Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 27, 10:02 pm, Paul Corfield wrote:
I'm pretty convinced that once orbital rail improvements start to materialise that there will be a surge in demand that is currently suppressed by relatively poor service levels and / or concerns about station facilities and security. I've slightly lost track as to what improvements are due when - as TfL and Network Rail have different views as to what is needed - but I think TfL will be exercising its option for new trains and asking for signal and platform enhancements within 18-24 months of Overground starting this November. Hopefully Willesden Junction High Level is done first - nearly all of the existing stations EXCEPT THIS ONE can handle six-car trains (or maybe they can handle 2x313, which may be shorter than 2x375). As for line enhancements, restoring full four-tracking in all places where it used to exist and constructing new stations at radial route interchanges (i.e. for the Piccadilly, Northern and Central lines) should definitely be considered. |
#12
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Does anyone have a line diagram, or maybe even one showing where it
used to be quad-tracked? |
#13
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 27, 2:47 pm, "TheOneKEA" wrote:
On Feb 27, 10:02 pm, Paul Corfield wrote: I'm pretty convinced that once orbital rail improvements start to materialise that there will be a surge in demand that is currently suppressed by relatively poor service levels and / or concerns about station facilities and security. I've slightly lost track as to what improvements are due when - as TfL and Network Rail have different views as to what is needed - but I think TfL will be exercising its option for new trains and asking for signal and platform enhancements within 18-24 months of Overground starting this November. Hopefully Willesden Junction High Level is done first - nearly all of the existing stations EXCEPT THIS ONE can handle six-car trains (or maybe they can handle 2x313, which may be shorter than 2x375). As for line enhancements, restoring full four-tracking in all places where it used to exist and constructing new stations at radial route interchanges (i.e. for the Piccadilly, Northern and Central lines) should definitely be considered. http://groups.google.com/group/uk.tr...31880267713b01 Much of the freight traffic on the North London Line does not even need to be in London. I am convinced that the UK needs a freight arc from Felixstowe to Southampton. This could be constructed using, in part, the track beds of the DN&S and LNWR Oxford to Cambridge routes. This is not something I actually expect to happen! But such a route could keep a substantial portion of the NL Line's freight load away from London. The North London Line needs to function much like TfL's mass transit lines. Adrian |
#14
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , Graham J
writes I used the North London Line to get from Highbury and Islington the last two days there were enough people to fill 8 carriages, but only 3 on the train. It must be common, because there was no hesitancy getting on board, everyone runs and crams into every available inch of space. Is this cattle truck scenario the norm ?? Drifting off from the original subject. I am always amused when I hear the whining and complaining at East Croydon about supposedly crowded trains in the morning peaks. Yes they can be extremely crowded but they are as nothing compared to those I used to encounter in the peaks from Edmonton Green. They'd have been regarded as half empty there :-) Similarly I used to complain about crowding from Palmers Green to Moorgate...... luxury. This morning I managed to get about 2 inches of space up against the door all the way from Highbury & Islington to Brondesbury on the NLL. I have to say that a lot of the problem seems to school kids filling the thing up. I can remember when everyone went to the local school, and walked there. In fact I can't remember using a bus or train once in all my school days. -- Edward Cowling London UK |
#15
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Graham J wrote:
Drifting off from the original subject. I am always amused when I hear the whining and complaining at East Croydon about supposedly crowded trains in the morning peaks. Yes they can be extremely crowded but they are as nothing compared to those I used to encounter in the peaks from Edmonton Green. They'd have been regarded as half empty there :-) Commuting from Edmonton Green is somewhat more bearable now there are 6 trains an hour during the peak (though it annoys the good folk of Southbury, Turkey Street and Theobalds Grove no end that their semi-fasts, which are all of five minutes quicker than the stoppers, now stop everywhere!) between Edmonton Green and Liverpool Street. Angel Road, however, now only gets a handful of trains in the peaks...and those go to Stratford. Can you say, "Closure by stealth"? Madness when you consider that Angel Road is virtually opposite Ikea and Tesco Extra! (Though the access to the station is now from a road overbridge a short distance off the *country* end of the platforms, rather than the London end, thanks to the widening of the A406). Cheers, Barry |
#16
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 27, 10:47 pm, "TheOneKEA" wrote:
Hopefully Willesden Junction High Level is done first - nearly all of the existing stations EXCEPT THIS ONE can handle six-car trains (or maybe they can handle 2x313, which may be shorter than 2x375). Not "nearly all" by any stretch of the imagination. According to ye Quail (*** for too short for 2x313): Richmond P3-5: 6; P6-7: 7 (through platforms are 8 if anyone wants to send the NLL to Kingston!) Kew Gdns 6 Up (to Camden Rd), 8 Dn Gunnersbury 7 Up, 6 Dn *** S Acton 4 *** Acton Cen 4 *** Willy J 3 Up, 4 Dn *** Kensal Rise 3 *** Brondesbury Pk 3 *** Brondesbury 3 *** W Hampstead 3 *** Finchley Rd & Frognal 3 *** Hampstead Heath 3 *** Gospel Oak 5 Up, 3 Dn *** Kentish Tn W 3 *** Camden Rd 5 (directions change) Caledonian Rd & Barnsbury 6 Highbury & Islington 6 Canonbury 6 *** Dalston Kingsland 3 Hackney Cen 6 *** Homerton 3 Hackney Wick 6 *** Stratford LL 5 (but P10A: 10; P11-12: 8) Hope this shows the scale of the platform lengthening job. James. |
#17
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mizter T wrote:
The NLL has seemingly turned from a forgotten backwater of London's rail system to become a very popular orbital link, but it's now almost too popular for it's own good. I put much of its popularity down to lack of proper 'revenue protection'. When teams of grippers are in action those packed NLL carriages can empty rather rapidly with people abandoning the train ASAP or flitting between carriages. The forthcoming station developments, gates et al, may help clamp down on this and so the three car trains could prove sufficient for a while longer. ESB |
#18
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Adrian" wrote in message oups.com... On Feb 27, 2:47 pm, "TheOneKEA" wrote: On Feb 27, 10:02 pm, Paul Corfield wrote: I'm pretty convinced that once orbital rail improvements start to materialise that there will be a surge in demand that is currently suppressed by relatively poor service levels and / or concerns about station facilities and security. I've slightly lost track as to what improvements are due when - as TfL and Network Rail have different views as to what is needed - but I think TfL will be exercising its option for new trains and asking for signal and platform enhancements within 18-24 months of Overground starting this November. Hopefully Willesden Junction High Level is done first - nearly all of the existing stations EXCEPT THIS ONE can handle six-car trains (or maybe they can handle 2x313, which may be shorter than 2x375). As for line enhancements, restoring full four-tracking in all places where it used to exist and constructing new stations at radial route interchanges (i.e. for the Piccadilly, Northern and Central lines) should definitely be considered. http://groups.google.com/group/uk.tr...31880267713b01 Much of the freight traffic on the North London Line does not even need to be in London. I am convinced that the UK needs a freight arc from Felixstowe to Southampton. This could be constructed using, in part, the track beds of the DN&S and LNWR Oxford to Cambridge routes. This is not something I actually expect to happen! But such a route could keep a substantial portion of the NL Line's freight load away from London. The North London Line needs to function much like TfL's mass transit lines. Adrian The 'freight arc' doesn't need to reach directly from Southampton to Felixstowe, but simply to allow access from either port to WCML and ECML. WCML from S'oton is already available via Reading West Curve, though a flyover here would be useful to avoid conflicts. I don't believe there is more than one train per day from S'oton to the ECML, and this traffic could easily pass via Birmingham/Derby. Felixstowe to the WCML/North could be served by gauge enhancements to the routes from the Haven Ports to Peterborough via Ely, and thence via Leicester/Nuneaton. There is other, non-container,traffic from West London to East London/East Anglia, but this could travel via the Tottenham and Hampstead, I believe. Brian |
#19
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 27 Feb 2007 13:56:41 -0800, Mizter T wrote:
The new trains should also be more tube-like, and in the end the service should look something like this: http://www.alwaystouchout.com/img/pr...il-phase-1.png http://www.alwaystouchout.com/img/pr...il-phase-2.png You rightly point out that the new Electrostar trains will be of a more suitable design, which will of course help, but they won't cure the problem. More capacity is needed. I should of course have consulted the alwaystouchout page I referred to in my first post and taken a proper look at those maps before posting, so thanks for providing the direct link. I'm not quite sure how the 8tph between Willesden Junction and Stratford will get fitted in with all the freight, but that is indeed the plan - though not until 2010 at the earliest. It seems to be more of an aspiration than a plan. Network Rail pour cold water on it in their Cross-London Route Utilisation Strategy: "Beyond 2014: It has not been possible to identify infrastructure deliverable within the scope and timeframe of this RUS that would accommodate TfL's ultimate aspiration of four trains per hour on each of a number of overlapping routes as well as existing freight traffic." Briefly, the recommendations of the RUS a -extend NLL and WLL platforms and services to 4 car -cut existing Southern WLL service back to Croydon and add 1tph Shepherds Bush - Croydon -extend existing 2tph Silverlink WLL services along the Goblin to Barking (using Class 170 units reconfigured to Class 376 standard) -add 2tph Stratford to Queen's Park -signalling improvements to improve headways on the NLL and Goblin -4-tracking Camden to Dalston (formerly 4-track but currently 3-track) -provision of through platforms on the Goblin at Gospel Oak -NLL power supply upgrade -freight loop at Camden Road |
#20
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message .com
"Adrian" wrote: [snip] Much of the freight traffic on the North London Line does not even need to be in London. I am convinced that the UK needs a freight arc from Felixstowe to Southampton. This could be constructed using, in part, the track beds of the DN&S and LNWR Oxford to Cambridge routes. What would be the logic of a freight connection between Southampton and Felixstowe? I would have thought that there would be little or no traffic actually between those points. Both are major container ports with traffic to and from the major manufacturing centres of Britain. Those connections could certainly do with upgrading. The two ports are too close together by sea for there to be any advantage in unloading containers at one port, railing them across country and reembarking them at the other. -- Graeme Wall This address is not read, substitute trains for rail. Transport Miscellany at http://www.greywall.demon.co.uk/rail/index.html |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Pickpocket North London Line | London Transport | |||
North London Line Revisited | London Transport | |||
North London Line update | London Transport | |||
North London Line update | London Transport | |||
Improvements to the North London Line | London Transport |