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#31
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LUL was pretty poor this morning due to overrunning engineering on the
Piccadilly near Barons Court - no trains between Hammersmith and Hyde Park Corner, with trains from Heathrow being turned around at Northfields, Acton Town and Hammersmith - I was dumped at Northfields, took the next train which took about 20 minutes to get to Acton Town, where we could finally change to the District - also going very slowly due to all the Piccadilly people trying to get on and blocking the doors. Two hours from LHR to Victoria, standing all the way of course. On the other hand, I flew in from the US where I had all the familiar problems of subway stations without ticket offices, only machines that don't take cards (especially foreign ones), only give USD5 change, and reject most of the dollar bills you feed in. Once you get in, the systems generally run pretty well. Tim |
#32
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On 28 Apr 2009 09:46:34 GMT, Huge wrote:
You've obviously never waited for a Circle Line train at Monument. To be fair, the issues with the Circle Line are well known, and it will be interesting to see how much it improves with the coming of the "teacup" in December. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the at to reply. |
#33
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Clive wrote on 28 April 2009 16:42:41 ...
In message , Alex writes If they were to rate architecture and general impressiveness of appearance - then Moscow Metro would probably win. But as a transport service it certainly lags behind. I found the Moscow Metro a curious setup, the trains seemed old but all had rheostatic braking, and I didn't like the juice rail right under the platform instead of furthest away. Paris has stations too close together and their rubber tyre stock can throw you off balance when braking, like Ligne 1 at Les Halles, the train brakes, enters the station then accelerates then brakes suddenly to a halt. In my experience the acceleration/deceleration of the rubber-tyred trains is no worse than the Central Line, and your description of arriving at Les Halles (it's Line 4 by the way) sounds just like the Victoria Line. -- Richard J. (to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address) |
#34
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#35
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![]() On Apr 28, 8:26*pm, Tom Anderson wrote: On Tue, 28 Apr 2009, John Rowland wrote: Tom Anderson wrote: Barcelona's was fine when i was there several years ago, but quite like Rome, ie nothing exciting. The fact that the network also includes funiculars and cable-cars is rather excellent, though! Maybe we should campaign for some in London, up Gants Hill, maybe. There was a semi-serious proposal for one in Chatham or something, wasn't there? Barcelona's has its middle stop at the summit of a mighty tower: http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?q=barc...://bacn.me/37l Perhaps the Post Office Tower could be pressed into service? The line could run from Primrose Hill to the GPO, then across the river to the Eye.. Dunno about Chatham, but there was semi-serious talk of a cable car linking Covent Garden with the South Bank - I've just goggled for it and found this Indy article from 1995: http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-en...y-1585424.html It was mooted as a potential Millennium project. It would seem that this idea lost out to the Hungerford footbridges, aka the Golden Jubilee Bridges, which were a Millennium project (i.e. funded by the Millennium Commission), and which provide a far superior route across the Thames in comparison to the old footbridge on the downriver side of the railway bridge. I'm a bit hazy on the details, but I'm not sure these were always destined to carry the "Golden Jubilee [Bridges]" moniker - however construction was delayed in part because of concerns about foundations hitting the Bakerloo line tunnels just under the river bed (were these not also reinforced around this time?). Whether there was ever a serious estimated completion date of late 1999 or 2000 I don't know, but if so the whole thing certainly slipped substantially early on. I would love for there to be a cable car between Covent Garden and the South Bank, but being brutally honest I have to say the new Hungerford bridges are rather more useful overall, and are also rather splendid at that. They do quite a good job in opening up the South Bank to norf- of-the-river central London, at least in comparison to their uninviting and unexciting predecessor. And I rather suspect that the Millennium Wheel has already taken up the slot for the theme-park ride already, at least in this part of town. |
#36
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On Tue, 28 Apr 2009 16:42:41 +0100, Clive wrote:
New York, (where every car is both a power car and driving car) can be confusing and has a habit of missing stations unless you're very careful, I've had to walk back the full length of Central Park before now. You do realize that you could have just transferred to a local going back in the other direction to reach your desired stop. If you can figure out the Metropolitan line, New York's easy. At least we give our locals and expresses different names (in most cases). Incidentally, not every car is a driving car, if I understand your terminology correctly. In the past, most of our rolling stock has consisted of either single cars or married pairs, but the last of the married pairs are in the process of retirement as we speak, and most of the newer cars are linked into half-train-length units (four 60-foot cars, four 75-foot cars, five 60-foot cars, or five 51-foot cars, depending on the line). Except for the five-car R62/R62A units and the four-car R68/R68A units, which were built as singles and "unitized" in the 90's, only the end cars (called A cars) have cabs; it is impossible to operate the train or the doors from the middle (B) cars. A handful of R62A and R68 singles will remain, to handle a few special cases - the 7 train runs 11-car trains (generally one five-car unit plus six single R62A's), the 42 St shuttle runs two 3-car trains and one 4-car train (all R62A singles), and the the Franklin Av shuttle runs two 2-car trains of R68's. But that's enough New York car trivia for today. -- David of Broadway New York, NY, USA |
#37
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![]() "Paul Corfield" wrote in message ... On Tue, 28 Apr 2009 10:21:11 +0100, Ian Jelf wrote: In message , writes On Mon, 27 Apr 2009 19:33:41 +0100 Paul Corfield wrote: SNIP I was in Brussels last year a couple of times. The metro seemed quite tidy to me though the information was woeful. We ended up going in the wrong direction on one of the underground tram lines because trying to decode the rats nest system map for the centre was a nightmare. SNIP Brussels' metro system is not very intuitive at all. It seems they have just completed their circle line so goodness knows how it runs now. I prefer the old traditional street tramway sections in Brussels but I understand that a fair slice of them have gone and been replaced by the tunnel sections that were built but not put into use for many years. Only in Belgium could they spend a fortune on tunnels and then not use them. Did I hear the word "Kingsway" echoing in the distance?? DW down under |
#38
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#39
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In message , DW downunder
writes "Paul Corfield" wrote in message .. . On Tue, 28 Apr 2009 10:21:11 +0100, Ian Jelf wrote: In message , writes On Mon, 27 Apr 2009 19:33:41 +0100 Paul Corfield wrote: SNIP I was in Brussels last year a couple of times. The metro seemed quite tidy to me though the information was woeful. We ended up going in the wrong direction on one of the underground tram lines because trying to decode the rats nest system map for the centre was a nightmare. SNIP Brussels' metro system is not very intuitive at all. It seems they have just completed their circle line so goodness knows how it runs now. I prefer the old traditional street tramway sections in Brussels but I understand that a fair slice of them have gone and been replaced by the tunnel sections that were built but not put into use for many years. Only in Belgium could they spend a fortune on tunnels and then not use them. Did I hear the word "Kingsway" echoing in the distance?? Brussels is in some respects like Kingsway on acid! (Never thought I'd type *that* sentence.) -- Ian Jelf, MITG Birmingham, UK Registered Blue Badge Tourist Guide for London and the Heart of England http://www.bluebadge.demon.co.uk |
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