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#101
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On 9 Mai, 22:29, Christopher A. Lee wrote:
I don't know about the Italian system but the American one had single speed locomotives because the AC motors were synchronous. The Italians used squirrel cage motors which don't strictly require synchronous running. Different speed settings could be obtained by the switching of poles. Resistors were used for the internediate speeds. So not too different to a DC setup really. |
#102
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On 6 May, 23:38, Tony Polson wrote:
"Recliner" wrote: "Tim Fenton" wrote in message My feeling is that Dave and his jolly good chums are set to visit on us the same horrors that Thatcher did, having learned nothing from the post 1979 record. They won't be the ones that have to go without. They enjoyed 18 years of power after 1979, so maybe their post-179 record wasn't so unpopular after all. I wonder how the alleged "horrors" of Thatcher's Tories compare with the "achievements" of NuLabour? *Notably, the latter's two illegal wars, the near-destruction of the British financial services industry thanks to inept regulation (or a lack of it) and the massive and apparently uncontrolled rises in public spending and taxation that show no kind of return. Not to mention the control freakery, the sleaze of individual MPs and the corruption of the Labour Party as a whole. *It was the latter that caused me to leave Labour, starting with the Ecclestone affair allowing continuation of tobacco advertising in Formula 1 motor racing in return for a bribe of £1 million paid to the Labour Party. John Major's Tory government was accused of sleaze and incompetence but nothing they did bears more than the slightest resemblance to the institutionalised gross corruption and negligence of this NuLabour lot. You need to recall how bad Britian was in 1979. Remember talk of "managed decline" and the "sick man of Europe"? People wanted to leave for a better life. Compare that with 1997: Britain was the fastest growing major economy in Western Europe, running a major budget surplus, with some of the most enterprising companies in Europe. People wanted to leave for a slower life. Fast forward to 2009: Largest deficit in Western Europe, unemployment up, confidence down. People once again leaving for a better life. And we still have one of the worst health services in Europe, and some of the worst transport, and schools are only looking better because exams are getting easier. |
#103
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On 7 May, 10:28, "Tim Fenton" wrote:
"Recliner" wrote in message ... My feeling is that Dave and his jolly good chums are set to visit on us the same horrors that Thatcher did, having learned nothing from the post 1979 record. They won't be the ones that have to go without. They enjoyed 18 years of power after 1979, so maybe their post-179 record wasn't so unpopular after all. So a decade of three million plus unemployed is OK, then? What the Tories did manage was to demonstrate that, with the UK's electoral system, you can get a landslide victory with only 30% of the electorate making a positive choice for your party. This was also discovered by Labour, whose positive choice percentage in 2005 was even less. It'll probably be three decades if you add in Incapacity Benefit. After 11 years in power Labour appears to have noticed the problem. |
#104
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#105
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disgoftunwells wrote:
On 6 May, 23:38, Tony Polson wrote: I wonder how the alleged "horrors" of Thatcher's Tories compare with the "achievements" of NuLabour? *Notably, the latter's two illegal wars, the near-destruction of the British financial services industry thanks to inept regulation (or a lack of it) and the massive and apparently uncontrolled rises in public spending and taxation that show no kind of return. Not to mention the control freakery, the sleaze of individual MPs and the corruption of the Labour Party as a whole. *It was the latter that caused me to leave Labour, starting with the Ecclestone affair allowing continuation of tobacco advertising in Formula 1 motor racing in return for a bribe of £1 million paid to the Labour Party. John Major's Tory government was accused of sleaze and incompetence but nothing they did bears more than the slightest resemblance to the institutionalised gross corruption and negligence of this NuLabour lot. You need to recall how bad Britian was in 1979. Remember talk of "managed decline" and the "sick man of Europe"? People wanted to leave for a better life. Compare that with 1997: Britain was the fastest growing major economy in Western Europe, running a major budget surplus, with some of the most enterprising companies in Europe. People wanted to leave for a slower life. Fast forward to 2009: Largest deficit in Western Europe, unemployment up, confidence down. People once again leaving for a better life. And we still have one of the worst health services in Europe, and some of the worst transport, and schools are only looking better because exams are getting easier. You're right in everything you said above. Blair conned a lot of people (including me) into thinking that "New" Labour was genuinely something different, but it's exactly the same as Old Labour. Gross economic mismanagement and gross incompetence at everything else. I find an interesting parallel between Harold Wilson and Tony Blair. Each proclaimed that they were new and in touch with the times. With Wilson it was the "Swinging Sixties" and with Bliar it was "Cool Britannia". Then each of them left under a cloud and handed over to someone else who took us into darker and even more incompetent times. The despair I feel is exactly the same as in 1978 - one year before an election that will sweep Labour away for a generation, until some other young and charismatic leader comes along, and cons us into thinking that Labour can change. It cannot, it has not, and it will not ever change. |
#106
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On 12 Mai, 12:37, Tony Polson wrote:
Why would they be "no brainer candidates"? relatively short diesel-worked lines in an otherwise totally electrified area? even if we leave aside the issue of running into Paddington under wires, wouldn't having a 100% electric fleet lead to savings in maintenance and the more flexible deployment of rolling stock. I guess the total number of trains required for these short branches is pretty insignificant compared to the Crossrail stock, which will more or less take over rest of the stopper workings in the area. |
#107
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#108
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![]() wrote even if we leave aside the issue of running into Paddington under wires, wouldn't having a 100% electric fleet lead to savings in maintenance and the more flexible deployment of rolling stock. I guess the total number of trains required for these short branches is pretty insignificant compared to the Crossrail stock, which will more or less take over rest of the stopper workings in the area. When the GEML became an all-electric railway south/west of Marks Tey (atleast as far as pasenger services were concerned) it initially left Southminster, Braintree, Romford - Upminster, and Dalston - Stratford - North Woolwich as diesel-worked branches. The dmus were at life expiry, and replacement dmus would have needed a new maintenance depot. So the decision was taken to electrify these lines, Dalston - North Woolwich being electrified on the 3rd rail dc system and worked as part of the North London Line. A side benefit was that Braintree and Southminter acquired through trains to/from London. It looks as though, when Crossrail opens, Greenford and Bourne End will lose their through London trains; Windsor Central and Marlow haven't got any through trains anyway, and Henley will probably make enough noise to keep some through peak dmus to Paddington. In the longer term it depends whether other routes served by Reading Diesel Depot get electrified. Reading to Gatwick already has the juice rail for about 40% of the route. Reading to Oxford would be electrified as part of any GWML scheme. Reading - Bsingstoke could well be included if a scheme is developed to get (XC and freight) electric trains between Southampton and Birmingham. It is however difficult to see the Berks & Hants line as an early candidate for electrification - I suspect that if/when electric trains run from Paddington to Exeter/Plymouth they'll go via Swindon and Bristol. Peter |
#109
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On 12 May, 13:07, Tony Polson wrote:
wrote: On 12 Mai, 12:37, Tony Polson wrote: Why would they be "no brainer candidates"? relatively short diesel-worked lines in an otherwise totally electrified area? Except for trainspotters who develop apoplexy at the thought of diesel trains "under the wires", there's absolutely nothing wrong with it. even if we leave aside the issue of running into Paddington under wires, Best left aside, yes. *See above. wouldn't having a 100% electric fleet lead to savings in maintenance and the more flexible deployment of rolling stock. Is that really significant? *Does it really matter? *Is it worth the expense of stringing up wires for little used branch lines? No. I guess the total number of trains required for these short branches is pretty insignificant compared to the Crossrail stock, which will more or less take over rest of the stopper workings in the area. So no, it isn't significant. *Just as long as the trainspotters can learn to control their anger at the sight of a diesel train running on electrified track ... It's exactly the sort of thing that trainspotters turn out in droves to see, unless there's steam available. You really need to find a better term for "people I don't agree with". Or are you parodying yourself? In which case, sorry for missing the joke. |
#110
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![]() Most trainspotters seem to prefer diesels over electrics. So those who argue against electrification most forecefully must be the greatest of trainspotters? |
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