Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#32
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#33
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 27 Nov 2015 08:45:59 +0000, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , at 16:05:22 on Thu, 26 Nov 2015, d remarked: Its a mystery to me why they didn't route a branch of the tram line through it. They head straight for it then veer off at the last moment. The tunnels northern portal is at the victoria centre where they could have had a stop and then headed off up the A60. On one hand that route misses out the main square, Nottingham Trent University etc; on the other hand they'd have ended up with a tramline bisecting two underground car parks and quite probably a lot of expensive tunnel repairs to do. So the tunnels have been compromised? I assumed they were still intact. Victoria Station was on top of the hill, in a deep cutting with a tunnel mouth at either end. As far as I know the tunnels in both directions are intact. The massive shopping centre car park is built from track level upwards, and the shops themselves are at ground and first flooe level beneath the flats and the grey-roofed 'shed'. The northern part of the cutting has a separate car park with an adjacent bus station at ground level. http://www.perry.co.uk/images/nottingham-victoria.jpg You can see the cutting best between A (the northern portal) and D (where a fraction of the old grey-brick retaining wall is viable. The southern portal is at C, and has a small building on the much smaller cutting. And, right at the center of the view is the only remaining part of Nottingham Victoria Station, the clock tower. |
#34
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , at 09:06:26 on
Fri, 27 Nov 2015, e27002 aurora remarked: http://www.perry.co.uk/images/nottingham-victoria.jpg You can see the cutting best between A (the northern portal) and D (where a fraction of the old grey-brick retaining wall is viable. The southern portal is at C, and has a small building on the much smaller cutting. And, right at the center of the view is the only remaining part of Nottingham Victoria Station, the clock tower. And the station hotel. -- Roland Perry |
#35
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 24 Nov 2015 12:09:41 +0000, Sam Wilson
wrote: In article , Guy Gorton wrote: On Sun, 22 Nov 2015 18:03:11 +0000, e27002 aurora wrote: On Sun, 22 Nov 2015 17:24:25 +0000, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 08:44:47 on Sun, 22 Nov 2015, Railsigns.uk remarked: There can't be many people who feel inclined to comment on the excellence or otherwise of a hotel room's plumbing Or its supply of hot water. I've only stayed at two hotels (out of several hundreds) which ran out of hot water. The first was in Maidenhead in around 1980 and had suffered a one-off major outage of some kind. The other was Sharm-el-Sheikh in 2009 where no-one appeared to be that surprised that the system had broken down yet again. Given how well travelled you are, Roland, one is surprised you have not noticed the quality of the mains pressure water systems found in those United States. One of the things that attracted me to my unit here on the south coast was the absence of the usual low pressure UK plumbing. My shower here works as well as my shower in Tucson. That is hardly the norm for the UK. It is attractive until the day the mains water system ceases to flow into the premises for whatever reason - planned/unplanned. My late sister-in-law's house was mains-only and it was not a happy solution - add being coupled to a combi boiler and the water system was useless. A family member who works in the renewables sector laments the vogue for combi boilers. A hot water tank provides a useful way of decoupling supply and demand when energy sources are intermittent. My limited experience with combi boilers is that they are far from reliable. |
#36
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 27 Nov 2015 08:45:59 +0000
Roland Perry wrote: Victoria Station was on top of the hill, in a deep cutting with a tunnel mouth at either end. As far as I know the tunnels in both directions are intact. The massive shopping centre car park is built from track level upwards, and the shops themselves are at ground and first flooe level beneath the flats and the grey-roofed 'shed'. The northern part of the cutting has a separate car park with an adjacent bus station at ground level. http://www.perry.co.uk/images/nottingham-victoria.jpg You can see the cutting best between A (the northern portal) and D (where a fraction of the old grey-brick retaining wall is viable. The southern portal is at C, and has a small building on the much smaller cutting. Thats a shame. Those tunnels would have been a useful link whether for tram or road. Seems a bit idiotic to have destroyed them. Oh well. -- Spud |
#37
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 27 Nov 2015 09:06:26 +0000
e27002 aurora wrote: And, right at the center of the view is the only remaining part of Nottingham Victoria Station, the clock tower. Didn't know that. I always thought it looked inconcruous but never really considered what it actually was. -- Spud |
#38
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , at 09:45:57 on Fri, 27 Nov
2015, d remarked: Victoria Station was on top of the hill, in a deep cutting with a tunnel mouth at either end. As far as I know the tunnels in both directions are intact. The massive shopping centre car park is built from track level upwards, and the shops themselves are at ground and first flooe level beneath the flats and the grey-roofed 'shed'. The northern part of the cutting has a separate car park with an adjacent bus station at ground level. http://www.perry.co.uk/images/nottingham-victoria.jpg You can see the cutting best between A (the northern portal) and D (where a fraction of the old grey-brick retaining wall is viable. The southern portal is at C, and has a small building on the much smaller cutting. Thats a shame. Those tunnels would have been a useful link whether for tram or road. Seems a bit idiotic to have destroyed them. Oh well. Do keep up! The tunnels are still there. It's the cutting which has been built upon. -- Roland Perry |
#39
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 27 Nov 2015 11:27:23 +0000, Neil Williams
wrote: On 2015-11-27 09:33:32 +0000, e27002 aurora said: My limited experience with combi boilers is that they are far from reliable. I have experience with precisely one, and it has been as reliable as one might expect a system boiler to be. How many have you experienced, and how old? The technology doesn't differ that much from a system boiler. It's just that if it fails there is no hot water backup. One, well I did say limited, :-). And, its age was, to me unknown. Before I bought this condo, I rented an apartment here in town for two years. It had a combi boiler, it heated the water for the radiators and instantaneously heated the water for the shower and faucets. Twice during my stay I called out the repairman because the hot water supply failed. Moreover, when the pilot light went out, relighting and restarting the system was an art form, a torturous one. Added two that, two homes that I have owned, one in the US and one in the UK had instantaneous water heaters. Both worked well for the first year. After that, we experienced problems. A tank with heaters works best. My UK home has a modern tank with two immersion heaters. My US home has a tank with a gas heater. |
#40
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 27 Nov 2015 11:59:56 +0000, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , at 11:27:23 on Fri, 27 Nov 2015, Neil Williams remarked: My limited experience with combi boilers is that they are far from reliable. I have experience with precisely one, and it has been as reliable as one might expect a system boiler to be. How many have you experienced, and how old? The technology doesn't differ that much from a system boiler. It's just that if it fails there is no hot water backup. I've had a few, and the main problem is they don't deliver hot water fast enough to fill a bath in a sensible length of time. Let alone filling up a bath at the same time someone else is having a shower. Nothing to do with low pressure British plumbing then? |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
London's Great Northern Hotel | London Transport | |||
London's Great Northern Hotel | London Transport | |||
London's Great Northern Hotel | London Transport | |||
Great Northern inner surburban services - London travelwatch reponse to RUS | London Transport | |||
(WA) Great Northern & City | London Transport |