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#41
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On 02.04.17 16:52, Recliner wrote:
Basil Jet wrote: On 2017\04\02 15:57, Recliner wrote: Basil Jet wrote: On 2017\04\02 15:28, Recliner wrote: David Walters wrote: On Sun, 2 Apr 2017 10:31:43 +0100, Clive Page wrote: My own suggestion for a transport oddity would be London's only funicular railway on the eastern side of the northern bank of the wobbly (Millennium) bridge. One could call it a sloping lift, but it really is a cable-hauled funicular, just a very short one. Best of all, it's free. There is one at Greenford Station too. That's not a funicular, just an inclined lift. Having used them both, I can see no difference, except the Greenford one is indoors, and the Blackfriars one is a shoddy embarrassment. Shouldn't a funicular railway have two cars that (approximately) balance each other, one going up while the other descends? They both have counterweights which do that, between the tracks. It's the yellow thing in Greenford. https://youtu.be/sxScXvX1Dv4?t=1m21s Light-coloured thing in Blackfriars https://youtu.be/b72PyyrFeYI?t=17s Yes, just like any lift. But I've always thought a funicular needed to have two balanced cars, not just one car and a counterweight. The inclined lift at Greenford doesn't purport to be anything other than a normal lift, which just happens to run on an angled track. They have them in New York as well as in Helsinki. |
#42
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On 02.04.17 15:51, Basil Jet wrote:
On 2017\04\02 15:28, Recliner wrote: David Walters wrote: On Sun, 2 Apr 2017 10:31:43 +0100, Clive Page wrote: My own suggestion for a transport oddity would be London's only funicular railway on the eastern side of the northern bank of the wobbly (Millennium) bridge. One could call it a sloping lift, but it really is a cable-hauled funicular, just a very short one. Best of all, it's free. There is one at Greenford Station too. That's not a funicular, just an inclined lift. Having used them both, I can see no difference, except the Greenford one is indoors, and the Blackfriars one is a shoddy embarrassment. Are you referring to the one at Millennium Bridge? |
#43
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On 02.04.17 13:21, David Walters wrote:
On Sun, 2 Apr 2017 10:31:43 +0100, Clive Page wrote: My own suggestion for a transport oddity would be London's only funicular railway on the eastern side of the northern bank of the wobbly (Millennium) bridge. One could call it a sloping lift, but it really is a cable-hauled funicular, just a very short one. Best of all, it's free. There is one at Greenford Station too. More likely to work. |
#44
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On 02.04.17 22:26, John Levine wrote:
Speaking of peculiar, London has four places where trains switch between overhead and third rail, namely Acton Central, Mitre Bridge, Drayton Park and Farringdon/City Thameslink. I have no idea how common pan-up-pan-down in service is globally. The 313 trains at Drayton Park very noticeably go though a "turn-it-off-and-turn-it-back-on-again" moment. I don't think it's that rare. In the US, the New York MTA New Haven line commuter rail switches at Mt Vernon They raise the pantographs when travelling east. Changeover was just after the junction at Woodlawn (CP 112), where the New Haven Line diverged from the Harlem Line, but they moved further east to the Mt. Vernon-Pelham border in 1993. This resulted in a small part of the New Haven Line becoming 3rd rail territory. There was consensus that they should have left the changeover just north of Woodlawn as part of that line goes through a cut, thus making track maintenance and power maintenance more difficult. and the Boston MBTA transit blue line switches near Logan Airport. I think that changeover on the T happens when the train is berthed at the station, whereas trains on the New Haven do it on the fly. For added confusion, Penn Station in New York has both third rail and OHLE, on different services but sometimes on the same tracks. Yes, but 3rd rail at Penn is all overriding, whereas Metro-North has only underriding. There is a direct connection from the New Haven line into Penn via the Harlem River Branch, which diverges just west of New Rochelle station. Amtrak trains are now the only trains to run over that line, though the MTA would eventually like to see New Haven trains running along it. One of the potential difficulties for this prospect is that M-2 and M-8 EMU trains have only underriding shoes. Having said that, the MTA have been discussing the prospect of New Haven Line trains running down the Harlem River Branch for at least 25 years -- if not longer. I sometimes think that it is just talk and that this is not likely to happen. |
#45
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#46
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and the Boston MBTA transit
blue line switches near Logan Airport. I think that changeover on the T happens when the train is berthed at the station, whereas trains on the New Haven do it on the fly. It's been a while since I've taken the train from the airport but I'm pretty sure it's on the fly. For added confusion, Penn Station in New York has both third rail and OHLE, on different services but sometimes on the same tracks. Yes, but 3rd rail at Penn is all overriding, whereas Metro-North has only underriding. There is a direct connection from the New Haven line into Penn via the Harlem River Branch, which diverges just west of New Rochelle station. Amtrak trains are now the only trains to run over that line, though the MTA would eventually like to see New Haven trains running along it. One of the potential difficulties for this prospect is that M-2 and M-8 EMU trains have only underriding shoes. I don't see why that's a problem, since the OHLE runs into Penn Station and beyond. There's an occasional MTA football special from New Haven that runs through Penn Station to Secacus for the Meadowlands stadium. Or are you saying the shoes would do bad things with the LIRR's third rail? There's also the Empire Connection, the former freight-only line down the west side of Manhattan that allows Amtrak trains from Albany to come into Penn Station. It's mostly unelectrified but there's a little bit of third rail at the end that lets the trains run into Penn Station. |
#47
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#48
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#49
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Someone Somewhere wrote:
On 02/04/2017 18:26, wrote: Does that mean at the time of my visit it was no longer a funicular but a very long inclined lift but now it is a funicular again? Given those cars seem to be articulated as well, when does a funicular become a funicular and stop being a cable hauled railway? The cars aren't articulated in a conventional sense. They seem to have a variable tilt mechanism (covered by the bellows) to keep the floor horizontal, as the angle of the funicular varies markedly. Perhaps that had failed in the missing car, and it was off being repaired. Rather than shut the funicular altogether, they ingeniously kept it running with just one car, using perhaps the undercarriage of the missing car with added weights for balance? |
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