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What is the longest route in LONDON.... Monday - Friday ?
On Thu, 20 Apr 2006, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 11:59:34 on Wed, 19 Apr 2006, TKD remarked: The longest Tube journey is on the Central Line, West Ruislip to Epping, at 54.9 km (34.1 miles). Although 11km or so are not in London but in the Epping Forest district of Essex. When this newsgroup was set up we discussed at great length what the definition of "London" was. I'm pretty sure we decided that it included inside the M25 plus all outposts of LUL. Does that mean we're not allowed to discuss the London Regional Rail Authority? :) Incidentally, can anyone find a copy of the proposed LRRA boundary map? It's disappeared from TfL's site. tom -- I'm angry, but not Milk and Cheese angry. -- Mike Froggatt |
What is the longest route in LONDON.... Monday - Friday ?
Mike Bristow wrote:
The longest Tube journey is on the Central Line, West Ruislip to Epping, at 54.9 km (34.1 miles). Can't you do Cockfosters - Cockfosters via the Heathrow loop that would be longer? If you're lucky you can probably do somewhere-in-west-london and back again on the central line via it's loop - or do they turf passengers out of those trains? I can't actually recall seeing services advertised on the indicators as running through to Hainault-Woodford (other than on days when part of the loop is out of service and the rest is being treated as a standard branch from Woodford) and the last time I was at Hainault the train terminated and a different one came in for Woodford. |
What is the longest route in LONDON.... Monday - Friday ?
Tim Roll-Pickering wrote:
Mike Bristow wrote: The longest Tube journey is on the Central Line, West Ruislip to Epping, at 54.9 km (34.1 miles). Can't you do Cockfosters - Cockfosters via the Heathrow loop that would be longer? If you're lucky you can probably do somewhere-in-west-london and back again on the central line via it's loop - or do they turf passengers out of those trains? I can't actually recall seeing services advertised on the indicators as running through to Hainault-Woodford (other than on days when part of the loop is out of service and the rest is being treated as a standard branch from Woodford) and the last time I was at Hainault the train terminated and a different one came in for Woodford. At the moment there are weekend engineering works somewhere around Redbridge which close part of the loop in one direction at a time, so trains have been running to Woodford via Newbury Park (and presumably therefore back to London via Snaresbrook, because they can't go the other way around the loop). When the work switches to the inner rail, I imagine trains will travel to Hainault via Woodford and thence straight back to London via Newbury Park. -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
What is the longest route in LONDON.... Monday - Friday ?
In article ,
Tim Roll-Pickering wrote: Mike Bristow wrote: If you're lucky you can probably do somewhere-in-west-london and back again on the central line via it's loop - or do they turf passengers out of those trains? I can't actually recall seeing services advertised on the indicators as running through to Hainault-Woodford I've seen services going through Leytstone as on the boards as Woodford via Hainault. I think there's a 3 or 4 TPH service doing that route. But I don't know if those trains turn into city-bound trains at some point on the loop, or if they terminate at Woodford. -- I don't play The Game - it's for five-year-olds with delusions of adulthood. |
What is the longest route in LONDON.... Monday - Friday ?
In message , at 16:49:53 on Thu,
20 Apr 2006, TKD remarked: When this newsgroup was set up we discussed at great length what the definition of "London" was. I'm pretty sure we decided that it included inside the M25 plus all outposts of LUL. I very much doubt the OP was using that definition. Well, this is uk.transport.LONDON, and we have this definition of "London"... -- Roland Perry |
What is the longest route in LONDON.... Monday - Friday ?
In message , at
19:25:28 on Thu, 20 Apr 2006, Tom Anderson remarked: When this newsgroup was set up we discussed at great length what the definition of "London" was. I'm pretty sure we decided that it included inside the M25 plus all outposts of LUL. Does that mean we're not allowed to discuss the London Regional Rail Authority? :) Maybe you could get a consensus to change the definition. When the newsgroup was set up, it seemed important to include more than just the administrative London, or more than just the "020" phone area, and even more than "inside the M25". But you do have to stop somewhere. -- Roland Perry |
What is the longest route in LONDON.... Monday - Friday ?
Mike Bristow wrote:
In article , Andy wrote: The longest Tube journey is on the Central Line, West Ruislip to Epping, at 54.9 km (34.1 miles). Can't you do Cockfosters - Cockfosters via the Heathrow loop that would be longer? If you're lucky you can probably do somewhere-in-west-london and back again on the central line via it's loop - or do they turf passengers out of those trains? But it would still be shorter than the Hammersmith-Barking route that I posted in this thread on 18 April, which involves 20 laps of the Circle Line. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
What is the longest route in LONDON.... Monday - Friday ?
Mike Bristow wrote:
I can't actually recall seeing services advertised on the indicators as running through to Hainault-Woodford I've seen services going through Leytstone as on the boards as Woodford via Hainault. I think there's a 3 or 4 TPH service doing that route. But I don't know if those trains turn into city-bound trains at some point on the loop, or if they terminate at Woodford. Wouldn't a once round the loop service potentially cause Circle Line style chaos on the line, being so long and potential to delaying other routes? |
What is the longest route in LONDON.... Monday - Friday ?
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What is the longest route in LONDON.... Monday - Friday ?
In message , at
02:10:00 on Fri, 21 Apr 2006, Colin Rosenstiel remarked: Maybe you could get a consensus to change the definition. When the newsgroup was set up, it seemed important to include more than just the administrative London, or more than just the "020" phone area, and even more than "inside the M25". But you do have to stop somewhere. Not Nottingham or Cambridge then? ;-) Nope. There's a charter here [1] which stops a long way from either. Although journeys with one end in London seem to qualify (eg Gatwick to Richmond). [1] Usenet not train. -- Roland Perry |
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