![]() |
Chiltern to Paddington
On 2015\09\19 00:22, Paul Corfield wrote:
On Fri, 18 Sep 2015 21:58:06 +0100, Basil Jet wrote: On 2015\09\18 16:54, Robin9 wrote: I travelled on this train this morning. Very interesting. There was one other passenger - with the regulation camera - and a member of staff in civilian clothes who seemed to be the guard. He said the reason for the service was to maintain Chiltern's right of way into Paddington and seemed to think that staff training was a secondary consideration. He also confirmed there was no chance of Chiltern sending more trains to Paddington because of a lack of train paths and platforms. What use is maintaining Chiltern's "right of way" if they don't have the right to more than one path a day? It avoids the horror, for the DfT, of going through the formal closure procedure. DfT are undboubtedly happy to avoid drawing any attention to the route, its appalling condition and the poor train service. If people became aware of the route all sorts of outrageous demands, like a decent train service or, horror of horrors, linking into Crossrail might be suggested and we can't have that. You can guarantee that if anyone did anything about closing the service in the next few months that it'd become a Mayoral election issue in West London and London Travelwatch would never, ever agree to a closure of a main line link into a London terminal. That sounds far more likely than Chiltern wanting to maintain a right of way. I'm wondering... if a link from the line to the West London line was built, perhaps using an S-shaped curve from just south of Old Oak Common Depot to Hythe Road / Salter Street, would an hourly service from, say Aylesbury and Princes Risborough to Shepherds Bush and further (say, Brixton and Orpington) be popular? And would that remove the legal need for the daily Chiltern service to Paddington, and the parliamentary bus service from Ealing to Wandsworth Road? |
Chiltern to Paddington
Basil Jet wrote:
On 2015\09\18 16:54, Robin9 wrote: I travelled on this train this morning. Very interesting. There was one other passenger - with the regulation camera - and a member of staff in civilian clothes who seemed to be the guard. He said the reason for the service was to maintain Chiltern's right of way into Paddington and seemed to think that staff training was a secondary consideration. He also confirmed there was no chance of Chiltern sending more trains to Paddington because of a lack of train paths and platforms. What use is maintaining Chiltern's "right of way" if they don't have the right to more than one path a day? The main use is as a diversionary route at weekends if Marylebone is closed. Peter Smyth |
Quote:
Chiltern's return service from Paddington in future "will instead run non-stop to High Wycombe." |
Chiltern to Paddington
On Monday, August 10, 2015 at 9:12:21 PM UTC+1, Barry Salter wrote:
On 06/08/2015 00:44, Recliner wrote: It arrives empty, presumably from Marylebone or Wembley, at the down platform 3 at South Ruislip. I assume the Chiltern drivers all take turns on this service after bringing in a peak train to Marylebone, so they have up-to-date route knowledge. Runs empty from Wembley LMD to South Ruislip as 5V35, forms 2V35 to Paddington, 2M30 back to West Ruislip, then 5H43 back to Marylebone, though that's only part of the unit's diagram for the day. The trains in question are only worked by Aylesbury drivers, and I believe they need a Guard as well. Cheers, Barry -- Barry Salter, usenet (at) southie (dot) me (dot) uk Disclaimer: The above do not necessarily represent the views of my employer. Barry The May 2017 issue of Modern Railways (Page 58) says that Chiltern's return service from Paddington in future "will instead run non-stop to High Wycombe." I was at Paddington today and I noticed the destination was High Wycombe. I asked the staff member on guard duty if the train still stopped at West Ruislip. The reply was no, but the inbound journey from South Ruislip is unchanged. Wycombe non-stop. My Freedom Pass is not valid beyond West Ruislip!N |
Chiltern to Paddington
In message , at 12:28:14 on
Tue, 15 Aug 2017, Recliner remarked: I was talking in general, even when people have walked past big red buffers at a terminus, a surprising number are then confused about which way it'll depart. And surprisingly often, such as at Kings Cross platform 9 this morning, the driver apparently doesn't even realise the big red buffers mean "stop before colliding with me". -- Roland Perry |
Chiltern to Paddington
Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 12:28:14 on Tue, 15 Aug 2017, Recliner remarked: I was talking in general, even when people have walked past big red buffers at a terminus, a surprising number are then confused about which way it'll depart. And surprisingly often, such as at Kings Cross platform 9 this morning, the driver apparently doesn't even realise the big red buffers mean "stop before colliding with me". That's assuming there wasn't a technical failure. |
Chiltern to Paddington
In message
-sept ember.org, at 20:33:06 on Tue, 15 Aug 2017, Recliner remarked: I was talking in general, even when people have walked past big red buffers at a terminus, a surprising number are then confused about which way it'll depart. And surprisingly often, such as at Kings Cross platform 9 this morning, the driver apparently doesn't even realise the big red buffers mean "stop before colliding with me". That's assuming there wasn't a technical failure. Failure of the emergency braking system would be very serious indeed. The whole fleet would surely be out of service for inspection by now? -- Roland Perry |
Chiltern to Paddington
On Wednesday, 5 August 2015 13:48:37 UTC+1, Recliner wrote:
As most people here must know, Chiltern runs one service a day, M-F, to Paddington. There is a YouTube video about this, dated 7/12/2017, at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5KiZGRA_yCE in case anyone's interested. It came up in my recommended videos column, which is slightly worrying. |
That YouTube video was sent to me too. It's misleading in that
it does not mention the inbound journey from South Ruislip to Paddington. I also question the forthright assertion that Chiltern are required to run this service. If that is correct, why were Chiltern originally allowed to terminate at West Ruislip? |
All times are GMT. The time now is 09:46 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2006 LondonBanter.co.uk