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#51
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![]() wrote I believe the stretch from Queens Park to Harrow & Wealdstone is still four rail, otherwise Bakerloo passengers would have to get out and push! Ditto Gunnersbury to Richmond for the District Line. However, on these joint sections the fourth (centre) rail is at neutral voltage, with the third rail at +750(?)V, whereas on the rest of LUL the fourth rail is at negative voltage and the third rail at positive voltage - i.e, even apart from loading gauge considerations, a LO or other National Rail DC train would not run satisfactorily on LU lines. Peter |
#52
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![]() "Arthur Figgis" wrote People have been calling National Rail trains in London "overground" for a lot longer than LOROL has existed. There was even an Overground Network branding on a few routes, which lasted about as long as it took for people to say "WTF are the new signs about?" - but many of the signs are still there. I suspect people started referring to the overground at least as long ago as the time the Wombles emerged from Wimbledon Common. Actually, Wimbledon is a good place to make the distinction between the underground route via Earls Court and the other routes into Waterloo or Blackfriars. http://www.toonhound.com/wombles.htm Peter |
#53
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![]() Charles Ellson wrote: On Thu, 17 Sep 2009 22:34:15 +0100, Charles Ellson wrote: On Thu, 17 Sep 2009 13:21:29 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: MIG wrote: 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. I believe the stretch from Queens Park to Harrow & Wealdstone is still four rail, otherwise Bakerloo passengers would have to get out and push! It is 3rd rail with the 4th rail bonded to the running rail which carries the traction return current. The LU 4-rail system does not have a deliberate electrical connection between the 3rd/4th rails and the running rails and is only loosely connected to earth/0v to enable control equipment to detect earthing of either electric rail. A further consequence of this arrangement is that trains running over such sections require higher-rated insulation than is necessarily on LU (660v to earth rather than 420v to earth) although IMU all current LU stock ... has been so equipped since the 1960s. I'm afraid all that technical theory stuff just goes over my head. I'm a straightforward, practical sort of person, and as far as I'm concerned, if you count the rails and there are four of them, then there are four rails. That's just common sense, and no amount of fancy electrical theory is going to change that. |
#54
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On 18 Sep, 07:17, "
wrote: Charles Ellson wrote: On Thu, 17 Sep 2009 22:34:15 +0100, Charles Ellson wrote: On Thu, 17 Sep 2009 13:21:29 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: MIG wrote: 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. I believe the stretch from Queens Park to Harrow & Wealdstone is still four rail, otherwise Bakerloo passengers would have to get out and push! It is 3rd rail with the 4th rail bonded to the running rail which carries the traction return current. The LU 4-rail system does not have a deliberate electrical connection between the 3rd/4th rails and the running rails and is only loosely connected to earth/0v to enable control equipment to detect earthing of either electric rail. A further consequence of this arrangement is that trains running over such sections require higher-rated insulation than is necessarily on LU (660v to earth rather than 420v to earth) although IMU all current LU stock ... has been so equipped since the 1960s. I'm afraid all that technical theory stuff just goes over my head. I'm a straightforward, practical sort of person, and as far as I'm concerned, if you count the rails and there are four of them, then there are four rails. *That's just common sense, and no amount of fancy electrical theory is going to change that.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Now let's be nice to each other! I did not know the details Charles kindly provided, but it does make sense. Interestingly, not only does fourth rail (however wired) exist as far north as Harrow, but the last time I looked there was quite a lot left further on, although some of it was lying rather dismally in the four foot rather than perched on insulators. It was never formally removed, in other words, although doubtless disconnected. On the more general point on whether Overground is part of National Rail, I suggest that it is, behind the scenes, a remarkable compromise/ fudge/whatever. Consider: Overground is a TfL operation, and the concession was awarded to LOROL by TfL. Other posters have already explained the differences between a National Rail franchise and a concession like Overground. Overground is funded and branded by TfL and included in its operations for all public purposes. Overground is, of course, Oyster compatible along with DLR and trams (and buses too, yes). Station specs (staffing, equipment, appearance, branding) have been officially described as comparable with the Underground (although not all the upgrades are done yet). On the other hand, most Overground trains run (or will run) over Network Rail infrastructure, and on some sections they share the line with freight traffic (or the true Underground ). South of New Cross at least, Overground will presumably share its tracks with scheduled National Rail passenger trains, too. One section, though (Dalston Junction west curve to New Cross Gate/New Cross inclusive) is TfL owned/maintained infrastructure. The rolling stock was specified by TfL and is leased by TfL, but is included in the NR Rolling Stock Library as Class 378/x, being yet further variations of the Bombardier Electrostar series (and thus thankfully built in Derby!). Overground is also being treated by the Office of Rail Regulation as part of National Rail: its statistics are included in National Rail Trends just as if it was another franchise. The ORR does not report the figures from other TfL rail systems, any more than it includes Tyne & Wear Metro. And another poster has also rightly pointed out the existence of 25kV in various places, which is why dual-voltage roilling stock is needed. To add a little savour, parts of the 25kV NLL route (Camden Road area?) have third rail as well as OHLE -- a rare combination, I would suggest. If I came across such a compromise system in a foreign capital, I would be intrigued. As it is, it's in London. Hooray! |
#55
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"Sim" wrote
Now let's be nice to each other! I did not know the details Charles kindly provided, but it does make sense. Interestingly, not only does fourth rail (however wired) exist as far north as Harrow, but the last time I looked there was quite a lot left further on, although some of it was lying rather dismally in the four foot rather than perched on insulators. It was never formally removed, in other words, although doubtless disconnected. On the more general point on whether Overground is part of National Rail, I suggest that it is, behind the scenes, a remarkable compromise/ fudge/whatever. Consider: Overground is a TfL operation, and the concession was awarded to LOROL by TfL. Other posters have already explained the differences between a National Rail franchise and a concession like Overground. Overground is funded and branded by TfL and included in its operations for all public purposes. Overground is, of course, Oyster compatible along with DLR and trams (and buses too, yes). Station specs (staffing, equipment, appearance, branding) have been officially described as comparable with the Underground (although not all the upgrades are done yet). On the other hand, most Overground trains run (or will run) over Network Rail infrastructure, and on some sections they share the line with freight traffic (or the true Underground ). South of New Cross at least, Overground will presumably share its tracks with scheduled National Rail passenger trains, too. One section, though (Dalston Junction west curve to New Cross Gate/New Cross inclusive) is TfL owned/maintained infrastructure. The rolling stock was specified by TfL and is leased by TfL, but is included in the NR Rolling Stock Library as Class 378/x, being yet further variations of the Bombardier Electrostar series (and thus thankfully built in Derby!). Overground is also being treated by the Office of Rail Regulation as part of National Rail: its statistics are included in National Rail Trends just as if it was another franchise. The ORR does not report the figures from other TfL rail systems, any more than it includes Tyne & Wear Metro. And another poster has also rightly pointed out the existence of 25kV in various places, which is why dual-voltage roilling stock is needed. To add a little savour, parts of the 25kV NLL route (Camden Road area?) have third rail as well as OHLE -- a rare combination, I would suggest. If I came across such a compromise system in a foreign capital, I would be intrigued. As it is, it's in London. Hooray! That seems like a reasonable summary. Now, can someone explain succinctly why the smaller 'National Rail' stations between Queens Park and Harrow & Wealdstone, used by LU and LO, which were previously Silverlink-branded, are now signed as LU (rather than LO) stations? |
#56
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![]() "John Salmon" wrote in message ... "Sim" wrote Now let's be nice to each other! SNIP As it is, it's in London. Hooray! That seems like a reasonable summary. Now, can someone explain succinctly why the smaller 'National Rail' stations between Queens Park and Harrow & Wealdstone, used by LU and LO, which were previously Silverlink-branded, are now signed as LU (rather than LO) stations? The name Bakerloo might have something to do with it. AIUI, the TfL strategy is to make the Bakerloo the primary service provider for this section, if not the whole way to Watford Jn. This may be linked in some way with the Metropolitan Line Watford branch extension to Watford Jn. DW downunder |
#57
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On 18 Sep, 09:52, "DW downunder" reply@newsgroup wrote:
"John Salmon" wrote in message ... "Sim" wrote Now let's be nice to each other! SNIP As it is, it's in London. Hooray! That seems like a reasonable summary. Now, can someone explain succinctly why the smaller 'National Rail' stations between Queens Park and Harrow & Wealdstone, used by LU and LO, which were previously Silverlink-branded, are now signed as LU (rather than LO) stations? The name Bakerloo might have something to do with it. AIUI, the TfL strategy is to make the Bakerloo the primary service provider for this section, if not the whole way to Watford Jn. This may be linked in some way with the Metropolitan Line Watford branch extension to Watford Jn. DW downunder The decision was made to transfer these stations to Underground management at the time Overground was being defined. The Bakerloo is probably seen as the senior partner as far as Harrow now, and further changes (already discussed) seem likely to make that even more so in the future. In the old days, Queen's Park was the last LT-managed station on the route to Watford, which was firmly BR (and before that LMS) thereafter all the way to Watford. The Bakerloo was the "guest". From 1964 a decline set in as far as LT was concerned, until by the 1970s there was no Bakerloo north of Queen's Park except a handful in the peaks. Then Stonebridge Park depot was built as part of the splitting of the Bakerloo around the time the first part of the Jubilee line opened (1979) and tube trains started running north of Queen's Park more frequently again. One thought: will Headstone Lane--Watford High Street inclusive also be transferred to Underground management eventually, particularly after Met trains start serving Watford HS on their way from Croxley to Watford Junction? Place your bets ... |
#58
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On 18 Sep, 09:44, "John Salmon" wrote:
"Sim" wrote Now let's be nice to each other! I did not know the details Charles kindly provided, but it does make sense. Interestingly, not only does fourth rail (however wired) exist as far north as Harrow, but the last time I looked there was quite a lot left further on, although some of it was lying rather dismally in the four foot rather than perched on insulators. It was never formally removed, in other words, although doubtless disconnected. Previous discussions have suggested that it is still there because it is still connected. I think the running rails must be wired to the fourth rail and then the fourth rail wired to earth in the way that the running rails are in other third rail systems. (Not technical, but I assume that it saved connecting the running rails for one sort of train and duplicating the connections for another sort of train.) Question: was this the system at Euston and Broad Street etc, ie positive to earth, rather than a bit positive to a bit negative? Presumably for an LU train, the difference between the rails is all that matters, whereas for a three-rail train it's the difference between positive and earth that matters, so a NR train on conventional LU track would only be at 420 V or something? |
#59
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On 18 Sep, 10:47, MIG wrote:
On 18 Sep, 09:44, "John Salmon" wrote: "Sim" wrote Now let's be nice to each other! I did not know the details Charles kindly provided, but it does make sense. Interestingly, not only does fourth rail (however wired) exist as far north as Harrow, but the last time I looked there was quite a lot left further on, although some of it was lying rather dismally in the four foot rather than perched on insulators. It was never formally removed, in other words, although doubtless disconnected. Previous discussions have suggested that it is still there because it is still connected. *I think the running rails must be wired to the fourth rail and then the fourth rail wired to earth in the way that the running rails are in other third rail systems. *(Not technical, but I assume that it saved connecting the running rails for one sort of train and duplicating the connections for another sort of train.) Question: was this the system at Euston and Broad Street etc, ie positive to earth, rather than a bit positive to a bit negative? Presumably for an LU train, the difference between the rails is all that matters, whereas for a three-rail train it's the difference between positive and earth that matters, so a NR train on conventional LU track would only be at 420 V or something? I really doubt that the old fourth rail is in circuit with anything. Some is missing, and other sections are lying in the four foot. Not much continuity there, I would have thought! |
#60
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Had a trip from Clapham Junction to Highbury & Islington yesterday
afternoon - a bargain £1.10 with Oyster. Can anyone help with the following queries? Why are most LO station name and platform number boards marked with 'This is a temporary sign'? What's wrong with them? New class 378 S- and 3-car stop signs are also appearing, some of which are only 2m from the existing signs. I understand that there is a need to move some NLL station S car stop signs ready for 4-car operation, but why the mucking about on the WLL? Compressors on the 313 I rode were incredibly loud, more so than on A stock. For whatever reason the popping noise that I normally associate with the driver cutting power is also made when accelerating - I can rule out third rail gaps as it happens when leaving Willesden Junction HL. I think Southern will live to regret taking on this fleet! Judging from comments and queries from other pax e.g. "does this train go to Camden Road?" overheard at CLJ, I think the assumption that most pax are doing 2-3 station hops is incorrect. The three other occupants of my bay from Willesden Junction hadn't left the train by Highbury. The train - 17:30 ex-CLJ - had plenty of standees but was not crush loaded. A non-scientific survey, but in conclusion seating in the 378s will be totally inadequate: was a compromise of 2+1 seating considered? |
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