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#11
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![]() "Basil Jet" wrote Wouldn't manpower costs be lower if you maintained the trains in London between the peaks, instead of in the sticks overnight? You only have half a shift between the peaks, but presumably will have to pay the depot staff for a full-time job. Overnight you can get a full shift. Peter |
#13
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On 8 Nov, 12:29, wrote:
In article , (Paul Scott) wrote: wrote in message ... In article , (D7666) wrote: Or are you saying they are all those TOC are wrong *with London services rolling stock based in Plymouth Bristol Norwich Manchester Leeds Edinburgh Northampton Aylsebury Salisbury Ramsgate Brighton Southampton. Apart from former ER operations at Hornsey Ilford and East Ham, and they are all legacy BR depots, just about every TOC has its main line depots away from London. Perhaps there are reasons for this ![]() What about Hornsey?! You didn't read to the end of Nick's post did you... Oops! However, he makes my point for me. I mentioned Hornsey because it has one of the highest reliability records of any modern EMU depot. Compare the past record with the same class 365 stock of the Kent coast depots. I seem to recall that the 365s were maintained at Slade Green, presumably because the fleet was small and similar to the rest of what was maintained at Slade Green. |
#14
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![]() "D7666" wrote in message ... On Nov 6, 10:43 pm, "Paul Scott" wrote: Could North Pole find a new life as the depot for the coming GW ML electric trains, or as home for HS2's rolling stock? Probably the former I should imagine, if only because it is the project likely to happen at the earliest, by quite a few years. But if I were the operator I'd not want my depot at the inner London end for either the intercity or suburban operation. BR made this mistake the last time for BedPan by placing its depot at Cricklewood. Yes CW (as a depot) was closed because of Thameslink, but when extra depot facilities were needed, it made more sense to build new at the end of the route at Cauldwell and not re-open CW - which was vacant at the time ((CW depot building has long had non rail use - but not continuous use - it was vacant around the time Cauldwell was announced)). Depots are better off ''out in the sticks'' as that is by far the best place to berth and hence maintain anything that has any kind of London flow. This is why what is now Chiltern built at Aylesbury, SWT at Salisbury, LM at Northampton, And previously of course at Bletchley so hardly a drastic move and presumably Aylesbury was built to free up very valuable land at Marylebone and surely built by Network SE not Chiltern Trains. Kevin |
#15
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On Sun, 8 Nov 2009 19:59:22 -0000, "Zen83237"
wrote: Depots are better off ''out in the sticks'' as that is by far the best place to berth and hence maintain anything that has any kind of London flow. This is why what is now Chiltern built at Aylesbury, SWT at Salisbury, LM at Northampton, And previously of course at Bletchley so hardly a drastic move and presumably Aylesbury was built to free up very valuable land at Marylebone and surely built by Network SE not Chiltern Trains. Yes, the present Aylesbury depot was constructed in Network SouthEast days as part of the so-called "Total Route Modernisation" of the Chiltern lines. |
#16
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![]() "D7666" wrote in message ... On Nov 7, 7:26 pm, David Randles wrote: Earlier this year Agility Trains (Hitachi et al) announced that the proposed new maintenance centres for the IEP would be at North Pole (part of site only), Reading and Bristol Parkway. These are in addition to several upgraded existing facilities (undisclosed). Of course this predated the GWML electrification announcement, so it could all change http://www.agilitytrains.com/assets/...IEP_Preferred_.... And of course no IEP has actually been ordered yet has it ??? Agility/Htchi is merely the prefered bidder. -- Nick And the traffic flows for IEPs are different than for commuter/outer suburban services; so having facilities close to the London termini will be useful for first turn down trains, and late returning up trains. DW downunder |
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