains on the DC lines without clogging Watford Junction?) Yes, it appears that there were a very few direct trains from Croxley Green to Euston and Broad St over the southern part of the triangle (not planned for reinstatement) until 1966. http://www.disused-stations.org.uk/f...ve/index.shtml |
Chance to ride the Watford North curve
Mizter T wrote:
However, without even having been anywhere near it I can still add to the complaints about poor presentation of information. On the TfL service status page, the information about replacement buses is all presented in one solid block of text, with no formatting whatsoever - so it's a bit of work just to see that there are four different replacement bus services (A to D) running. Actually it's five but that just proves your point. It seems that in this brave new world, such special leaflets are a rarity or just non-existent (see discussion about Christmas services and lack of leaflet) as information provision is all on the web - unfortunately, often it also seems that no-one is making an effort to present the information with clarity on the web, as well as the lack of info on the ground. It also doesn't help that WiFi provision at many stations is poor and very bad on trains. And the webpage on the journey planner is slow and painful because it seems to have stations and bus stops outside as separate entries and then gets upset if a user hasn't been clear - but on an intermittant connection the options don't load quickly enough. Not everyone has the TfL apps downloaded on a smartphone with preset usage that makes it easy to zoom in on what they need - and indeed weekend and holiday traffic is even less likely to have them. -- My blog: http://adf.ly/4hi4c |
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