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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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#12
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#13
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#14
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I couldn't agree more about the terrible decision to keep Sutton loop trains using Thameslink core. It's an established fact that loops (as opposed to termini) are bad for reliability, hence the conversion of the Circle line to the 'tea cup". The Sutton loop also has a single track section through Wimbledon station, which can only worsen reliability. Finally, the Sutton loop is restricted to 8-coach trains, reducing capacity through the core, and also on the Thameslink slow services north of the river which are in desperate need of additional peak hour capacity.
The campaign and decision to keep Sutton loop trains using the Thameslink core took place without people north of the river knowing that there was a chance of such a decision, so there was no opportunity for a counter-campaign. |
#15
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In article ,
(Paul Corfield) wrote: On Tue, 15 Dec 2015 07:16:21 -0600, wrote: We all know that the insane decision to include the Wimbledon loop services in Thameslink was prompted by the then Sutton MPs. Will DfT now have the balls to tell them (only 1 is new) to stop holding half the rest of the country to ransom? It wasn't just Sutton MPs though. It was the Wimbledon MP, London Assembly Members, the Streatham MP and others. The bit I've never understood is that running through consigns the route to a x30 headway whereas terminating at Blackfriars would give a x15 frequency *and* would have allowed more 12 car trains to run through the core. The politicians aren't all dim so why a more nuanced decision wasn't pursued I don't know. I doubt any of them would have suffered particular electoral consequences over an issue that doesn't manifest until 2018. I'm sad to say that the number of politicians who understand how to run a transport system is very small and doesn't include that lot as far as I know (not certain about the GLA members). I'm a lifelong and committed Lib Dem but my is no more exempt from that than any other in my experience. I know that Paul Burstow and Tom Brake made as much noise about it as any but they were just wrong. I'm surprised they didn't realise the impact on frequencies, mind. I would have thought a 15 minute service (would that work at Wimbledon?) would be much better. I think 10 Crossrail 2 trains will turn at Wimbledon. 30 are planned through the core and 20 an hour to Raynes Park. I didn't think it was 30 tph from day one for CR2 but I may be wrong. I was quoting from the CR2 web site. My son-in-law is working on the current consultations programme at present so I've seen some leaflets too. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
#16
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On 2015\12\15 13:16, wrote:
In article , (Basil Jet) wrote: On 2015\12\15 00:30, wrote: After all, isn't that why the Southern survives with no metro frequencies. It's such a complex and multifarious network. I'd imagine it mostly survives because most of the people who want to get a train to Central London every morning live in North London. Why do you think that? I had to cross the river every day just to get to school north of the river. So? |
#17
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to St. Pancras International and points further north. Clapham Junction, of course, is such a quiet back water . . . . |
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