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#11
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General Von Clinkerhoffen wrote:
I pay £1648 annual season ticket from Aylesbury to Amersham, from Stoke Mandeville it £300 cheaper, I call that expensive for a 15 mile journey. Assuming a 5 day week and 48 weeks per year that's less than 23 pence per mile. |
#12
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![]() "Brimstone" wrote in message ... General Von Clinkerhoffen wrote: I pay £1648 annual season ticket from Aylesbury to Amersham, from Stoke Mandeville it £300 cheaper, I call that expensive for a 15 mile journey. Assuming a 5 day week and 48 weeks per year that's less than 23 pence per mile. Not forgetting that the large difference in price between Aylesbury and Stoke Mandeville is because the latter has a larger car park and they want to encourage commuters to travel from there instead... although obviously for commuters without cars it can be considered a little unfair. That being said, a month or longer season from Aylesbury gives you free travel on Arriva buses within Aylesbury. |
#13
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Adrian Auer-Hudson wrote:
The diversion through Aylesbury is not an elegant solution. Wouldn't it be great if there was an alternative? Aylesbury through Verney Junction and Buckingham to Banbury would be so useful right now. As for Central Railway or the Great Central based HSL, Leicester through Rugby, Woodford, Banbury and High Wycombe to London would be a great route. Banbury would work well as interchange with local traffic. One can't imagine how the passenger feels, having reached Princess Risborough to be going backward to Aylesbury. I guess as long as the UK has politicians she will have a bizarre railway system. Adrian, webmaster http://www.LosAngelesMetro.net HOLLYWOOD, CA The original reason was that politicians had nothing to do with it, except to pass private Acts of Parliament to facilitate the haphazard planning of dozens of private operators. The Settle-Carlisle route, now a tourist attraction, was unnescessary even at the time, but the owner of the comapny concerned just had to have a route to Scotland. -- You can't fool me: there ain't no Sanity Clause. -Chico Marx http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Agora/1955 |
#14
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Tony Polson wrote:
"Adrian Auer-Hudson" wrote: The diversion through Aylesbury is not an elegant solution. Wouldn't it be great if there was an alternative? Aylesbury through Verney Junction and Buckingham to Banbury would be so useful right now. As for Central Railway or the Great Central based HSL, Leicester through Rugby, Woodford, Banbury and High Wycombe to London would be a great route. Banbury would work well as interchange with local traffic. One can't imagine how the passenger feels, having reached Princess Risborough to be going backward to Aylesbury. I guess as long as the UK has politicians she will have a bizarre railway system. And as long as the US has politicians it will have an almost total absence of passenger railroads. It beggars belief that someone from the land of the gas guzzling automobile, and especially from the home of permanent smog, should have the temerity to criticise any European railway system. ;-) There are politicians and ploiticians. Back in the days of President Ford, he wanted to carve up Amtrack in a way that would probably ended in its closure, but the House of Representatives stopped him. The Yanks have some head bangers, but there are more checks and balances in their system. -- You can't fool me: there ain't no Sanity Clause. -Chico Marx http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Agora/1955 |
#15
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Adrian Auer-Hudson wrote:
Nevertheless having grown up near a town (Aylesbury) with fine rail links both north and south. Said routes having the potential for development into a fine network, you will understand my disappointment at the leftovers that Aylesbury has for it rail link today. This is particularly strange in so far as Aylesbury was part of an area that was expected to see, and did see, expanded housing and employment as companies and individual were encouraged to relocate away from London in the 1960s and 1970s. This was typical of planning in the period, which assumed universal car ownership. After all, we all watched Perry Mason, didn't we? -- You can't fool me: there ain't no Sanity Clause. -Chico Marx http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Agora/1955 |
#16
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![]() "Martin Edwards" wrote in message ... Adrian Auer-Hudson wrote: The diversion through Aylesbury is not an elegant solution. Wouldn't it be great if there was an alternative? Aylesbury through Verney Junction and Buckingham to Banbury would be so useful right now. As for Central Railway or the Great Central based HSL, Leicester through Rugby, Woodford, Banbury and High Wycombe to London would be a great route. Banbury would work well as interchange with local traffic. One can't imagine how the passenger feels, having reached Princess Risborough to be going backward to Aylesbury. I guess as long as the UK has politicians she will have a bizarre railway system. Adrian, webmaster http://www.LosAngelesMetro.net HOLLYWOOD, CA The original reason was that politicians had nothing to do with it, except to pass private Acts of Parliament to facilitate the haphazard planning of dozens of private operators. The Settle-Carlisle route, now a tourist attraction, was unnescessary even at the time, but the owner of the comapny concerned just had to have a route to Scotland. -- You can't fool me: there ain't no Sanity Clause. -Chico Marx http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Agora/1955 If anything, the US owes the form of its railway network to the politicians of the 19th century, who offered very generous inducements (in the form of land grants) in order to encourage the westward expansion of the railways from St Louis etc. Nothing comparable existed in the UK at same period. Brian |
#17
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On Wed, 6 Jul 2005, Martin Edwards wrote:
Adrian Auer-Hudson wrote: I guess as long as the UK has politicians she will have a bizarre railway system. The original reason was that politicians had nothing to do with it, except to pass private Acts of Parliament to facilitate the haphazard planning of dozens of private operators. I think there was a bit more order to it than that, even if only a bit more. For example, i understand that the government required railway companies to build connections to other companies' tracks wherever possible; it's only thanks to that that we have a single network at all! tom -- Like Kurosawa i make mad films; okay, i don't make films, but if i did they'd have a samurai. |
#18
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23p/mile I can do Aylesbury to Amersham cheaper in my car, I don't
because I like the option of walking to the station, or cycling. Brimstone wrote: General Von Clinkerhoffen wrote: I pay £1648 annual season ticket from Aylesbury to Amersham, from Stoke Mandeville it £300 cheaper, I call that expensive for a 15 mile journey. Assuming a 5 day week and 48 weeks per year that's less than 23 pence per mile. |
#19
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Arriva buses are crap, get off train, walk to bus station, look for next
bus, there are 5 that travel along my route, next one is 30 mins, give up and walk, to cap it all those crooks decided to reduce the child discount from 50% to 25%, didn't tell anyone and left children waiting at bus stops, I wouldn't urinate on a director of Arriva if they were being consumed by fire. Matt Wheeler wrote: "Brimstone" wrote in message ... General Von Clinkerhoffen wrote: I pay £1648 annual season ticket from Aylesbury to Amersham, from Stoke Mandeville it £300 cheaper, I call that expensive for a 15 mile journey. Assuming a 5 day week and 48 weeks per year that's less than 23 pence per mile. Not forgetting that the large difference in price between Aylesbury and Stoke Mandeville is because the latter has a larger car park and they want to encourage commuters to travel from there instead... although obviously for commuters without cars it can be considered a little unfair. That being said, a month or longer season from Aylesbury gives you free travel on Arriva buses within Aylesbury. |
#20
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On Wed, 6 Jul 2005, General Von Clinkerhoffen wrote:
Aylesbury does still have good if bloody expensive rail connections with Chiltern, To London. Not so good to the north or Milton Keynes, right? there are plans for an Aylesbury North station to be built along with a big housing development, Very true. what we really need are links west to east, connecting us with Oxford, MK, and Cambridge now that would be fantastic, Milton Keynes, yes - i presume that's a reasonably big employment centre - but i'm not sure about how much demand there is for trips to Oxford or Cambridge. Still, if the line was there, it would have other uses! with the planned expansion of the town with Mad Uncle Prescotts lets cover the entire south east with homes idea, the amount of traffic is going to go through the roof, parts of the town are already a pollution hotspot! to have this rail link, along with a bypass would hopefully sort out some of the chaos that we have now, Where is the car traffic going? In view of Mad Uncle Prescott's plans, which will surely lead to drastic expansion of small towns and villages in the area, perhaps it would be a good idea to bring the line continuing north from Aylesbury (and, hopefully, Aylesbury North) up to standard, and use it to extend Aylesbury commuter services to Waddesdon, Quainton, etc. That line already connects to the (disused, i think) line to Milton Keynes, so commuter trains could run there, too. If a curve the other way was built at that junction, trains could also run to Bicester; with a connection to the existing mainline there, this would be the alternate route to Birmingham. All rather simpler than restoring the Quainton Road - Verney Junction route, i think. oh and don't get me started on Arriva busses (bunch of crooks). Par for the course with bus companies. tom -- Like Kurosawa i make mad films; okay, i don't make films, but if i did they'd have a samurai. |
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