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#11
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![]() "Paul Corfield" wrote in message ... On Sat, 27 Aug 2005 12:24:23 GMT, "Gareth Packer" wrote: On the second subject though, the Piccadilly line is getting new 2009-Stock tube trains in (funnily enough) 2009, which will be based on the 92-Stock of the Central Line, and the 95/96 Stock of the Northern and Jubilee Lines, so I wouldnt have thought that much more work by way of refurbishments will be undertaken on the 72-Stock Trains... could be wrong, since they are also due on the Victoria Lines around the same time, the only line with outdated trains I believe will be the Bakerloo line, which is not due new stock until 2019... I think you know more than we at LU or even Tube Lines do. The train design is not finalised and new trains are not required until 2012 at the earliest with upgrade completion due in 2015 if memory serves. It would be foolish to purchase a design of train that will be 15 years old for the Piccadilly Line upgrade. And performance of the current Northern Line trains is dire so it would be doubly stupid - Tube Lines will want something that it is very reliable so that their risk under PPP is minimised. I'm sure Alstom would be delighted to know they have already won a yet to be tendered contract as would the EU as this would be a breach of procurement law. Not sure how Bombardier would feel about the IPR of the Central Line trains being "stolen" to inform the design of the Piccadilly Line trains. Oh and Piccadilly Line stock is 1973 stock and it has just had a whole package of improvements made to it to improve reliability and all of the seat covers are being replaced by Tube Lines. As the Picc is generally very reliable on the Tube Lines managed sections it is pretty clear that spending money to deal with the worst aspects of unreliability has been worth it. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! I have replied with a couple of pictures before i read this, so it blurbs on about the trains, whether they will or wont exist. I am interested to know how much is true, however, so here is what I read. Would be interested in any comments? *** LONDON UNDERGROUND MAJOR REGENERATION SCHEME, UNITED KINGDOM London has one of the largest metro systems in the world, carrying almost one billion passengers a year. Although much of the 'Tube' was built by private enterprise in the late 19th and early 20th Century, for the last half-century it has been in public ownership, and governments of all complexions have been guilty of starving London Underground (LUL) of funding. When the Labour Government came to power in 1997, it chose a Public Private Partnership (PPP), under which private companies would help to finance regeneration in return for lengthy maintenance/management contracts and guaranteed returns. The once autonomous London Underground is now split into four organisations - two infrastructure companies (Infracos) and Transport for London. The Infracos are responsible for the maintenance and management of infrastructure (track, tunnels, stations and structures) and trains. TUBE INFRASTRUCTURE Around £16 billion investment has been promised by the Government and the two Infraco consortia over the next 30 years: £4 billion from the private sector, £5 billion from farebox and retail revenues and £7 billion from the taxpayer. Early priorities are to improve reliability and cut delays. One consortium, Tube Lines, is putting all its contracts out to open tender, for which the three shareholders will be able to bid against other companies. Improvements to stations include replacement or refurbished lifts and escalators, regular 'deep cleans' and a complete rebuild of Wembley Park station to serve the new national sports stadium. The other consortium, Metronet, is carrying out much of the work itself and is funded in a very different way, with investment from the five partners, European and other banks, a bond issue, government grants and farebox revenue. Included in this investment are new signalling systems for the Victoria and sub-surface lines, seven extra trains and improvements in service levels and journey times on Victoria Line. Track, points and crossings will be renewed, along with a comprehensive upgrade of all civil assets in the first 15 years, including 4,800 bridges, 1,600 structures and buildings, 130km of tunnels, 155km of embankments, 225km track drainage and 150 stations. LONDON UNDERGROUND ROLLING STOCK One of Tube Lines' earliest decisions was a £160 million order for signal upgrades to increase capacity and extra Jubilee Line cars to expand the fleet from the current 59 six-car trains to 63 seven-car sets. The vehicles will be similar to those already in service on the Jubilee Line, built by Alstom in 1997-99. However, closure of the manufacturing plant at Washwood Heath in Birmingham means they will have to be built outside the UK. The major part of the £3.4 billion contract awarded to Bombardier in April 2003 covers the supply of 1,738 Metro cars for the sub-surface and Victoria lines between 2008-15, all of which will be built at Derby. In total, 47 eight-car Movia 248 trains (part of the Bombardier Movia Metro family) will be built for the deep-tube Victoria Line with two pre-production prototypes arriving in 2006. Once the design is accepted, one train will roll off the assembly line every 15 days until August 2012. The Bakerloo Line will have to wait until 2019 for new trains. For the larger loading gauge Sub-Surface Lines (SSL), 190 Movia 237 trains will replace older stock on the Metropolitan, District, Circle and Hammersmith & City lines. Two prototypes on the 'Met' will have to run 40,000km - both empty and in traffic - to ensure they are fit for purpose. Bombardier's innovative bolted assembly process will be used to ensure rapid construction. For the first time, all sub-surface trains will be to the same design apart from train length to bring economies of scale on spares and maintenance, and will be the first on LUL to feature inter-connecting full-width gangways, creating more space and increased security for passengers. Improved acceleration and braking will shorten journey times and allow a planned increase in frequency on the Victoria Line from 28 trains per hour to 33. In the meantime, 75 six-car District Line trains, the last of existing stock to be replaced, are being refurbished. LUL SIGNALLING AND COMMUNICATIONS Much of LUL's signalling is old and unreliable and the Infracos have pledged to upgrade all equipment across the system. Westinghouse has been named as Metronet's sub-contractor for the signalling side of the contracts, worth around £850 million. It will install new train control systems on Metronet lines to improve safety and reduce headways, although the new system will not be 'moving block'. Around 75% of LUL control equipment is Westinghouse and the company has been a supplier to the Underground for over 50 years. For this reason it was the preferred choice for Metronet and Bombardier. PPP envisages a 15% increase in capacity over the next 30 years, but this looks likely to be inadequate for the growth anticipated. THE FUTURE By 2010, Tube Lines should have upgraded all 24 stations on the Jubilee Line, replaced over 16km of track and repaired 5km of drainage. By the same date the Northern Line should have had 40 stations upgraded, delays cut, 24km of new track and over 6km of drainage replaced. A year later a new signalling system should improve journey times by 18%, with real-time train running information on stations and trains. Further into the future, new signalling is planned system for the Piccadilly Line to improve journey times by a fifth, with 93 new trains. *** Thanks Gareth |
#12
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Boltar wrote:
I meant the Victoria Line... your absolutely right, the picadilly line So who's Emma Clark anyway? http://www.emmaclarke.com/ -- Joel Rowbottom, Chief Bespectacled Idiot, joelatfotopicdotnet 14M+ photos :: 215+ countries :: Free gallery at http://fotopic.net Now selling big 15oz mugs and steel travel mugs @ http://shop.fotopic.net |
#13
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Boltar wrote:
I meant the Victoria Line... your absolutely right, the picadilly line So who's Emma Clark anyway? http://www.emmaclarke.com/ She seems to do so many voiceovers that you probably hear her every day without realising! Cheers, Steve M |
#14
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On Sat, 27 Aug 2005 17:35:51 GMT, "Gareth Packer"
wrote: [snip] I have replied with a couple of pictures before i read this, so it blurbs on about the trains, whether they will or wont exist. I am interested to know how much is true, however, so here is what I read. Would be interested in any comments? *** LONDON UNDERGROUND MAJOR REGENERATION SCHEME, UNITED KINGDOM London has one of the largest metro systems in the world, carrying almost one billion passengers a year. Although much of the 'Tube' was built by private enterprise in the late 19th and early 20th Century, for the last half-century it has been in public ownership, and governments of all complexions have been guilty of starving London Underground (LUL) of funding. I'd say that was pretty factual. When the Labour Government came to power in 1997, it chose a Public Private Partnership (PPP), under which private companies would help to finance regeneration in return for lengthy maintenance/management contracts and guaranteed returns. The once autonomous London Underground is now split into four organisations - two infrastructure companies (Infracos) and Transport for London. The Infracos are responsible for the maintenance and management of infrastructure (track, tunnels, stations and structures) and trains. It is actually 3 infrastructure companies and LUL. TfL own LUL via Transport Trading. The article is a little loose with its terminology. LUL manages the trains in terms of how they run and work during the day. Infracos maintain and upgrade them and ensure they are safe to use on the railway. TUBE INFRASTRUCTURE Around £16 billion investment has been promised by the Government and the two Infraco consortia over the next 30 years: £4 billion from the private sector, £5 billion from farebox and retail revenues and £7 billion from the taxpayer. Early priorities are to improve reliability and cut delays. One consortium, Tube Lines, is putting all its contracts out to open tender, for which the three shareholders will be able to bid against other companies. Not sure I agree with the numbers. Ultimately all the money comes from the taxpayer as the borrowing and risk for the Infracos is within the bid infrastructure service charge. It is true that Tube Lines' approach is to competitively tender as there are no suppliers in the consortium structure. Improvements to stations include replacement or refurbished lifts and escalators, regular 'deep cleans' and a complete rebuild of Wembley Park station to serve the new national sports stadium. LUL is paying for the expansion of Wembley Park although a part of the scope was included within the PPP Contract in so far as it applied to the old size of the station. The lift and escalator programme has been rescheduled although reliability work on the worst performing lifts has been brought forward in Tube Lines land. The other consortium, Metronet, is carrying out much of the work itself and is funded in a very different way, with investment from the five partners, European and other banks, a bond issue, government grants and farebox revenue. Metronet is a supply chain organisation and its constituent parts are big businesses who build or maintain railway assets. They are restructuring themselves as performance to date has been dire - especially on project works. It remains to be seen what happens with Metronet following their restructuring. Included in this investment are new signalling systems for the Victoria and sub-surface lines, seven extra trains and improvements in service levels and journey times on Victoria Line. Track, points and crossings will be renewed, along with a comprehensive upgrade of all civil assets in the first 15 years, including 4,800 bridges, 1,600 structures and buildings, 130km of tunnels, 155km of embankments, 225km track drainage and 150 stations. I have to say that I will believe the Victoria Line upgrade when I see it. I am not close to the project but given the delays Metronet have encountered on relatively simple station projects I dread to think what is happening with something very complex like the Vic Line upgrade. I sincerely hope to be proved wrong as I use the Vic Line all the time. The civil asset upgrades have a timespan of 22½ years in the contract. LONDON UNDERGROUND ROLLING STOCK One of Tube Lines' earliest decisions was a £160 million order for signal upgrades to increase capacity and extra Jubilee Line cars to expand the fleet from the current 59 six-car trains to 63 seven-car sets. The vehicles will be similar to those already in service on the Jubilee Line, built by Alstom in 1997-99. However, closure of the manufacturing plant at Washwood Heath in Birmingham means they will have to be built outside the UK. Yes - this is to deliver the seven car upgrade and achieve an interim upgrade in capability for the Jubilee Line. The major part of the £3.4 billion contract awarded to Bombardier in April 2003 covers the supply of 1,738 Metro cars for the sub-surface and Victoria lines between 2008-15, all of which will be built at Derby. If Bombardier can afford to keep Derby ticking over until then. There is a real shortage of work and they are sacking more people. Quite where the labour force is going to come from to ramp up production I am not sure. In total, 47 eight-car Movia 248 trains (part of the Bombardier Movia Metro family) will be built for the deep-tube Victoria Line with two pre-production prototypes arriving in 2006. Once the design is accepted, one train will roll off the assembly line every 15 days until August 2012. The Bakerloo Line will have to wait until 2019 for new trains. If the Vic Line is not arriving until 2012 then I think it will be at least 2 years late against the target. I'm not at all convinced that date of 2012 is right. Improved acceleration and braking will shorten journey times and allow a planned increase in frequency on the Victoria Line from 28 trains per hour to 33. In the meantime, 75 six-car District Line trains, the last of existing stock to be replaced, are being refurbished. It is true that improvements to acceleration and braking are important but there are many related issues such as power consumption, heat generation / tunnel ventilation, track and structures wear if the trains are too heavy that all have to be considered. The implications of DDA compliance are also key as revised regulations have been issued and more are in the pipeline. Well it is true the D stock is being refurbished. I even got on one of the trains the other week - it wasn't too bad but then I like the old D stock interior anyway. I just hope they have wrecked the reliability of the trains in the process of refurbishment. LUL SIGNALLING AND COMMUNICATIONS Much of LUL's signalling is old and unreliable and the Infracos have pledged to upgrade all equipment across the system. Westinghouse has been named as Metronet's sub-contractor for the signalling side of the contracts, worth around £850 million. It will install new train control systems on Metronet lines to improve safety and reduce headways, although the new system will not be 'moving block'. Around 75% of LUL control equipment is Westinghouse and the company has been a supplier to the Underground for over 50 years. For this reason it was the preferred choice for Metronet and Bombardier. Westinghouse had to win a contract from one or other of the Infracos or else they'd be in dire trouble. Tube Lines have gone with Alcatel for the Northern and Jubilee Line signalling and control upgrades. THE FUTURE By 2010, Tube Lines should have upgraded all 24 stations on the Jubilee Line, replaced over 16km of track and repaired 5km of drainage. By the same date the Northern Line should have had 40 stations upgraded, delays cut, 24km of new track and over 6km of drainage replaced. A year later a new signalling system should improve journey times by 18%, with real-time train running information on stations and trains. Further into the future, new signalling is planned system for the Piccadilly Line to improve journey times by a fifth, with 93 new trains. Typically Tube Lines are proceeding well with their station works. 7th car on the Jubilee Line is on track for January next year. Their track programme started late but is going reasonably well. There are big issues with Northern Line performance and the Jubilee Line has good months and then bad ones. It needs stability. The Picc Line - barring the bit between Acton and Barons Court which Metronet maintain - is pretty damn good overall. The performance numbers for the train service are good although signal issues are problematic. There has been a step change improvement on this line - if only we could have it on all lines. The biggest challenges for PPP remain in the future. Concerted efforts have seen some reliability improvements but a lot still needs to be done to deal with the interface between aging assets and the improvement works being implemented to replace them. The train service still has to run in the meantime and that's where the issues are. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#15
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In message , Paul Corfield
writes On Sat, 27 Aug 2005 17:35:51 GMT, "Gareth Packer" wrote: It will install new train control systems on Metronet lines to improve safety and reduce headways, although the new system will not be 'moving block'. I understood the reason why the jubilee line was late to Stratford was in problems over "Moving Block" signalling. Have they still not got this item right yet? Couldn't LUL insist on such a system which when working could be seriously advantageous to all the network? Private companies were brought in to do the work, if they can't deliver shouldn't they either be sacked as a common worker would or be penalised until they came up with the goods? Or are punters just cattle who feed the big corporations and have to put up with inferior service? -- Clive |
#16
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#17
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In message ,
Colin Rosenstiel writes I thought they gave up on moving block signalling to meet the 1999 opening date. Are there any plans yet to introduce moving block or any other automatically driven trains? I thought not. May be on LU but I understood it was part of the ongoing research by Westinghouse to keep ahead of the crowd. -- Clive |
#18
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![]() "Paul Corfield" wrote in message ... On Sat, 27 Aug 2005 12:24:23 GMT, "Gareth Packer" wrote: Not sure how Bombardier would feel about the IPR of the Central Line trains being "stolen" to inform the design of the Piccadilly Line trains. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! What would you want of the design of the 92TS? The far too powerfull traction system. DTS. The famous motor bracket!! |
#19
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![]() "Paul Corfield" wrote in message ... On Sat, 27 Aug 2005 17:35:51 GMT, "Gareth Packer" wrote: Westinghouse has been named as Metronet's sub-contractor for the signalling side of the contracts, worth around £850 million. It will install new train control systems on Metronet lines to improve safety and reduce headways, although the new system will not be 'moving block'. Around 75% of LUL control equipment is Westinghouse and the company has been a supplier to the Underground for over 50 years. For this reason it was the preferred choice for Metronet and Bombardier. Westinghouse had to win a contract from one or other of the Infracos or else they'd be in dire trouble. Tube Lines have gone with Alcatel for the Northern and Jubilee Line signalling and control upgrades. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! I didn't think Westinghouse had signed any deal with Metronet at all from what I know they are a subcontractor for Bombardier who signed a 'performance contract' with Metronet. |
#20
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In message , Andy
writes What would you want of the design of the 92TS? The far too powerfull traction system. When acceleration means reduced times between trains, then there's no such thing as "far too powerful". -- Clive |
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