WestRiding
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- Joined
- 21 Mar 2012
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No doubt the scheme will now be delayed even more. If only Sheffield was on an important bit of railway.
Actual Headway of 4 mins Up and 5 minutes Down and thats probably not the planning Headway which I would have thought be between 5 to 6 minutes.
The theoretical headway becomes less relevant when you consider the speed differential between a loaded freight train struggling away from Chinley East or out of Earles, with an express passenger bearing down on it at up to 90mph.Which is roughly what it is now so that remains a bottleneck that will be cited in future rather than Dore West Junction and the single line through Dore & Totley Station.
The theoretical headway becomes less relevant when you consider the speed differential between a loaded freight train struggling away from Chinley East or out of Earles, with an express passenger bearing down on it at up to 90mph.
Yes perfect solution! Let the 2550T freight get crawling and just as it picks speed up put it in a loop only for it to have to get going......again!Stick it in the Bamford loop, that's what it will be there for!
Yes perfect solution! Let the 2550T freight get crawling and just as it picks speed up put it in a loop only for it to have to get going......again!
Much more benefit in actually letting it run with the gradients around Bamford & Grindleford.
Which is roughly what it is now so that remains a bottleneck that will be cited in future rather than Dore West Junction and the single line through Dore & Totley Station.
What is the latest signaling plan? I can see version 2.1. £10 says Totley tunnel gets planned as absolute block as it is now, it won't have a numerical value. In terms of following a freight, you would specify a specific planning headway to accommodate for that. At least the new Bamford loop has a flashing yellow on it, though I think the 50mph entry is probably overkill considering its length.The theoretical headway becomes less relevant when you consider the speed differential between a loaded freight train struggling away from Chinley East or out of Earles, with an express passenger bearing down on it at up to 90mph.
Guessing the 50 is there to avoid it being approach controlled rather than the expected entry speed.What is the latest signaling plan? I can see version 2.1. £10 says Totley tunnel gets planned as absolute block as it is now, it won't have a numerical value. In terms of following a freight, you would specify a specific planning headway to accommodate for that. At least the new Bamford loop has a flashing yellow on it, though I think the 50mph entry is probably overkill considering its length.
You can do, but then by the time it's got under way again, it'll be way behind the express, again not really testing the theoretical headway. It'll be a useful hidey-hole, but I'm still not convinced of its value for routine regulating - by the time a freight's got from there to Dore, its intended margin could quite easily have been squeezed by a late departure from Sheffield. It really is crucial that there's room to stand a freight on Dore curve so that it can await a suitable margin if necessary (in either direction) without screwing up whatever's behind it. The only concern then is making sure that a loaded freight off the Hope Valley doesn't turn up at Dore at the same time as a set of empties in the opposite direction!Stick it in the Bamford loop, that's what it will be there for!
I don't know what the latest plan is, but I'd be surprised if they were going for stop signals inside the tunnel - so there's probably not much to be gained.What is the latest signaling plan? I can see version 2.1. £10 says Totley tunnel gets planned as absolute block as it is now, it won't have a numerical value. In terms of following a freight, you would specify a specific planning headway to accommodate for that. At least the new Bamford loop has a flashing yellow on it, though I think the 50mph entry is probably overkill considering its length.
Shouldn't be as the flasher solves that, it will be 70/90MU there anyway so its greater than 10mph difference.Guessing the 50 is there to avoid it being approach controlled rather than the expected entry speed.
There aren't any going in, an extra distant is going in the tunnel on the up though to make two. The block signal is moving 400m away from the tunnel exit towards Dore and also becomes the junction signal for the Dore curve, so you effectively lose a section.I don't know what the latest plan is, but I'd be surprised if they were going for stop signals inside the tunnel - so there's probably not much to be gained.
Why isn't 'the old road' via Beighton and Renishaw used more often for long cement trains off the Hope Valley needing to access the southbound MML? Can long freight trains not just be routed this way instead if there is danger of them overhanging Dore South Curve?
How would they lock up Sheffield? They can use the through road and either take the line via Woodhouse to Beighton Junction or run to Brightside/Meadowhall and take the freight line to access the old road at Treeton Junction.If overhanging Dore South curve is undesirable, locking up Sheffield station is abhorrent!
They’d need a suitable margin to run right through the station and up towards Woodburn in one go. They’re too long to stand inside clear in the station itself or between there and Nunnery ML Jn. Given how busy the north end of the station is, and the steep gradient up out of the cutting, it’s really asking for trouble.How would they lock up Sheffield? They can use the through road and either take the line via Woodhouse to Beighton Junction or run to Brightside/Meadowhall and take the freight line to access the old road at Treeton Junction.
The Through Line is useless as it exits into an already busy Platform 1b, its not a true Through Line. You cannot get from Brightside to the Old Road, it shut Yonks ago. Its hard enough getting Freights through Sheffield Station without encouraging more of them. Its not easy turning right in Nunnery Jn towards Woodburn etc because its approach control signal, bringing freights to a near stand, and then an extremely steep gradient towards Woodburn. Its defeated a few freights from a standing start over the years. Its also not like we can stand freight at Sheffield as none of them fit in the North Bound platforms. We can't stand them for long at Sheffield South either due to the amount of trains now using platforms 7 and 8 from the South.How would they lock up Sheffield? They can use the through road and either take the line via Woodhouse to Beighton Junction or run to Brightside/Meadowhall and take the freight line to access the old road at Treeton Junction.
Why isn't 'the old road' via Beighton and Renishaw used more often for long cement trains off the Hope Valley needing to access the southbound MML? Can long freight trains not just be routed this way instead if there is danger of them overhanging Dore South Curve?
Yep, Sheffield WS, we currently fringe to Totley SB. Absolute Block to Grindleford to Earles. The first we know of a train coming is when it Tracks in at Grindleford. Not much notice for Sheffield to do much with a late train. The loop at Bamford will be brilliant, especially if Passenger trains can use it too, ie, the late Hope Valley stoppers.Curreny all cement and stone trains will overhang the Dore loop/chord if they can't run straight through to or from the MML
Once the scheme is complete that will remain the case for the longer stone trains as they won't fit on the longer loop.
This is where signalling from Hope to Dore West being controlled from York and the east should. in theory, improve performance. Currently the break is immediately to the west of Dore West Junction with control from Manchester.
Looks fantastic, thanks for sharing!Thees three pictures may give an idea of how the Dore loop/chord will fit into the current landscape. The first is today, then how it may look on completion of the work in 3 years time, and then how it might look a few years later when the landscaping has grown. It will stretch from this point back to Dore West Junction, taking a slice of land below the oak wood. It isn't taking any part of the ancient woodland higher up the hillside.
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That's a surprise! Why is there approach control there? From memory, the 15-mph restriction out of the station ends at or just after 158¾ miles and Nunnery Main Line Jn is a little before 159 miles with a 25-mph divergence. Could anything actually be approaching the turnout too fast? Or is it just that because line-speed at that point is 70 and the divergence is 25, there has to be approach control even if nothing could be anywhere near line-speed?Its not easy turning right in Nunnery Jn towards Woodburn etc because its approach control signal, bringing freights to a near stand, and then an extremely steep gradient towards Woodburn.
Yep, Sheffield WS, we currently fringe to Totley SB. Absolute Block to Grindleford to Earles. The first we know of a train coming is when it Tracks in at Grindleford. Not much notice for Sheffield to do much with a late train. The loop at Bamford will be brilliant, especially if Passenger trains can use it too, ie, the late Hope Valley stoppers.
How many long tunnels have signals capable of showing red aspects within? I know Kilsby does, Severn Tunnel doesn't, Disley doesn't (I believe it is a repeater/distant on the down main inside the tunnel), Standedge doesn't (again a repeater/distant on the down and on the up), Chipping Sodbury?Why does Totley tunnel have to have a six minute headway?
Is there some restriction on the tunnel that prevents signal blocks being inside it?