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#61
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In message , Steve Fitzgerald
] writes Oh no, but you do have to be in possession of a 'Wrong Direction Move Form' This sounds very similar to the "Wrong Line Orders" that used to be used on BR. -- Clive |
#62
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Clive wrote:
In message , Steve Fitzgerald ] writes Oh no, but you do have to be in possession of a 'Wrong Direction Move Form' This sounds very similar to the "Wrong Line Orders" that used to be used on BR. Same principle, different railway etc. |
#63
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On 9 Jun 2005 02:45:35 -0700, "Boltar" wrote:
The queue in such a situation would be jam all the way back to White City as that is the next nearest turning point. Reversing trains I don't know if this is an issue on the central line but it does seem on some lines that some connects between the running lines have been removed for no obvious reason , leading to less flexibility in the service if theres a screw up. Convent garden on the piccadilly line spings to mind , not to mention the connection at finsbury park being lost due to the victoria line using an ex-picc tunnel. So if theres a problem on the line you get huge sections closed. Doesn't seem like a good situation. The real solution, of course, is to get the reliability and resilience of the railway up so that failures don't happen or if they do they have a much smaller impact because there are back up systems in place. This is the Japanese philosophy but it is expensive. In terms of turnbacks and crossovers - yes they can be a help but you do need to consider what happens to the passengers at the end of a closed part of line. I would not want to see trains terminating at Covent Garden - the place can hardly cope with normal passenger flows. If you look at the Jubilee Line - which has a lot of turnbacks and sidings on old and new sections - you will see that that added flexibility does not always provide a guarantee of quick service recovery. It does help but it would be better not to fail in the first place. I understand that a range of options per line are being assessed at present to boost operational flexibility and service recovery - this includes reinstatement of crossovers etc. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#64
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"Paul Corfield" wrote in message
news ![]() In terms of turnbacks and crossovers - yes they can be a help but you do need to consider what happens to the passengers at the end of a closed part of line. I would not want to see trains terminating at Covent Garden - the place can hardly cope with normal passenger flows. I know Covent Garden isn't the most ideal place, but the Picc really does need some form of turn-back facility in the long section between Hyde Park Corner and King's Cross. If one of these is out of use for any reason you have a really long length of railway closed - i.e. Hyde Park Corner to Arnos Grove. Perhaps Covent Garden should be reinstated with trains detained at Leicester Square or Holborn? The Picc could also do with some means of turning eastbound trains from Heathrow back - currently there is no way of doing this until the reception roads at Boston Manor (which us problematic as AIUI only Acton Town drivers are trained to drive in there?), or inconveniently at Northfields. If you look at the Jubilee Line - which has a lot of turnbacks and sidings on old and new sections - you will see that that added flexibility does not always provide a guarantee of quick service recovery. It does help but it would be better not to fail in the first place. I understand that a range of options per line are being assessed at present to boost operational flexibility and service recovery - this includes reinstatement of crossovers etc. IME there seems to be a reluctance to use facilities even where they exist. Even for pre-planned closures the areas of suspension seem to get wider and wider, and not long ago I witnessed an occasion where Northern Line trains were being reversed south-to-north at Stockwell due to an incident and yet were not taking passengers northbound, causing massive congestion and needless inconvenience. It has taken ten years to commission the Central Line's crossover at Queensway, which I'm sure would have proved useful on occasions where something has gone wrong at White City. And as far as the Jubilee Line is concerned, whenever there is engineering work east of Canary Wharf they only ever seem to reverse in one platform (providing a 6-minute-interval service), when reversals in both are possible. |
#65
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David Splett wrote:
I know Covent Garden isn't the most ideal place, but the Picc really does need some form of turn-back facility in the long section between Hyde Park Corner and King's Cross. If one of these is out of use for any reason you have a really long length of railway closed - i.e. Hyde Park Corner to Arnos Grove. Is there anyway that the Aldwych branch could be adapted for the purpose? Or does that require too much work to justify? |
#66
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Is there anyway that the Aldwych branch could be adapted for the purpose? Or
does that require too much work to justify? Probably not realistic since it only links to the northbound main line and at holborn the north and southbound lines are at different levels so you'd need some sloping tunnel to be bored to link up with the southbound line. Far too expensive. B2003 |
#67
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Boltar wrote:
Is there anyway that the Aldwych branch could be adapted for the purpose? Or does that require too much work to justify? Probably not realistic since it only links to the northbound main line and at holborn the north and southbound lines are at different levels so you'd need some sloping tunnel to be bored to link up with the southbound line. Far too expensive. Is it me or did someone set out to make the Aldwych branch next to useless for the main Picadilly line? |
#68
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In message , Tim Roll-Pickering
writes Is it me or did someone set out to make the Aldwych branch next to useless for the main Picadilly line? Not really ... it was more historical accident. The Piccadilly started life as two separate lines - one from Brompton to Piccadilly and the other from Wood Green to Aldwych. Before they were finished, these two schemes were linked by a line between Piccadilly and Holborn, creating the first portion of what came to be called the Piccadilly line - the consequence of this change of plan left the short stub from Holborn to Aldwych as a none-too-useful branch. -- Paul Terry |
#69
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Tim Roll-Pickering wrote:
Boltar wrote: Is there anyway that the Aldwych branch could be adapted for the purpose? Or does that require too much work to justify? Probably not realistic since it only links to the northbound main line and at holborn the north and southbound lines are at different levels so you'd need some sloping tunnel to be bored to link up with the southbound line. Far too expensive. Is it me or did someone set out to make the Aldwych branch next to useless for the main Picadilly line? It a remnant of the original railway from north London. The Piccadilly is actually made up of three separate railway schemes. The first was a deep level tube railway running under the existing District Railway to provide express services. The second was the Piccadilly & Brompton Rly intended to run from Air Street (near Piccadilly Circus) to a junction with the deep level District at South Kensington and the third was the Great Northern & Strand which was to run from Wood Green Great Northern Railway station under the GNR to Kings Cross and over the present alignment to Strand (now Aldwych) station. Upon electrification the District gained sufficient capacity that they didn't need to built the deep level line and the three schemes (icluding the District Railway company) were bought up and combined by Charles Tyson Yerkes, an American financier. A section was added between Piccadilly Circus and Holborn and the section north of Finsbury Park abandoned. Hence the stub that is the Aldwych Branch. |
#70
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Paul Terry wrote:
Is it me or did someone set out to make the Aldwych branch next to useless for the main Picadilly line? Not really ... it was more historical accident. The Piccadilly started life as two separate lines - one from Brompton to Piccadilly and the other from Wood Green to Aldwych. Before they were finished, these two schemes were linked by a line between Piccadilly and Holborn, creating the first portion of what came to be called the Piccadilly line - the consequence of this change of plan left the short stub from Holborn to Aldwych as a none-too-useful branch. Perhaps - but I recall other sections of the original railways were planned and never built. And this doesn't explain why the Aldwych branch wasn't properly linked to the network (surely linking to the southbound tunnel as well would have made sense?) or why the platforms were left so short, making a through service a non starter. |
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