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#31
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Tom Anderson wrote:
On Fri, 3 Aug 2007, Paul Scott wrote: This map was pointed out recently on ORR site, gives a fair idea of the impact of crossrail on the existing lines... http://www.rail-reg.gov.uk/upload/pd...le_line_GW.pdf Interesting! Just west of the portal is a feature comprising a plethora of crossovers, a two-track siding, through lines and a platform around the whole lot. I assume this is the famous Westbourne Park turnback siding. I read recently that it would be possible for passengers to be turned off the train here; i assume that's what the platform's for. However, the map makes it look like there will be platform faces on the through lines as well. Not necessarily. The map makes no distinction between a platform edge facing the track and the back of a single platform bounded by a wall. Look at platforms 1 and 12 at Paddington, for example. However, one would expect a turnback siding with two tracks would have at most an island platform bewteen the tracks. Perhaps there is an intention to have platforms on the running lines here for emergency use. -- Richard J. (to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address) |
#32
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Tom Anderson wrote:
Just west of the portal is a feature comprising a plethora of crossovers, a two-track siding, through lines and a platform around the whole lot. I assume this is the famous Westbourne Park turnback siding. I read recently that it would be possible for passengers to be turned off the train here; i assume that's what the platform's for. However, the map makes it look like there will be platform faces on the through lines as well. Is this then, in effect, a station? Just one where no trains will stop? The environmental statement specifically states the sidings will have four tracks/platforms, so I'm surprised to see there aren't two running lines in addition. The northernmost platform appears to double as the eastbound running line. U -- http://londonconnections.blogspot.com/ A blog about transport projects in London |
#33
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On Sat, 4 Aug 2007, Mr Thant wrote:
Tom Anderson wrote: Just west of the portal is a feature comprising a plethora of crossovers, a two-track siding, through lines and a platform around the whole lot. I assume this is the famous Westbourne Park turnback siding. I read recently that it would be possible for passengers to be turned off the train here; i assume that's what the platform's for. However, the map makes it look like there will be platform faces on the through lines as well. Is this then, in effect, a station? Just one where no trains will stop? The environmental statement specifically states the sidings will have four tracks/platforms, so I'm surprised to see there aren't two running lines in addition. The northernmost platform appears to double as the eastbound running line. It says: "8.3.6 A reversing facility will be constructed at Westbourne Park, to the west of Royal Oak portal to enable Crossrail trains terminating at Paddington to turn around. To meet safety requirements that all trains are cleared of passengers before going out of service, Crossrail must provide a facility where trains terminating at Paddington can be inspected. To ensure that services following behind are not significantly delayed, the facility needs to ensure that trains being inspected can be overtaken or two trains can be inspected concurrently. "8.3.7 The reversing facility will consist of: - two 210 m length island platforms and four tracks; and - emergency access to/from the street via footbridges." The key phrase seems to me to be "trains being inspected can be overtaken or two trains can be inspected concurrently"; the 'or' means that you need to be able to have a through train overtake a single stopped train, or to have two trains stopped at once. Two roads in either direction does that. Now, this description, and the maps attatched, indicate that we've got an Edgware Road-like setup, with all four roads going through around two islands. The diagram i was commenting on above shows something different - through lines at the edge, and terminating bays in the middle. I assume that's just out of date. tom -- Love as a principle and order as the basis; progress as the goal. |
#34
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In article , Paul Scott
writes This map was pointed out recently on ORR site, gives a fair idea of the impact of crossrail on the existing lines... http://www.rail-reg.gov.uk/upload/pd...le_line_GW.pdf It would appear that a turntable is going to be added to North Pole Depot! I also note that the new eastern access to North Pole is curiously indirect. -- Clive D.W. Feather | Home: Tel: +44 20 8495 6138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work: Please reply to the Reply-To address, which is: |
#35
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![]() "Clive D. W. Feather" wrote in message ... In article , Paul Scott writes This map was pointed out recently on ORR site, gives a fair idea of the impact of crossrail on the existing lines... http://www.rail-reg.gov.uk/upload/pd...le_line_GW.pdf It would appear that a turntable is going to be added to North Pole Depot! I also note that the new eastern access to North Pole is curiously indirect. -- Clive D.W. Feather | Home: Tel: +44 20 8495 6138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work: Please reply to the Reply-To address, which is: The turntable is presumably a like-for-like replacement for the one at the current Old Oak Common depot, which EWS seem to be ceding to Crossrail. The access to North Pole seems indirect, but this is presumably to allow use of the existing carriage line flyover towards the Relief lines, rather than having a direct access to the Down Main, which would mean all light engine workings etc having to cross the Up Main on the flat. How much use do EWS make of their current depot at Old Oak at present- it seems to be largely a repository for stored stock. The North Pole premises would seem to be somewhat overspecified, unless the idea is also to transfer FGW HST maintenance or servicing there. Brian |
#36
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In article , BH Williams
writes The access to North Pole seems indirect, but this is presumably to allow use of the existing carriage line flyover towards the Relief lines, rather than having a direct access to the Down Main, which would mean all light engine workings etc having to cross the Up Main on the flat. That's not what I mean. The plan shows an access from the Down Main at Portobello Junction, but any train making that access will have to run half way to the flyover, shunt backwards into a headshunt, then run forwards into the depot. One additional crossover anywhere between Portobello and the flyover would make things a lot simpler. Obviously you want access off the flyover, and that will require use of the headshunt. But why force the double reverse on anything coming out of the south side of Paddy? -- Clive D.W. Feather | Home: Tel: +44 20 8495 6138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work: Please reply to the Reply-To address, which is: |
#37
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On Aug 6, 4:46 pm, "Clive D. W. Feather" cl...@on-the-
train.demon.co.uk wrote: Obviously you want access off the flyover, and that will require use of the headshunt. But why force the double reverse on anything coming out of the south side of Paddy? The layout at Shenfield is equally curious: http://www.rail-reg.gov.uk/upload/pd...le_line_GE.pdf Why is the Southend down diveunder connected solely to the Crossrail up platform? Also, no crossovers are shown in the central section: http://www.rail-reg.gov.uk/upload/pd...central_SE.pdf Unless I've missed something, there should be one east of Farringdon. U -- http://londonconnections.blogspot.com/ A blog about transport projects in London |
#38
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On Thu, 02 Aug 2007 11:11:55 -0700, W14_Fishbourne
wrote: On Aug 2, 6:58 pm, Neal wrote: This is certainly my favourite option! I think they should be given control of the entire London suburban rail network and run it as part of the Overground as franchises expire.. It may have escaped your notice but Maidenhead and Shenfield are not part of London, so why should Ken or Boris run the trains that serve them? Fine by me if London ratepayers pick up the tab, but I somehow suspect that that's not the intention. To put it another way, if Ken or Boris should run those trains, why shouldn't they run all the trains that serve London? I somehow think that the people of Glasgow, Leeds, Manchester, etc, might have something to say about their trains to London being run by the MoL. Even if you exclude those trains, the London commuter-belt goes out a long way these days: Bournemouth, Bristol, Northampton, Grantham, Cambridge, Norwich, Southend. In New York, the Connecticut commuter trains are run jointly by the Connecticut Dept. of Transportation and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. They pay for the line in accordance with the proportion of trackage in each state. No reason why TfL shouldn't run Crossrail with Essex along the same lines. -- Chris Hansen | chrishansenhome at btinternet dot com | http://www.christianphansen.com | http://chrishansenhome.livejournal.com |
#39
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On 6 Aug, 18:38, Mr Thant
wrote: Also, no crossovers are shown in the central section:http://www.rail-reg.gov.uk/upload/pd...ingle_line_cen... Unless I've missed something, there should be one east of Farringdon. ISTR this got dropped at some point during the consultation process, because it would've been underneath something highly breakable. -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org |
#40
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On Mon, 6 Aug 2007, Mr Thant wrote:
On Aug 6, 4:46 pm, "Clive D. W. Feather" cl...@on-the- train.demon.co.uk wrote: Obviously you want access off the flyover, and that will require use of the headshunt. But why force the double reverse on anything coming out of the south side of Paddy? The layout at Shenfield is equally curious: http://www.rail-reg.gov.uk/upload/pd...le_line_GE.pdf Why is the Southend down diveunder connected solely to the Crossrail up platform? It's not - look at the colours again; Crossrail only uses the northernmost island, via the existing track to the south of it (in orange), plus a new stub on the north side (in red). The down Southend is accessed from the blue and black track which runs past the north side of the middle island. Furthermore, if you look at the mess of pointwork to the west, it looks like there's a way to get trains from the slows to the Crossrail platform without conflicting with moves from the fasts to the non-Crossrail platforms: trains coming in on the down slow take the westernmost slip linking that line to the new loop that leads into the new northern terminating track; leaving, they take the slip onto the current down slow (resignalled for up trains), and then the westernmost new slip linking the current up and down slows. That would mean no Crossrail train ever runs on the current up slow east of the westernmost new slip, and so trains coming along the down fast and bound for Southend can use this, reached via the new slip linking the down fast to the current up slow, to get to the middle island and the down Southend. The odd thing is that you can't reach the southern face of the northern island that way: there would have to be a crossover in place of the slip that leads from the current down slow to the new Crossrail terminating track. This only creates conflict between Crossrail trains arriving into the southern platform and those departing the northern platform, though; there's no conflict with trains on the fasts. If enough things are bidirectionally signalled, then such a conflict could be smoothed over by working the departing train into the new loop, passing the arriving train on the wrong side, then reaching the up slow via two slips (one new, one old) in rapid succession. If there was another train arriving at that point, it would hit it, but there won't be. Also, no crossovers are shown in the central section: http://www.rail-reg.gov.uk/upload/pd...central_SE.pdf That seems like a really bad idea. Any problem in the tunnel means reversing everything at the portals. tom -- OK, mostly because of Tom, but not only because of his bloody irritating character and songs. |
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