![]() |
|
Chingford line frequency
Paul Corfield wrote: [snip] Nice to see Saturday services back to x15 after being hacked back to x20 when One took over. I don't remember the Saturday service being 15-minute intervals before now in the 20 years I've been using the line - I'm pretty sure it hasn't been in that period, as I use the line a fair bit at weekends. I don't have any great desire to stick up for One, but I think this may be a little unfair on them! The 15-minute interval M-F service was implemented around 8-10 years ago I would guess. Until then 20-minute intervals applied M-S daytime, 30-minute intervals after approx 19.15. M-F peak services varied from year-to-year, typically around every 12-15 minutes. Around 15 years ago a few ran fast from Liverpool Street to Walthamstow St James Street in the evening peak, and I think v.v. in the morning peak. I don't remember this lasting for more than one timetable though. I believe Sundays have always been 30-minute intervals throughout the day. Around five years ago there was a bus service regularly replacing trains for whole timetable periods for various engineering works. I can't remember what the Jazz service levels were however, and they may well have included a 15-minute Saturday service mentioned above. I do remember that the last remains of the all-night service (around three trains in the overnight period) were finally removed sometime around 1987-9. I see from other posts that the actual implementation has been a farce. I don't use the line very much but the improvements are a good idea - shame they are now delayed for the best of a year due to One's incompetence. I couldn't agree more. The timetable was revised two weeks ago, but rather than revert to the previous incarnation One have selectively cancelled some services on most, if not all, West Anglia routes. The effect of this for the Chingford line is that there are several scheduled half-hour gaps in the daytime, utterly spoiling the idea of a regular interval service. One of the many cancellations across the WA network is the first train from Chingford after the morning peak restrictions, which is a truly fantastic idea. |
Chingford line frequency
|
Chingford line frequency
|
Chingford line frequency
On Sun, 19 Feb 2006 08:27:34 +0000, Paul Terry
wrote: (Back in 1929 there was also the Chingford - North Woolwich service via Stratford - hourly on Sundays, but very sparse on other days.) Presumably this ran via the curve at Low Hall and ran through Lea Bridge station? Any idea why it was hourly on Sundays but infrequent the rest of the time? Pathing issues or just lack of demand? -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
Chingford line frequency
In message , Paul Corfield
writes On Sun, 19 Feb 2006 08:27:34 +0000, Paul Terry wrote: (Back in 1929 there was also the Chingford - North Woolwich service via Stratford - hourly on Sundays, but very sparse on other days.) Presumably this ran via the curve at Low Hall and ran through Lea Bridge station? That's right. But it was always very patchy. According to London's Local Railways, it started in 1880 as a Walthamstow-Stratford service for local commuters, with some trains running through to Chingford. It was cut back to Wood Street in 1910. From 1914 it became North Woolwich to Chingford, but was apparently summer only (it is in my Bradshaw of June 1929). Any idea why it was hourly on Sundays but infrequent the rest of the time? Pathing issues or just lack of demand? I think it was primarily a Sunday leisure service for eastenders wanting to take a day-trip to Epping Forest. There was a similar summer-only, mainly-Sunday service from Highgate Road (later Gospel Oak) to Chingford via Copper Mills, which ran down even faster (Easter, Whit and August Bank Holidays only after 1926, abandoned in the 1940s). -- Paul Terry |
Chingford line frequency
Peter Masson wrote:
It's been 4tph Mondays to Fridays for quite a time, and IIRC it's never been less than 3tph. Saturdays has recently iuncreased from 3tph to 4tph, and Sundays from 2tph to 4tph, presumably as part of TfL's 'Overground Network' scheme. Are TfL subsidising the increased weekend frequency? Going back to 2000, it was every 15 minutes weekdays, every 20 minutes Saturday and every 30 minutes Sunday. Quite an unusual service pattern - I don't think there are that many routes that have a different frequency on weekdays (excluding peak periods) to Saturday. -- Stevie D \\\\\ ///// Bringing dating agencies to the \\\\\\\__X__/////// common hedgehog since 2001 - "HedgeHugs" ___\\\\\\\'/ \'///////_____________________________________________ |
Chingford line frequency
Yes the implementation has been a farce. The original printed timetable
for the London to Chingford branch for the period 11 December 2005 to 10 June 2006 has been replaced by one for the period 6 Februay to 10 June 2006. But for Sundays until 5 March the revised timetable dosent give any times! Instead it refers readers to visit the One website or phone National Rail Enquiries. A bit odd that. But even the revised printed timetable for Mondays to Fridays seems suspect. A couple of times recently I arrived at Liverpool Street in time for the 21.15 train as shown on the revised timetable. But on both occasions it wasant shown on the departure boards. The first time it happened I thought that this was a bit odd as normally a cancelled train will still be up on the departure board with the cancelled label shown. I just waited for the next train. But the second time it happened I smelt a rat so I looked at the timetables displayed near the ticket office only to find that the 21.15 train has been erased from the timetable. I wonder how many more services have been erased out of existence without passengers knowledge? Barry |
Chingford line frequency
wrote in message ups.com... Yes the implementation has been a farce. [snip] But even the revised printed timetable for Mondays to Fridays seems suspect. A couple of times recently I arrived at Liverpool Street in time for the 21.15 train as shown on the revised timetable. But on both occasions it wasant shown on the departure boards. The first time it happened I thought that this was a bit odd as normally a cancelled train will still be up on the departure board with the cancelled label shown. I just waited for the next train. But the second time it happened I smelt a rat so I looked at the timetables displayed near the ticket office only to find that the 21.15 train has been erased from the timetable. I wonder how many more services have been erased out of existence without passengers knowledge? Barry The entire Saturday Stratford-Tottenham service, although appearing in the recent weekend engineering works special timetable, is withdrawn. There is no publicity at Tottenham Hale station to advise of this, and the member of staff on duty there 4 Saturdays ago was unaware that the withdrawal was permanent. A poster in the underground passsage leading to platform 12 at Stratford is the only publicity for this service withdrawal there. The only way a customer would ever see this, is if they were on the way to catch the non-existent service itself, the only one that uses that platform. There's nothing on the station concourse. Hopeless. Chris Cook Beckenham, Kent |
All times are GMT. The time now is 02:48 PM. |
|
Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2006 LondonBanter.co.uk