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#61
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Marland wrote:
Recliner wrote: Marland wrote: tim... wrote: "Recliner" wrote in message ... Graeme Wall wrote: On 22/10/2019 11:35, tim... wrote: "Recliner" wrote in message ... From: https://www.ft.com/content/c2b51fd2-f19f-11e9-ad1e-4367d8281195?segmentId=080b04f5-af92-ae6f-0513-095d44fb3577 One of the Britain’s busiest railway stations is set to take on a new role as a freight hub as part of a plan to shuttle goods to central London from a container port using old passenger trains. Have I understood this right? someone is going to take a container of stuff from the port transfer the contents of it onto a converted passenger carriage individual "units" at a time, presumably through side door(s) and then at the other end empty the passenger carriage by individual units onto little trucks Actually into vans What size of individual unit is this going to work for? Pallets and wheeled cages, think updated BRUTES. Somehow it reminds me of one of the late Michael Bell's schemes His scheme involved autonomous, self-propelled containers being carried on the convertible upper deck of his giant high speed double-decker trains. They would drive themselves right to the cutomer's address. you might jest, but I feel sure that Amazon are looking at doing that sort of thing without the train involvement tim The Ocado depot in Andover Hampshire burnt down early this possibly because the fire precautions were not thought through enough, that withstanding the publicity from the incident did show how far the technology of autonomous sorting equipment has become and similar equipment is used elsewhere. video of the Ocado system here, it would not be inconceivable to think that some of the units could be programmed to load themselves onto a truck or train get taken to distribution point and once self driving vehicle technology has developed complete the last leg though I imagine at first it would be other warehouses. Ocado before it burnt. https://youtu.be/4DKrcpa8Z_E Automated robots following tracks in flat factory floors aren't new, and the Ocado ones run in a segregated environment where they don't have to steer clear of people or other vehicles. Extrapolating that to the general problem of operating in a public space, where they have to self-navigate around people and other vehicles, across curbs and bumpy surfaces, obeying traffic lights, etc is a difficult problem whose solution isn't imminent. Level 5 autonomous cars are certainly more than a decade away, perhaps much more. Have no argument with the long development time for autonomous vehicles which is why I added the caveat of first use could be to other warehouses ,which might be the store for a large supermarket and further replace the need for human staff As it happens the system used by Ocado is little more sophisticated than a flat factory floor in that the storage baskets are stacked several tiers vertically, as well horizontally and the system stores items less in demand at the bottom. And while it may be a controlled environment they do have to avoid each other. Which is a lot easier than avoiding random pedestrians, cyclists, dogs, cars, buses, etc. I wouldn’t expect to see anything like them roam free in public space anytime soon but was more using them as an example that the late Mr Bells idea of self loading cargo pods might not be so outlandish though not on a super gauge railway. I think Michael's grand vision in this area was based on a number of individually feasible, or at least theoretically possible, elements, but collectively it was far from practical. That was true of many of his grand plans, which generally weren't based on impossible science. One rare exception was his strange belief that taller high speed trains would be more stable than squatter ones. |
#62
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In message , at 20:50:41 on Tue, 22
Oct 2019, " remarked: On 22/10/2019 10:12, Graeme Wall wrote: On 22/10/2019 09:49, Recliner wrote: From: https://www.ft.com/content/c2b51fd2-...d8281195?segme ntId=080b04f5-af92-ae6f-0513-095d44fb3577 One of the Britain’s busiest railway stations is set to take on a new role as a freight hub as part of a plan to shuttle goods to central London from a container port using old passenger trains. The first service, which is due to start in May between London Gateway and London Liverpool Street, is intended to help hauliers avoid the charges from London’s Ultra-Low Emissions Zone (ULEZ), which was introduced this year, and the congestion zone. It would also take traffic off the heavily congested A13 that links the port near Thurrock in Essex to the capital. A specialist rail engineering company, Rail Operations Group, is working with DP World, the owner of London Gateway, to develop the low-emissions scheme to compete with road hauliers to move consumer goods and freight nearer to their final destination in London. Karl Watts, ROG chief executive, said the response to its plans from logistics companies and retailers had been “overwhelming,” although he declined to name any customers that had signed up for the service. Paul Orchard, ROG production director, said a series of different companies — including logistics companies and retailers — were looking at participating. Heavy goods vehicles that fall short of the standards required for the ULEZ have to pay a charge of £100 for each trip into the zone, which from April this year mirrors the congestion-charging zone in central London. From October 2021, Transport for London will extend ULEZ to cover the area within the north and south circular roads. Mr Orchard said road hauliers can face environmental charges of up to £200 on a return trip into the capital depending on timing and the type of vehicle used. “The margins are in some cases wafer-thin,” Mr Orchard said of road transport. “You start adding in an extra £200?.?.?.?and that’s enough to make rail competitive.” ROG, which will offer the service under the “Orion” brand, plans to initially run three round-trip rail services per day outside of peak hours. It plans to use two converted, four-carriage trains that previously operated the Thameslink cross-London passenger route. The trains, due for delivery in May, are having their seats removed and being fitted with diesel engines. The engines will generate power when the train is not running on non-electrified lines, such as the freight sidings at London Gateway. ROG estimates that each carriage on its trains will carry around the same as a heavy truck. Once the packages arrive at Liverpool Street, they will be distributed to their final destinations around the city by electric van or cargo bikes. Liverpool Street is the UK’s third-busiest station with 67m passengers using it in the year to the end of March 2018. ROG is looking to expand the service and is talking to customers about other destinations, including possible overnight trains between London and Scotland and from London to Bristol. DP World confirmed it had held discussions with ROG about starting the service. It said it was also talking to the Port of London Authority on plans to use barges to move some goods to a site in Fulham, west London, by river. Then ship them up the Grand Union to* Birmingham! I've wondered whether the Grand Union or even the Caledonian could find commercial use once again. Perhaps the Regents Canal from Limehouse up to Paddington Station via Little Venice? That would require an intermodal station, however. Does Sweden's Göta Canal ever see any commercial traffic? If the road hauliers are worried about their HGVs being banned, then they could recruit OAPs (with Freedom cards) to hand-carry items from a railhead near the M25. Brentwood to the east and Chorleywood to the northwest. There's even a pub near each station where the OAPs could gather while waiting for the HGVs to arrive. -- Roland Perry |
#63
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In message , at 17:34:28 on Tue, 22 Oct
2019, tim... remarked: "Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message , at 12:40:02 on Tue, 22 Oct 2019, tim... remarked: think updated BRUTES. I have no idea what BRUTES is Are. If you think you were correcting my grammar, fraid not I had assumed it was the name of a concept or system solution, say like TOPS. It's dispelling that assumption which requires your grammar to be corrected. -- Roland Perry |
#64
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![]() "Anna Noyd-Dryver" wrote in message ... tim... wrote: "Anna Noyd-Dryver" wrote in message ... tim... wrote: And. of course, they will only deliver the bottom pallet of a stack How high do you think they’ll be stacked within a train carriage? more than one The pallets I’ve seen on supermarket shop floors are stacked to about 6 feet high and wrapped in shrink wrap. I didn’t realise 769s had 12 foot internal headroom... from personal experience: you wouldn't want to be moving around a 6 foot high stack with a hand driven thingy you need the item to be no higher than you can reasonably see over the top Anna Noyd-Dryver |
#65
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On 23/10/2019 08:08, tim... wrote:
"Anna Noyd-Dryver" wrote in message ... tim... wrote: "Anna Noyd-Dryver" wrote in message ... tim... wrote: And. of course, they will only deliver the bottom pallet of a stack How high do you think they’ll be stacked within a train carriage? more than one The pallets I’ve seen on supermarket shop floors are stacked to about 6 feet high and wrapped in shrink wrap. I didn’t realise 769s had 12 foot internal headroom... from personal experience: you wouldn't want to be moving around a 6 foot high stack with a hand driven thingy you need the item to be no higher than you can reasonably see over the top Tell that to Asda. Our local one has been re-fitted with their extra high shelves and I'm forever being asked to reach items from the top one. |
#66
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![]() wrote in message ... On 23/10/2019 08:08, tim... wrote: "Anna Noyd-Dryver" wrote in message ... tim... wrote: "Anna Noyd-Dryver" wrote in message ... tim... wrote: And. of course, they will only deliver the bottom pallet of a stack How high do you think they’ll be stacked within a train carriage? more than one The pallets I’ve seen on supermarket shop floors are stacked to about 6 feet high and wrapped in shrink wrap. I didn’t realise 769s had 12 foot internal headroom... from personal experience: you wouldn't want to be moving around a 6 foot high stack with a hand driven thingy you need the item to be no higher than you can reasonably see over the top Tell that to Asda. Our local one has been re-fitted with their extra high shelves and I'm forever being asked to reach items from the top one. That's a bit different from trying to push and steer a few hundredweight of pallet around the store, isn't it? As an aside, the 2.5 tonnes that (we have been told) these things can move is never going to be likely in a manual loaded environment. With a 20 kg personal lifting limit that's 100+ boxes per load. Manually loading 100 boxes onto a single pallet repeatedly, just ain't gonna happen tim |
#67
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On 23/10/2019 09:26, tim... wrote:
wrote in message ... On 23/10/2019 08:08, tim... wrote: "Anna Noyd-Dryver" wrote in message ... tim... wrote: "Anna Noyd-Dryver" wrote in message ... tim... wrote: And. of course, they will only deliver the bottom pallet of a stack How high do you think they’ll be stacked within a train carriage? more than one The pallets I’ve seen on supermarket shop floors are stacked to about 6 feet high and wrapped in shrink wrap. I didn’t realise 769s had 12 foot internal headroom... from personal experience: you wouldn't want to be moving around a 6 foot high stack with a hand driven thingy you need the item to be no higher than you can reasonably see over the top Tell that to Asda.* Our local one has been re-fitted with their extra high shelves and I'm forever being asked to reach items from the top one. That's a bit different from trying to push and steer a few hundredweight of pallet around the store, isn't it? As an aside, the 2.5 tonnes that (we have been told) these things can move is never going to be likely in a manual loaded environment.* With a 20 kg personal lifting limit that's 100+ boxes per load. Manually loading 100 boxes onto a single pallet repeatedly, just ain't gonna happen You are assuming they will be loaded manually. -- Graeme Wall This account not read. |
#68
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![]() "Graeme Wall" wrote in message ... On 23/10/2019 09:26, tim... wrote: Manually loading 100 boxes onto a single pallet repeatedly, just ain't gonna happen You are assuming they will be loaded manually. I thought we'd established that's the MO here tim |
#69
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On 23/10/2019 11:07, tim... wrote:
"Graeme Wall" wrote in message ... On 23/10/2019 09:26, tim... wrote: Manually loading 100 boxes onto a single pallet repeatedly, just ain't gonna happen You are assuming they will be loaded manually. I thought we'd established that's the MO here Depends how the are loaded into the container at origin, could already be palletised. Automatic loading of individual items onto pallets is also possible but the latter are more likely to loaded into cages which are already in use so they have to loaded somehow. -- Graeme Wall This account not read. |
#70
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On 22/10/2019 14:35, Anna Noyd-Dryver wrote:
The taxi rank used to be between platforms 10 and 11, at platform level. ISTR seeing service vehicles in that area on a recent journey, so presumably there’s still access. There still is a taxi rank between platforms 10 & 11, at platform level. -- Basil Jet recently enjoyed listening to Tortoise - 2016 - The Catastrophist |
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