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#1
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In article , Jon Crowcroft
writes What surprises me is that there isn't more reverse commuute Trains to Cambridge in the morning have appalling timekeeping. Even people commuting from as close as Royston/Meldreth etc are only doing it as a distress purchase. I'm guessing that only the rather baroque residence requirement of the University has stopped some of that community taking that view You entirely misunderstand the "boarding school" nature of education at Cambridge, which takes places 7 days a week. It's simply not like most other Universities. It suits people very well, and if it's not to your taste then no-one is forcing you to go there. Going the other way, a friend of mine who works at UCL (where I used to) did indeed move to Cambridge for life style reasons, and the 70min estimate for commute time is about right (note - depending on your work, this is made up of 45 mins of useable reading/working time...so in fact its very tractable - in his case, he even gets london weighting on his salary which almost exactly covers the train ticket costs ) Actually, the 70 minutes is the time *on the train* in the rush hour (not door to door). That's 58 minutes for the journey and five minutes either end for getting on and off. 45 mins is the much faster journey time during the day on a non-stop Cambridge Cruiser, which don't run in the peaks. And if you are lucky enough to get a seat you can do some work, but the trains lack useful tables and it's a real struggle. If GNER trains didnt get in the way at the Hitchin junction, theCambridge-London service for King's Cross could easily be a tad faster - _ believe there was discussion 3-4 years ago about speeding the route up further to 35 mins but: The cruisers manage to get through Hitchin without stopping. It's about 57 miles by train, and 35 mins is a bit optimistic (average of 98mph using trains that I think have a max speed of 100mph). The line speed from Hitchin to Cambridge is the limiting factor, a major upgrade about 5 years ago raised it to the 70-80 mph region, I think (and knocked 2 mins of the timings). Upgrading again to 100 mph is unrealistic. If you look at GNER timings (and they run at well over 100mph) then Hitchin would seem to be about 21 mins from KX (Stevenage is timetabled at 19 mins as a stop; or dividing the KX-HIT-PBO distance equally into 45 mins you get 20 mins, but the southern end is always slower) leaving only 14 mins for the remaining 25 miles! The cruisers do well to average about 70 north of Hitchin (assuming they can also get to Hitchin in 21 mins, which is averaging just over 90). -- "now, the thing you type on and the window you stare out of are the same thing" |
#2
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In article ,
Meldrew of Meldreth writes: In article , Jon Crowcroft writes What surprises me is that there isn't more reverse commuute Trains to Cambridge in the morning have appalling timekeeping. Even people commuting from as close as Royston/Meldreth etc are only doing it as a distress purchase. I'm guessing that only the rather baroque residence requirement of the University has stopped some of that community taking that view You entirely misunderstand the "boarding school" nature of education at Cambridge, which takes places 7 days a week. It's simply not like most other Universities. It suits people very well, and if it's not to your taste then no-one is forcing you to go there. This is rather an over-statement of the specialness of Cambridge (especially given there's Oxford, Durham, and even UKC and a couple of other places that are based on College/Residence model formally); but having studied for taught degrees and research degrees in London and Cambridge, let mesaytell you that since the move to most teaching and much supervision being department or school centric in Cambridge, the collegiate (or boarding school) model you describe is much less pronounced. What is more, MOST universities traditionally had a model that students were "away from home" for the first time living in dorms, staying in their university town all term, and going home in the vac. Indeed, given the economic pressures, travel is not high on the typical student (or academic)'s agenda. For real cabin fever though, there are ofcourse students who are obliged to live at home due to falling in between various "wealth bins" that the governemnt constructs. Anyhow this is not directly connected with transport (although actually cost of living and pressures on where to live in relation to work are clearly major factors in planning, so I dont think its off topic for this group). Going the other way, a friend of mine who works at UCL (where I used to) did indeed move to Cambridge for life style reasons, and the 70min estimate for commute time is about right (note - depending on your work, this is made up of 45 mins of useable reading/working time...so in fact its very tractable - in his case, he even gets london weighting on his salary which almost exactly covers the train ticket costs ) Actually, the 70 minutes is the time *on the train* in the rush hour (not door to door). That's 58 minutes for the journey and five minutes either end for getting on and off. Um, my friend is an _academic_: You assume he commutes in the peak time, but thats not a requirement, as he can go after (or before ![]() But you're right I guess for some jobs, e.g. some city banker type who wants to live in a nice quiet town/village, unless they go really early, and that would kind of negate the point of a quiet half-life. For the reverse commute, there _are_ fast trains and smaller crowds. 45 mins is the much faster journey time during the day on a non-stop Cambridge Cruiser, which don't run in the peaks. Yes, true - and thats reasonable given they have to stop so many times so a faster train couldnt easily overtake. I wonder if they've looked at this increase in demand and figured out if there's money in it to improve that service yet? And if you are lucky enough to get a seat you can do some work, but the trains lack useful tables and it's a real struggle. Yes, that is a drag ... the trick WAGN play with 8 and 4 carriage trains is neat, but it doesnt quite produce enough space for the commute load...I agree - If GNER trains didnt get in the way at the Hitchin junction, theCambridge-London service for King's Cross could easily be a tad faster - _ believe there was discussion 3-4 years ago about speeding the route up further to 35 mins but: The cruisers manage to get through Hitchin without stopping. It's about 57 miles by train, and 35 mins is a bit optimistic (average of 98mph using trains that I think have a max speed of 100mph). The line speed from Hitchin to Cambridge is the limiting factor, a major upgrade about 5 years ago raised it to the 70-80 mph region, I think (and knocked 2 mins of the timings). Upgrading again to 100 mph is unrealistic. I thouht the points were a big limiting factor between Hitchin and Cambridge and at Hitchin too...but I am not a Jarvis employee of course:-) If you look at GNER timings (and they run at well over 100mph) then Hitchin would seem to be about 21 mins from KX (Stevenage is timetabled at 19 mins as a stop; or dividing the KX-HIT-PBO distance equally into 45 mins you get 20 mins, but the southern end is always slower) leaving only 14 mins for the remaining 25 miles! The cruisers do well to average about 70 north of Hitchin (assuming they can also get to Hitchin in 21 mins, which is averaging just over 90). Well I certainly remember reading about plans; I am fairly sure that the problems are slwing for the various points and level crossings like round Foxton. If there was a road bridge there (or road tunnel, although it doesnt look easy to engineer that) that would obviate the rather long slow down and speed up a train has to do. I am guessing that the 70mph is simply coz there's not enough run between these places to make it worth getting up to 90 or 100 and then back down again but you may well be right... but imagine if it was 35 mins - you could be looking at Cambridge-Paris by train in 2 years time in under 3 hours... which would probably be very close to the cambridge-stansted-charles de gaul-paris haul given checkin/security etc, and an awful lot greener....and when fuel prices go up and hit economy airlines, an awful lot cheaper (though thats rather further off:-( "now, the thing you type on and the window you stare out of are the same thing" -- Jon Crowcroft |
#3
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In article , Jon Crowcroft
writes What surprises me is that there isn't more reverse commuute Trains to Cambridge in the morning have appalling timekeeping. Even people commuting from as close as Royston/Meldreth etc are only doing it as a distress purchase. I'm guessing that only the rather baroque residence requirement of the University has stopped some of that community taking that view You entirely misunderstand the "boarding school" nature of education at Cambridge, which takes places 7 days a week. It's simply not like most other Universities. It suits people very well, and if it's not to your taste then no-one is forcing you to go there. This is rather an over-statement of the specialness of Cambridge (especially given there's Oxford, Durham, and even UKC Did I say it was unique to Cambridge? I just said "*most* other Universities". Um, my friend is an _academic_: You assume he commutes in the peak time, but thats not a requirement, as he can go after (or before ![]() The cruisers don't run either before the morning peak or after the evening one. Unless he's putting in 6 hour days, he can only use them at most one way. 45 mins is the much faster journey time during the day on a non-stop Cambridge Cruiser, which don't run in the peaks. Yes, true - and thats reasonable given they have to stop so many times so a faster train couldnt easily overtake. I wonder if they've looked at this increase in demand and figured out if there's money in it to improve that service yet? The last I heard, WAGN wanted to cancel the Cruisers and rely on the remaining semi-fasts (there is plenty of capacity as all these trains run rather empty during the day), but were prevented from doing that because the Cruisers are a franchise obligation. I thouht the points were a big limiting factor between Hitchin and Cambridge and at Hitchin too...but I am not a Jarvis employee of course:-) The points *at* Hitchin have to be taken slowly (it's also a quite severe curve) but there's no similar restrictions I know of further north until just outside Cambridge (where the junction with the LS line is also a slow one). If you look at GNER timings (and they run at well over 100mph) then Hitchin would seem to be about 21 mins from KX (Stevenage is timetabled at 19 mins as a stop; or dividing the KX-HIT-PBO distance equally into 45 mins you get 20 mins, but the southern end is always slower) leaving only 14 mins for the remaining 25 miles! The cruisers do well to average about 70 north of Hitchin (assuming they can also get to Hitchin in 21 mins, which is averaging just over 90). Well I certainly remember reading about plans; I am fairly sure that the problems are slwing for the various points and level crossings like round Foxton. If there was a road bridge there (or road tunnel, although it doesnt look easy to engineer that) that would obviate the rather long slow down and speed up a train has to do. Would have to do. The current trains don't slow down for Foxton. I am guessing that the 70mph is simply coz there's not enough run between these places to make it worth getting up to 90 or 100 and then back down again but you may well be right... The track is very bumpy and poorly maintained. That's the main reason for the limits. The line is basically three straight stretches joined together with a curve each at Royston and Shepreth. but imagine if it was 35 mins - you could be looking at Cambridge-Paris by train in 2 years time in under 3 hours... It's a dream. You'll never get the required 125 mph running on the line, and even that won't help unless KX-Hitchin is improved (remember the 14 mins for 25 miles from the earlier sums), and that's *already* high speed. -- "now, the thing you type on and the window you stare out of are the same thing" |
#4
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Meldrew of Meldreth wrote:
You entirely misunderstand the "boarding school" nature of education at Cambridge, which takes places 7 days a week. It's simply not like most other Universities. It suits people very well, and if it's not to your taste then no-one is forcing you to go there. This is rather an over-statement of the specialness of Cambridge (especially given there's Oxford, Durham, and even UKC Did I say it was unique to Cambridge? I just said "*most* other Universities". Certainly back in the 70's/80's, almost all universities expected first (and often third) years to live on site |
#5
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On Mon, 3 Jan 2005 15:02:18 -0000, "Stimpy"
wrote: Certainly back in the 70's/80's, almost all universities expected first (and often third) years to live on site Perhaps - though I've not heard in a long time of another university (like I'm told is the case in Cambridge and possibly Oxford) that requires you to be in residence over a specified number of weekends. Many universities guarantee first years a place in halls, but I don't think any (other than those two) now enforce it as a requirement. Neil -- Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK When replying please use neil at the above domain 'wensleydale' is a spam trap and is not read. |
#6
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In article , Neil Williams
writes Perhaps - though I've not heard in a long time of another university (like I'm told is the case in Cambridge and possibly Oxford) that requires you to be in residence over a specified number of weekends. Weekends aren't special (nor are Bank Holidays during exams); it's the number of *nights* that count. You need the weekends to make up the numbers, and in my day there were quite a few courses with Saturday morning lectures- I'm not sure whether that's changed now. Comparing our calendars with friends at London University, their terms were 2 weeks longer, but everyone routinely took time off most weekends - so they actually worked less. My college library was full of people studying on a Sunday afternoon, and with no TV or other distractions to speak of (one set in a common room) people did tend to work most of the time. -- "now, the thing you type on and the window you stare out of are the same thing" |
#7
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On Mon, 3 Jan 2005 15:55:38 +0000, Meldrew of Meldreth
wrote: Weekends aren't special (nor are Bank Holidays during exams); it's the number of *nights* that count. You need the weekends to make up the numbers, and in my day there were quite a few courses with Saturday morning lectures- I'm not sure whether that's changed now. OOI, how is it enforced? Do they come around knocking on doors in the late evening to ensure you haven't sneaked off for a couple of days? (In Manchester, we were supposed to notify the hall office if going away overnight, presumably for fire list reasons, but in practice nobody actually did that I could tell, and a register was never taken when the fire alarm went off). Neil -- Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK When replying please use neil at the above domain 'wensleydale' is a spam trap and is not read. |
#8
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Meldrew of Meldreth writes:
... people did tend to work most of the time. Boggle. We are talking about student life here are we? My recollection is rather different. |
#9
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In article , Stimpy
writes Certainly back in the 70's/80's, almost all universities expected first (and often third) years to live on site That may have been because there were fewer "new" universities then, but even in those days there were few students at London University living anywhere near their lecture facilities, even if they were in halls of residence. -- "now, the thing you type on and the window you stare out of are the same thing" |
#10
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In article , Jon Crowcroft
writes I thouht the points were a big limiting factor between Hitchin and Cambridge and at Hitchin too...but I am not a Jarvis employee of course:-) For a non-stop class 365 EMU, the bottlenecks are as follows: King's Cross approaches start at 15mph and ramp up to 100mph by, IIRC, Finsbury Park (my sources for this are a bit out of date). Limit is then never below 100mph to Hitchin. Hitchin junction is 40mph for 34c (just under 700m) northbound, 26c (just over 500m) southbound. Southbound trains are also limited to 75mph through Hitchin and for about 600m south, then IIRC 70mph over the connection to the fast line. Limit is then 80mph to Royston (but this may be out of date). North of Royston my sources predate the major works of a few years ago, but show limits varying between 50 and 90mph; the major restrictions are at the north end of Royston and at Shepreth. Shepreth Branch Junction (on to the Liverpool Street line) is 30mph. Then 90mph to Long Road, then 80mph northbound, 90mph southbound, to Hills Road, then 35mph into the station. -- Clive D.W. Feather | Home: Tel: +44 20 8495 6138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work: Please reply to the Reply-To address, which is: |
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