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#21
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In message , at 16:53:18 on Wed, 13 Oct
2004, Sir Benjamin Nunn remarked: Hmmm.... I thought the W&C tunnels were big enough to take regular stock... Thought I had vague memories of NSE trains running on the line before the management went over to LUL, but could well be wrong. Erm, the trains were once run by NSE, but they were small tube trains. I've had a cab ride on the W&C and I can assure you that the Central Line stick they are currently using only *just* fits!! -- Roland Perry |
#22
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"Sir Benjamin Nunn" wrote in message
... I thought the W&C tunnels were big enough to take regular stock... No, in fact they had to be enlarged slightly to take the 92 stock. Thought I had vague memories of NSE trains running on the line before the management went over to LUL, but could well be wrong. They were certainly NSE trains, but approximately tube gauge. The current 92 stock are still in NSE livery. You might be interested in something I put together a few years ago. http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acro...tml#BlackTrack -- John Rowland - Spamtrapped Transport Plans for the London Area, updated 2001 http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acro...69/tpftla.html A man's vehicle is a symbol of his manhood. That's why my vehicle's the Piccadilly Line - It's the size of a county and it comes every two and a half minutes |
#23
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Sir Benjamin Nunn wrote:
Hmmm.... I thought the W&C tunnels were big enough to take regular stock... Thought I had vague memories of NSE trains running on the line before the management went over to LUL, but could well be wrong. They use similar stock to that in use on the Central. When delivered it was in NSE livery, as was the previous 1941 stock IIRC. |
#24
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On 13 Oct 2004, Boltar wrote:
"Andrew" wrote in message ... This is highly speculative and I'm sure the engineering feats involved would be considerable, but how about connecting the Northern City / WAGN line with the Thameslink spur into Moorgate, and restoring the 3rd curve at Farringdon Junction making it a triangular junction again. Would create I suspect the gradiants and curves required to join the 2 would be too severe unless a new line split off from blackfriars since from Barbican you'd have to drop about 20 metres and do a 90 degree turn More like a 120 degree turn, i think. in the space of 1/4 mile. Think outside the box! Don't do it with a curve to the north, do with with a curve to the south - a spiral tunnel heading down and round. Not only does that give you the space to do it, but it spreads the height change out over a greater distance. tom -- POTATO POWER IS UNTRACEABLE POWER |
#25
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On Tue, 12 Oct 2004, Andrew wrote:
"Jim Brown" wrote in message om... If the Bank of England sacrificed its vaults (Very little use for them now, with the gold sold off) and Cannon Street St was put underground (Plus a new tunnel under the Thames), would a tunnel connecting Moorgate and London Bridge be feasible? Or do the tube lines around there make it impossible? This is highly speculative and I'm sure the engineering feats involved would be considerable, but how about connecting the Northern City / WAGN line with the Thameslink spur into Moorgate, and restoring the 3rd curve at Farringdon Junction making it a triangular junction again. Would create more direct North-South journey possibilities without building a second tunnel. However after Thameslink 2000 is complete this might prove rather superfluous anyway as there will be a direct route from the ECML through the new Kings Cross Thameslink station and on to Farringdon. It seems a shame to abandon the Moorgate Thameslink route though. It does. I reckon it should be extended east from Moorgate, to Liverpool Street, then Whitechapel, then turning north to a portal around the Bethnal Green junction thing, where it could take over the West Anglia slow lines. Doing that would decouple those lines from the mainline part of Liverpool Street, which would relieve the station _and_ allow the line to run more frequent trains. It would also give that line more reach into town. The western end would either be some new platforms on the existing track at Farringdon (cheap, and still useful), or down into more tunnel to some new deep platforms at Farringdon, and then off on some sort of Crossrail N jaunt: i like Holborn, Embankment, Westminster, Victoria, then a bit of Chelsea-Hackney action to Sloane Square, King's Road Chelsea, Chelsea Harbour, Clapham Junction, then another portal to take over the slow pair on the LSW main line as far as Hampton Court, plus perhaps the Leatherhead (IIRC) line down to Epsom (with mainline trains through Epsom going into London via Sutton, unless someone feels like four-tracking from Epsom to the mainline). Might be a bit expensive just to save a mile of track, though. tom -- POTATO POWER IS UNTRACEABLE POWER |
#26
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![]() "Sir Benjamin Nunn" wrote in message ... Hmmm.... I thought the W&C tunnels were big enough to take regular stock... Thought I had vague memories of NSE trains running on the line before the management went over to LUL, but could well be wrong. Until around 1990 it was operated with specially built Southern Railway stock, though in its last years it may have been painted in NSE livery. Some of these trains even had ventilator grilles until the end of their lives which formed the words 'Southern Railway.' The new stock which arrived in 1990 was part of the LUL Central Line order, but was painted in NSE livery. Subsequently operation was transferred to LUL. But the loading gauge is very definitely tube gauge. Peter |
#27
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John Rowland wrote to uk.transport.london on Wed, 13 Oct 2004:
They were certainly NSE trains, but approximately tube gauge. The current 92 stock are still in NSE livery. Er - when did you last go on the W&C? Last time I went, at an Open Day a few years ago, the line were in ordinary LUL livery. -- "Mrs Redboots" http://www.amsmyth.demon.co.uk/ Website updated 26 September 2004 |
#28
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#29
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On 13 Oct 2004, Jim Brown wrote:
"R.C. Payne" wrote in message ... Solar Penguin wrote: --- Jim Brown said: If the Bank of England sacrificed its vaults (Very little use for them now, with the gold sold off) and Cannon Street St was put underground (Plus a new tunnel under the Thames), would a tunnel connecting Moorgate and London Bridge be feasible? Or do the tube lines around there make it impossible? Interesting idea, Jim... There's also the problem of the slope down from the high-level platforms at London Bridge to below the level of the river bed. Especially since the line also has to curve from east-west to north-south as it drops. Surely the way to make this work is to build new tube-level platforms at Cannon St and London Bridge, and break the surface east of London Bridge? Of course that would increase your price by just a few quid. Well yes I kind of presumed underground platforms at London Bridge but I didnt make that explicit. But as a ball park figure and assuming you could slot it into the London Bridge rebuild I'm guessing it would cost £3/4 billion. Of course the question then is which line(s) south of the river would be best to used for a new cross-london service? Dartford. What i'd do is surface as soon as possible onto the northernmost pair of tracks heading into (or out of) London Bridge, then run down to Lewisham (via a new station at the proposed Deptford Park ELL station), then out over all three routes to Dartford. You could run out to Ebbsfleet as well, if you liked. Ideally, you'd run a tube-style service. All this would interfere with other lines, like Crossrail (which is going to use part of the North Kent Line), mainline services from beyond Dartford (which would have to share with the metro as far as Lewisham) and the line (the Greenwich Line?) from London Bridge to Charlton. I'd solve the first two by fiddling about with Crossrail: beyond Canary Wharf, keep going south, to Lewisham, then turn and go to Dartford, still in tunnel; mainline trains could then use the tunnel to get to Lewisham, and carry on as normal from there, via another portal. Alternatively, don't get quite so radical with Crossrail, just follow the existing route but all in tunnel, and four-track one of the Dartford-Lewisham lines for the mainline (which is probably impossible - although probably cheaper than the ~100 million mile tunnel needed in the other option). The Greenwich Line, i'd transfer to the ELL - you just need a little tiny connection through some mangy trading estate around TQ366777; you'd lose the ELL service to New Cross, but New Cross would gain the metro in return. In other news, are Crossrail seriously not proposing a station at London City Airport? Is that what Custom House is supposed to be for? I think we discussed this, but most Crossrail stuff goes right over my head. tom -- POTATO POWER IS UNTRACEABLE POWER |
#30
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On Wed, 13 Oct 2004, Sir Benjamin Nunn wrote:
"David E. Belcher" wrote in message om... I seem to recall that in the post war plans for Londons Transport, one of the new lines to be built was an extension of the Northern City line from Moorgate, through the City and to new underground platforms at London Bridge and linking with the Crystal Palace (High Level) branch line of the SR. There were certainly thoughts of extending from Moorgate to serve a new station (i.e. not meeting up with other lines at Bank) near the Bank of England itself many years ago, and a few yards of tunnel were actually dug. This idea never really got past the drawing board stage, though. For years, I've advocated joining the Northern City Line from Moorgate up with the W&C line at Bank to form the basis of a new key route through the City and turning two rubbish lines into something useful. That's a neat idea. We really should have somewhere to write down these plans. In fact, what we need is something like: http://www.ratemynetworkdiagram.com/ But for hypothetical railway lines ... Anyway, as has been pointed out, th W&C is tube gauge, not mainline, so would need to be widened. Visionless naysayers protest that this would be impossible, but i demur - that's exactly what, i read in CULG, was done to the City & South London Railway when it became part of the Northern Line. They even did much of the widening at night, with trains still running in the day! Until they hit a gas main and exploded it, anyway. I can't believe no-one has ever seriously considered this idea before. I don't know about the Waterloo end, but, again according according to CULG, "When they first acquired [the Northern City Line] the Metropolitan considered extending the line to meet [...] the Waterloo & City". tom -- POTATO POWER IS UNTRACEABLE POWER |
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