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#31
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On 9 Sep, 14:00, wrote:
On Wed, 9 Sep 2009 12:46:57 +0100 "Paul Scott" wrote: 250m long? That'll produce some interesting bunching of passengers down one end. I doubt many people will spend 3 minutes walking down the length of the platform. Why should it? The central underground stations are double ended, (eg Farringdon/Barbican, *Moorgate/Liverpool St) with access to the platforms Unless the entrances are spaced a reasonable distance apart then passengers are going to have to walk those 250 metres at some point , whether its on the platform or in a connecting tunnel. But all the stations will have two entrances at street level. For central London at least one of these will be an existing Underground station with the other usually at a new site, but a couple will be another Underground site. The distance that passengers will walk may be considerably less than currently; consider a passenger at the rear of a 12 car set at Liverpool Street at the moment (a 12 car class 321 formation is ~240m), they will have no choice but to walk considerably more than 250m to get anywhere near the Underground to continue their journey. |
#32
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![]() wrote in message ... On Wed, 9 Sep 2009 12:46:57 +0100 "Paul Scott" wrote: 250m long? That'll produce some interesting bunching of passengers down one end. I doubt many people will spend 3 minutes walking down the length of the platform. Why should it? The central underground stations are double ended, (eg Farringdon/Barbican, Moorgate/Liverpool St) with access to the platforms Unless the entrances are spaced a reasonable distance apart then passengers are going to have to walk those 250 metres at some point , whether its on the platform or in a connecting tunnel. They are spaced a reasonable distance apart, eg Farringdon and Barbican, Moorgate and Liverpool St, Bond St and Hanover Square, and Tottenham Court Rd (Centre Point and Dean St) Effectively there will be 8 entrances and ticket halls on the surface, for the 4 central area stations... Paul S |
#33
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#34
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On Wed, 9 Sep 2009 16:06:03 +0100
"Basil Jet" wrote: wrote: *sigh* I hate to break this pre-GCSE news to you, but the area of the shaft of a cylinder increases *linearly* with increasing radius, not as the square of it so the cost of the lining will not go up like that. The formula you want incidentaly is 2*pi*r*h. So before you post anymore bull**** pretending your in-the-biz you might want to revisit your school books first. It's a good job you didn't write those schoolbooks, otherwise they'd say that a one-inch diameter pipe and a five-metre diameter pipe need walls which are the same thickness. Remind me how a 10% increase in diameter size required to fit UIC gauge trains in the tunnel in mostly self supporting london clay is going to cost so much more because of huge extra lining thickness apparently required. B2003 |
#35
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![]() On Sep 9, 3:58*pm, "Paul Scott" wrote: wrote: Unless the entrances are spaced a reasonable distance apart then passengers are going to have to walk those 250 metres at some point, whether its on the platform or in a connecting tunnel. They are spaced a reasonable distance apart, eg Farringdon and Barbican, Moorgate and Liverpool St, Bond St and Hanover Square, and Tottenham Court Rd (Centre Point and Dean St) Effectively there will be 8 entrances and ticket halls on the surface, for the 4 central area stations... Sorry Paul but Boltar doesn't do facts, he just does 'common sense'. |
#36
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On Wed, 9 Sep 2009 08:26:58 -0700 (PDT)
Mizter T wrote: On Sep 9, 3:58=A0pm, "Paul Scott" wrote: wrote: Unless the entrances are spaced a reasonable distance apart then passengers are going to have to walk those 250 metres at some point, whether its on the platform or in a connecting tunnel. They are spaced a reasonable distance apart, eg Farringdon and Barbican, Moorgate and Liverpool St, Bond St and Hanover Square, and Tottenham Cour= t Rd (Centre Point and Dean St) Effectively there will be 8 entrances and ticket halls on the surface, fo= r the 4 central area stations... Sorry Paul but Boltar doesn't do facts, he just does 'common sense'. Which bit of "Unless the entrances are spaced a reasonable distance apart" did you have trouble reading? They apparently are going to be spaced a reasonable distance apart. I didn't know this. End of discussion. B2003 |
#37
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![]() On Sep 9, 4:44*pm, wrote: On Wed, 9 Sep 2009 08:26:58 -0700 (PDT) Mizter T wrote: [snip] Sorry Paul but Boltar doesn't do facts, he just does 'common sense'. Which bit of "Unless the entrances are spaced a reasonable distance apart" did you have trouble reading? They apparently are going to be spaced a reasonable distance apart. I didn't know this. End of discussion. OK, enough on this topic. |
#38
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Paul Scott wrote:
"DW downunder" reply@newsgroup wrote in message ... I'm not sure of the logic of platform doors restricting rollingstock to dedicated Xrail only; in which case one should be planning enough loading gauge for well-type DD cars once the eastern and western arms are cleared through. The expansion plan is to extend from 10 - 12 cars, the stations are 250m long for that reason. I'd expect fixed formation trains (rather than 5+5 as previously stated), with a Thameslink layout, ie with through gangways. But the Crossrail tunnels are AFAICS UK gauge, In a moment of boredom I once phoned them and asked. They confirmed UK single-deck sized tunnels, and told me the size in metres but not in terms of UIC ABC123+-~ gauge or whatever. No provision for double deckers, because of cost and not being able to send the trains somewhere else and/or sell them second-hand afterwards. -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
#39
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On Wed, 9 Sep 2009 10:55:13 +0000 (UTC), wrote:
250m long? That'll produce some interesting bunching of passengers down one end. I doubt many people will spend 3 minutes walking down the length of the platform. They don't need to, if platform access is properly planned. Go check out the MTR in Hong Kong, or the RER in Paris. Both systems run trains over 200 metres long. |
#40
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