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Watford Junction - Shops could be bulldozed for new road
On 13 July, 21:52, Andy wrote:
Provision of the passing loop at Bricket Wood would have had nothing to do with the costs of the units needed to run the service. The class 350s, used by LM, cost a similar amount to the new LO class 378 units, although it is hard to compare the costs to the train operating company, as the rental cost of units seems to be much harder to find. What would be cheaper is for LM to run the branch with the class 321s that they are retaining, rather than switching to any form of new unit. I was led to believe that the point of the loop would be that you could have two trains on the line at once, and due to them needing to be 377s (or as you suggest 350s - like I say, I don't really care about the trains themselves!), the economics didn't add up. More juice, heavier, higher leasing...can't say I remember or indeed ever knew the details. On 13 July, 21:59, (Neil Williams) wrote: On Mon, 13 Jul 2009 13:25:23 -0700 (PDT), Jamie Thompson wrote: Yup, but one of the main reasons the passing loop got deferred is because one of the franchise commitments that came in when LM took over was to harmonise their fleet or some such, meaning that the line can only be worked by a hugely excessive new 377, when a much smaller/ cheaper non-standard unit would suffice ( I believe a Silverlink Metro unit used to operate the line before the franchise change). It was a 313[1]. *But IMO it makes no sense to add it to the incredibly slow DC lines. *Better use of the loop, if built, would be to attach it to a self-contained AC Euston-Harrow-Bushey-Watford shuttle, with most stops south of Watford being removed from existing LM services. *This would make better use of units, as there are quite a few LM trains that are quite quiet north of Watford but full and standing south of either there or Harrow. The problem is that for services north of Watford to run fast to Euston, they need clear lines, which they won't have if St Albans services are sitting in the platforms at Bushey, H&W, Wembley, etc. You might have something if you were to stick a loop or two at those stations, but that's even more unlikely than my dodgy flyover/under. I did think about them once though, Bushey has nasty drainage issues in the subway, so if you took advantage of a rebuild to move the platforms further south (also enabling you to provide disabled access via ramps a-la Carpenters Park), then you may have room for a loop or two before the Bushey arches. At Harrow one loop would be easy by reusing the old Belmont platform, though you'd need to fit a lift from the eastern ticket office to the overbridge if you wanted to maintain the existing disabled access. Two would require quite a rebuild of most of the platform area to shuffle things around (probably sacrificing fast line platforms in the process, not to mention that the proximity of the road bridge's supports would limit your options). At Wembley there's no chance. If anything were to happen I'd imagine it'd be easiest to knock through the parcels platforms...but well. Hmm. Adding platforms at Willesden Junction with loops from the outset would by comparison be easy ;) ....which is why something extending every other slow DC service on a 40 minute timetable (shame they won't up the DC frequency to 4tph, that would give a handy 30 minute every-other option) and letting people connect to the existing AC services makes more sense for me. That way you get less stopping at H&W/Bushey/etc. leaving more line capacity for outer AC services. This kind of thing has already started with some peak services, and is likely to expand. *Ideal stock for it is to use LM's retained 321s. If the branch platforms are too short for 8 cars (as I think they are), one set could be left at Watford while the other one does the branch - if it can work at Northampton it can work there. I was under the impression that all the 321s would eventually be on their way elsewhere. |
Watford Junction - Shops could be bulldozed for new road
On Jul 13, 9:59*pm, (Neil Williams) wrote: [snip] [1] These days it's a 321, which isn't exactly a super-high-tech unit, though is newer and more pleasant than a nasty unrefurbed graffitied Silverlink 313. The 313's are actually a lot cleaner these days under LO's care. The even clean the previously filthy seat covers! Of course they haven't done any refurbishment as such (ala Merseyrail), just removed some of the seats, but the trains do at least now look as though someone actually cares about them. |
Watford Junction - Shops could be bulldozed for new road
On Jul 13, 11:41*pm, Jamie Thompson wrote:
On 13 July, 21:52, Andy wrote: Provision of the passing loop at Bricket Wood would have had nothing to do with the costs of the units needed to run the service. The class 350s, used by LM, cost a similar amount to the new LO class 378 units, although it is hard to compare the costs to the train operating company, as the rental cost of units seems to be much harder to find. What would be cheaper is for LM to run the branch with the class 321s that they are retaining, rather than switching to any form of new unit. I was led to believe that the point of the loop would be that you could have two trains on the line at once, and due to them needing to be 377s (or as you suggest 350s - like I say, I don't really care about the trains themselves!), the economics didn't add up. More juice, heavier, higher leasing...can't say I remember or indeed ever knew the details. Indeed, the loop would allow two trains at once, but there is really no way to increase the frequency to every 30 mins without a loop. The old timetable (in immediate post-electrification days) had a train every 40 mins during the peak, but the time keeping fell off a bit towards the end of the rush hour and there was a gap in service to allow for this. Current frequency is a train every 42 mins at the start of service, then 45 mins for most of the day but 45-50 mins in the evening peak. The journey takes 16 mins end-to-end which doesn't leave sufficient turn around times to run a reliable service every 40 mins (this would only allow 4 mins at each end). On 13 July, 21:59, (Neil Williams) wrote: On Mon, 13 Jul 2009 13:25:23 -0700 (PDT), Jamie Thompson wrote: Yup, but one of the main reasons the passing loop got deferred is because one of the franchise commitments that came in when LM took over was to harmonise their fleet or some such, meaning that the line can only be worked by a hugely excessive new 377, when a much smaller/ cheaper non-standard unit would suffice ( I believe a Silverlink Metro unit used to operate the line before the franchise change). It was a 313[1]. *But IMO it makes no sense to add it to the incredibly slow DC lines. *Better use of the loop, if built, would be to attach it to a self-contained AC Euston-Harrow-Bushey-Watford shuttle, with most stops south of Watford being removed from existing LM services. *This would make better use of units, as there are quite a few LM trains that are quite quiet north of Watford but full and standing south of either there or Harrow. The problem is that for services north of Watford to run fast to Euston, they need clear lines, which they won't have if St Albans services are sitting in the platforms at Bushey, H&W, Wembley, etc. You might have something if you were to stick a loop or two at those stations, but that's even more unlikely than my dodgy flyover/under. I did think about them once though, Bushey has nasty drainage issues in the subway, so if you took advantage of a rebuild to move the platforms further south (also enabling you to provide disabled access via ramps a-la Carpenters Park), then you may have room for a loop or two before the Bushey arches. At Harrow one loop would be easy by reusing the old Belmont platform, though you'd need to fit a lift from the eastern ticket office to the overbridge if you wanted to maintain the existing disabled access. Two would require quite a rebuild of most of the platform area to shuffle things around (probably sacrificing fast line platforms in the process, not to mention that the proximity of the road bridge's supports would limit your options). At Wembley there's no chance. If anything were to happen I'd imagine it'd be easiest to knock through the parcels platforms...but well. Hmm. Adding platforms at Willesden Junction with loops from the outset would by comparison be easy ;) But there is actually plenty of capacity off-peak to do this and London Midland are planning have these relief services running from Watford Junction anyway during the peaks anyway. If you look between 17.00 and 18.00 or between 18.00 and 19.00 there are currently 6 trains leaving Euston on the slow lines, add in the Southern service and there are 7 passenger trains per peak hour leaving London. The time penalty for the current Harrow / Bushey stoppers is 4 mins to Watford Junction at non-peak times although often less during the peak as many trains are Harrow or Bushey not both. For an easy example, removing the Harrow and Bushey stops from the xx.04 and xx.34 off-peak services would allow xx.10 and xx.40 services calling at Queens Park, Wembley (ok the first two are 'extras'), Harrow, Bushey and Watford Junction to run without impacting on the following service which uses the slow lines (xx.24 and xx.54). Compared to many other routes out of London, the WCML slow lines are not at capacity, even allowing for the freight which runs during the peak. Platform loops don't really add capacity whilst allowing for a reliable timetable, as there is a very narrow slot for the fast train to run through whilst the slow is stopped in the loop. ...which is why something extending every other slow DC service on a 40 minute timetable (shame they won't up the DC frequency to 4tph, that would give a handy 30 minute every-other option) and letting people connect to the existing AC services makes more sense for me. That way you get less stopping at H&W/Bushey/etc. leaving more line capacity for outer AC services. But you'll have the same stopping at Harrow and Bushey whatever train run on the AC lines, as the existing service will have to retain their calls. Currently the DC services have a 16 min turnaround at Watford Junction which allows plenty of recovery time (and this is often used). You would turn this into 4 mins at St. Albans for every other train, with maybe a couple of mins stand at Watford Junction in each direction to adsorb late running / power switch over when coming onto or off the DC lines. This kind of thing has already started with some peak services, and is likely to expand. *Ideal stock for it is to use LM's retained 321s. If the branch platforms are too short for 8 cars (as I think they are), one set could be left at Watford while the other one does the branch - if it can work at Northampton it can work there. I was under the impression that all the 321s would eventually be on their way elsewhere. Current plans see 7 x class 321 units retained by LM (unit 411 and 412 have already been repainted in LM livery) and originally it was to be 10. |
Watford Junction - Shops could be bulldozed for new road
On Mon, 13 Jul 2009 15:41:17 -0700 (PDT), Jamie Thompson
wrote: The problem is that for services north of Watford to run fast to Euston, they need clear lines, which they won't have if St Albans services are sitting in the platforms at Bushey, H&W, Wembley, etc. This can't be a problem, because LM are already doing it in the height of the peak. They're just terminating at Watford. I was under the impression that all the 321s would eventually be on their way elsewhere. They will, but not for some time. LM are keeping either 7 or 9 (I forget) for the foreseeable future. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the at to reply. |
Watford Junction - Shops could be bulldozed for new road
On Mon, 13 Jul 2009 15:41:17 -0700 (PDT), Jamie Thompson
wrote: I was led to believe that the point of the loop would be that you could have two trains on the line at once, and due to them needing to be 377s (or as you suggest 350s - like I say, I don't really care about the trains themselves!), the economics didn't add up. More juice, heavier, higher leasing...can't say I remember or indeed ever knew the details. If the economics of a loop and new rolling stick "don't add up", let's see you try to justify the cost of constructing a flyover/flyunder, which would be orders of magnitude higher! Should be quite a laugh. |
Watford Junction - Shops could be bulldozed for new road
On 14 July, 12:44, Bruce wrote:
On Mon, 13 Jul 2009 15:41:17 -0700 (PDT), Jamie Thompson wrote: I was led to believe that the point of the loop would be that you could have two trains on the line at once, and due to them needing to be 377s (or as you suggest 350s - like I say, I don't really care about the trains themselves!), the economics didn't add up. More juice, heavier, higher leasing...can't say I remember or indeed ever knew the details. If the economics of a loop and new rolling stick "don't add up", let's see you try to justify the cost of constructing a flyover/flyunder, which would be orders of magnitude higher! Should be quite a laugh. I didn't say I could justify it, just that it'd be a useful thing to have as an investment for the future. Sorry if that's not quite the laugh you envisioned. |
Watford Junction - Shops could be bulldozed for new road
On 14 July, 01:09, Andy wrote:
On Jul 13, 11:41*pm, Jamie Thompson wrote: Indeed, the loop would allow two trains at once, but there is really no way to increase the frequency to every 30 mins without a loop. The old timetable (in immediate post-electrification days) had a train every 40 mins during the peak, but the time keeping fell off a bit towards the end of the rush hour and there was a gap in service to allow for this. Current frequency is a train every 42 mins at the start of service, then 45 mins for most of the day but 45-50 mins in the evening peak. The journey takes 16 mins end-to-end which doesn't leave sufficient turn around times to run a reliable service every 40 mins (this would only allow 4 mins at each end). Fair enough. The mighty wikipedia says the line speed varies between 40-75mph. Could raising this slightly not give the required layover time...expensive I know, but we're already well off into fantasyville here anyway. For the record, I think the loop's a great idea. I wonder, would having 3 or 4 trains on the branch (you'd need both termini to have dual platforms or at the very least pre-platform loops) not work too? Two in motion, and one or two waiting at the terminus/i for the next to arrive. Plenty of layover time. ;) But there is actually plenty of capacity off-peak to do this and London Midland are planning have these relief services running from Watford Junction anyway during the peaks anyway. If you look between 17.00 and 18.00 or between 18.00 and 19.00 there are currently 6 trains leaving Euston on the slow lines, add in the Southern service and there are 7 passenger trains per peak hour leaving London. The time penalty for the current Harrow / Bushey stoppers is 4 mins to Watford Junction at non-peak times although often less during the peak as many trains are Harrow or Bushey not both. For an easy example, removing the Harrow and Bushey stops from the xx.04 and xx.34 off-peak services would allow xx.10 and xx.40 services calling at Queens Park, Wembley (ok the first two are 'extras'), Harrow, Bushey and Watford Junction to run without impacting on the following service which uses the slow lines (xx.24 and xx.54). Compared to many other routes out of London, the WCML slow lines are not at capacity, even allowing for the freight which runs during the peak. Platform loops don't really add capacity whilst allowing for a reliable timetable, as there is a very narrow slot for the fast train to run through whilst the slow is stopped in the loop. Is it really that hard to hold them to timetable? My main concern would be the acceleration reducing capacity, but that could be countered by making the loops longer. The Reason I first thought of these loops was my experience of standing at Harrow & Wealdstone during the peak with the platform being crush loaded and trying to force my way back behind the yellow line when a ex-Bushey non-stopper shot past. Incredibly dangerous, especially when you don't get the warnings until the trains already shooting through - if indeed you can hear them at all due to the crappy PA system. Strikes me that if you put the platforms on loops the air shockwave would be non-existent and you'd have less change of having your face ground against the side of a 90mph train if someone happened to bump you by accident. Also, it does seem that there is spare capacity, but then I wonder about several peak gaps in service of half an hour or so (ok, 15 really, but it's 30 if you want to go to Euston rather than Clapham), which made me wonder if I was missing something. But you'll have the same stopping at Harrow and Bushey whatever train run on the AC lines, as the existing service will have to retain their calls. Currently the DC services have a 16 min turnaround at Watford Junction which allows plenty of recovery time (and this is often used). You would turn this into 4 mins at St. Albans for every other train, with maybe a couple of mins stand at Watford Junction in each direction to adsorb late running / power switch over when coming onto or off the DC lines. Sorry, I thought we were proposing additional calls? - My bad. Current plans see 7 x class 321 units retained by LM (unit 411 and 412 have already been repainted in LM livery) and originally it was to be 10. I stand informed and corrected :) Another random thought, given the ample capacity on the DC lines, and with a flyunder and a link to the MML/proposed Radlett freight terminal, you could increase freight capacity to Wembley yard whilst (depending on the location of said flyunder), possibly even moving some freight off the slow lines between Watford and Wembley. |
Watford Junction - Shops could be bulldozed for new road
On Tue, 14 Jul 2009 05:08:46 -0700 (PDT), Jamie Thompson
wrote: On 14 July, 12:44, Bruce wrote: On Mon, 13 Jul 2009 15:41:17 -0700 (PDT), Jamie Thompson wrote: I was led to believe that the point of the loop would be that you could have two trains on the line at once, and due to them needing to be 377s (or as you suggest 350s - like I say, I don't really care about the trains themselves!), the economics didn't add up. More juice, heavier, higher leasing...can't say I remember or indeed ever knew the details. If the economics of a loop and new rolling stick "don't add up", let's see you try to justify the cost of constructing a flyover/flyunder, which would be orders of magnitude higher! Should be quite a laugh. I didn't say I could justify it, just that it'd be a useful thing to have as an investment for the future. Sorry if that's not quite the laugh you envisioned. On the contrary, it was hilarious! You appear to have quite a bizarre (mis)understanding of the term "investment". ;-) |
Watford Junction - Shops could be bulldozed for new road
On Tue, 14 Jul 2009 05:30:58 -0700 (PDT), Jamie Thompson
wrote: Fair enough. The mighty wikipedia says the line speed varies between 40-75mph. Could raising this slightly not give the required layover time...expensive I know, but we're already well off into fantasyville here anyway. Well you might be, but most others here have the sense to see that you are well and truly in fantasy land. |
Watford Junction - Shops could be bulldozed for new road
On 14 July, 14:18, Bruce wrote:
On Tue, 14 Jul 2009 05:30:58 -0700 (PDT), Jamie Thompson wrote: Fair enough. The mighty wikipedia says the line speed varies between 40-75mph. Could raising this slightly not give the required layover time...expensive I know, but we're already well off into fantasyville here anyway. Well you might be, but most others here have the sense to see that you are well and truly in fantasy land. Umm...trolling by repeating what I just said doesn't make any sense... |
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