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Overground
On 17 Sep, 13:49, Neil Williams wrote:
On Sep 17, 1:20*pm, Sim wrote: They prefer S- Bahn and U-Bahn, we prefer Overground and Underground. Both are clear enough for me. And there are odd examples. *In Hamburg, there is a large section of S- Bahn that is underground, and a large section of U-Bahn that is elevated (hence Hamburger Hochbahn AG - the overhead railway!). To my way of thinking the S-bahns generally serve areas further out than the U-bahns. Much of the S-bahn track is now exclusively for S- bahn trains and the services are no longer directly run by DB (if thinking about Germany), but put out to tender by the local transport authority. Both the Met and District, as well as LO have a lot more in common with various S-bahn networks than with the corresponding U- bahn. |
Overground
Graham Harrison wrote:
"Basil Jet" wrote in message ... Is there a reason why this is not just billed as part of the Underground, especially since it will soon have some deep tube bits? If the Underground can include the Chesham branch, why not the North London Line? Do staff at Gospel Oak station get paid less than staff at Chesham, in which case keeping the Overground separate from the Underground is a divide-and-conquer wheeze against the rail workers? What is now called the "Overground" is actually part of "British Rail". The government put those lines out to tender and "Overground" won it. Therefore, it's not part of Tfl as such - for instance it works under National Rail rules/signalling and passenger terms/conditions not LU. Signalling and rules are of no relevance. The ATO lines are not declared to be a different system to the driven lines, for instance. |
Overground
"Paul Scott" wrote in message ... 1506 wrote: This is something I have wondered for some time. The Overground name is contrived. The East London Line is a former Underground line anyway. But before it became part of the 'Underground' it was part of the main line network, so it is just back where it was originally... It was an oddity. It escaped the Grouping because it was part-owned by the Metropolitan, who ran all the passenger trains, and it escaped the formation of the London Passenger Transport Board because it was part-owned by the Southern Railway. Following nationalisation it was administered by the London Transport Executive, but still figured in the Southern Region timetable, and it was possible to obtain through tickets from SR stations to ELL stations, even when through tickets (other than season tickets) from SR to LT stations did not exist. Peter |
Overground
On 17 Sep, 14:28, Andy wrote:
On 17 Sep, 12:53, Jamie Thompson wrote: On 17 Sep, 12:43, MIG wrote: On 17 Sep, 12:38, Jamie Thompson wrote: ...though of course, as pointed out elsewhere, the Underground goes over the Overground at Whitechapel :) And at Hampstead, Kilburn and Wembley. I presume you mean the Met east of South Hampstead (never thought really about it, but I guess you're right!), the Met at Kilburn yup, but Wembley? The Met just south of Kenton, yes, but Wembley...where? I agree that this should be Kenton, not Wembley and it also occurs at Chiswick (District and Piccadilly over), north of Shepherd's Bush (Hammersmith & City over), and in the recent past at Stratford (Central line over until the LO platforms moved to the north of the station) and West Ham (under the District / H&C until the North Woolwich section shut). North west London is all one mush to me ... Kenton then. Or Northwick Park. |
Overground
1506 wrote:
This is something I have wondered for some time. The Overground name is contrived. Indeed, its also quite interesting the way the term 'overground' has become a way of describing National Rail trains within London for some, even if not run by LOROL. Its fairly common on LBC 97.3 when callers phone in and talk about rail services as overground trains. |
Overground
"Great Eastern" wrote in message
... 1506 wrote: This is something I have wondered for some time. The Overground name is contrived. Indeed, its also quite interesting the way the term 'overground' has become a way of describing National Rail trains within London for some, even if not run by LOROL. Its fairly common on LBC 97.3 when callers phone in and talk about rail services as overground trains. Several years ago, IIRC at the instigation of TfL, National Rail services within Greater London which had a frequency of 4 tph or better were branded 'Overground Network'. Some of teh branding still exists, at stations which are not part of London Overground. Peter |
Overground
In message
MIG wrote: On 17 Sep, 14:28, Andy wrote: On 17 Sep, 12:53, Jamie Thompson wrote: On 17 Sep, 12:43, MIG wrote: On 17 Sep, 12:38, Jamie Thompson wrote: ...though of course, as pointed out elsewhere, the Underground goes over the Overground at Whitechapel :) And at Hampstead, Kilburn and Wembley. I presume you mean the Met east of South Hampstead (never thought really about it, but I guess you're right!), the Met at Kilburn yup, but Wembley? The Met just south of Kenton, yes, but Wembley...where? I agree that this should be Kenton, not Wembley and it also occurs at Chiswick (District and Piccadilly over), north of Shepherd's Bush (Hammersmith & City over), and in the recent past at Stratford (Central line over until the LO platforms moved to the north of the station) and West Ham (under the District / H&C until the North Woolwich section shut). North west London is all one mush to me ... Kenton then. Or Northwick Park. Mornington Crescent! -- Graeme Wall This address not read, substitute trains for rail Transport Miscellany at www.greywall.demon.co.uk/rail |
Overground
On 17 Sep, 16:22, rail wrote:
In message * * * * * MIG wrote: On 17 Sep, 14:28, Andy wrote: On 17 Sep, 12:53, Jamie Thompson wrote: On 17 Sep, 12:43, MIG wrote: On 17 Sep, 12:38, Jamie Thompson wrote: ...though of course, as pointed out elsewhere, the Underground goes over the Overground at Whitechapel :) And at Hampstead, Kilburn and Wembley. I presume you mean the Met east of South Hampstead (never thought really about it, but I guess you're right!), the Met at Kilburn yup, but Wembley? The Met just south of Kenton, yes, but Wembley...where? I agree that this should be Kenton, not Wembley and it also occurs at Chiswick (District and Piccadilly over), north of Shepherd's Bush (Hammersmith & City over), and in the recent past at Stratford (Central line over until the LO platforms moved to the north of the station) and West Ham (under the District / H&C until the North Woolwich section shut). North west London is all one mush to me ... *Kenton then. *Or Northwick Park. Mornington Crescent! Talking of which, have the rules been changed to take Overground into account? That should be the true definition of whether or not they are part of the same system, ie "subject to the rules of Mornington Crescent". |
Overground
On 17 Sep, 10:15, "Peter Masson" wrote:
"Sim" wrote Some differences between Overground and Underground: 1. Third rail electrification rather than fourth, so not compatible for through running. The NLL is 25 kV OHLE between Acton and Camden Road, and between Dalston Kingsland and Stratford, and will be all the way between Acton and Stratford once the NLL refurbishment is complete. The WLL switches from 25 kV OHLE to 3rd rail between North Pole Junction and Shepherds Bush. Goblin remains diesel worked (and if it is electrified it will be 25 kV OHLE. BTW, the Broad Street to Dalston line, most of which is being incorporated into the ELL, was originally 4th rail, but IIRC was converted to 3rd rail before closure. Peter And all electrified parts of the current London Overground were four rail at some point, weren't they? Ah, maybe not Dalston to Stratford. |
Overground
On 17 Sep, 17:48, MIG wrote:
On 17 Sep, 16:22, rail wrote: In message * * * * * MIG wrote: On 17 Sep, 14:28, Andy wrote: On 17 Sep, 12:53, Jamie Thompson wrote: On 17 Sep, 12:43, MIG wrote: On 17 Sep, 12:38, Jamie Thompson wrote: ...though of course, as pointed out elsewhere, the Underground goes over the Overground at Whitechapel :) And at Hampstead, Kilburn and Wembley. I presume you mean the Met east of South Hampstead (never thought really about it, but I guess you're right!), the Met at Kilburn yup, but Wembley? The Met just south of Kenton, yes, but Wembley...where? I agree that this should be Kenton, not Wembley and it also occurs at Chiswick (District and Piccadilly over), north of Shepherd's Bush (Hammersmith & City over), and in the recent past at Stratford (Central line over until the LO platforms moved to the north of the station) and West Ham (under the District / H&C until the North Woolwich section shut). North west London is all one mush to me ... *Kenton then. *Or Northwick Park. Mornington Crescent! Talking of which, have the rules been changed to take Overground into account? *That should be the true definition of whether or not they are part of the same system, ie "subject to the rules of Mornington Crescent".- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - IMHO, you can include Overground only if you admit the offside diagonal rule between South Acton and Richmond. |
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