59CosG95
Established Member
Good. Much better safety case for using MEWPs than ladders.OK., and there's no one working off a 6m ladder!
WAO
Good. Much better safety case for using MEWPs than ladders.OK., and there's no one working off a 6m ladder!
WAO
Exactly. Safety improvements all the time and incrementallyGood. Much better safety case for using MEWPs than ladders.
Great flexibilityCertainly is, they can work independently on multiple headspan assemblies concurrently, over the best part of half a mile. Not all of the work was on adjacent headspans, those that I saw today were spread over a couple of miles.
OK., and there's no one working off a 6m ladder!
WAO
And a road rail vehicle can be ready to go far quicker. If you think of an electrification train, it had to be kept locally and hauled to site. RRVs can be driven by road and use the nearest road access point, so be close to the point of work when the possession startsAre RRV's really more efficient and cheaper than the old ex-501 car wiring train? (Yes I know it was short of guard rails etc..)
WAO
However, the RRV is limited to a low speed when on rail. An electrification train could operate as a normal train and follow the last service train with the possession being taken around it. So this particular benefit may not be as big as it first appears.And a road rail vehicle can be ready to go far quicker. If you think of an electrification train, it had to be kept locally and hauled to site. RRVs can be driven by road and use the nearest road access point, so be close to the point of work when the possession starts
A fleet of RRVs could do the same thing, but also has the flexibility to work on several more widely separated sites. With the train, some problem with one activity stops the whole thing from moving on.IIRC, an electrification train could service its own length of track simultaneously, allowing multiple foundations etc to be drilled'/driven, in parallel. When these had been completed, the train simply moved forward to the next group of sites/pegs. This was highly productive and therefore cheap, compared to the GWEP record of low single figure completions, each possession.
The secret of low cost is serial production with division of labour, and Japanese style elimination of waste time, materials, effort and operative time.
I defer to my betters' experience of course and the above may be being achieved with the RRV's.
WAO
Projects involving modification of existing OLE will take a more traditionalapproach using RRVs, since it is necessary to thread the new wire between existing wires, a process knownas flaking. Projects may also choose a mixed approach, with wiring trains used in open route areas, and RRVsused in complex junction areas.The order of wiring is another consideration, regardless of the plant used; some projects will install wires indescending order of height, which (dependent on the system design) can mean:1. Crossover catenaries;2. Running lines catenaries;3. Crossover contact wires;4. Running lines contact wires.However this is not compatible with wiring a complete wire run at full tensions in a single shift, in which caserunning lines wire runs will be installed first, followed by crossover wire run installation using RRVs. Wiringtrains are however capable of wiring simple crossovers if a tangential arrangement (section 12.5.6) and boomanchors (section 12.10.10) are used, so that no flaking is necessary.
I think that the HOP train was a bought out item not one put together by a C C M & E E's staff. Its failings necessarily followed.With their high output train the GWML scheme was aiming at just that sort of serial production technique, but it clearly didn't work as planned.
You're probably right. CM&EE had ceased to exist over a decade previously and I've lost track of which successor organisation would have employed any of their staff who hadn't given up and left the industry considering their skills weren't needed any more.I think that the HOP train was a bought out item not one put together by a C C M & E E's staff. Its failings necessarily followed.
WAO
I would say so as, pausing apart, the actual MML work has proceeded quietly, efficiently, and competently.Hopefully the MML teams have found a way of improving efficiency by other means.
More quiet progress...the actual MML work has proceeded quietly
Over nine weekends between Saturday 22 February to early June, engineers will be carrying out essential infrastructure work south of Bedford to upgrade the overhead lines that power trains between Bedford and London. Thameslink and East Midlands Railway journeys between London St Pancras International and Bedford will be significantly altered, likely involving a bus.
We are upgrading the wiring on this part of the Midland Main Line so that the bi-mode trains will be able to travel at up to 125mph on this section of the line.
The railway line between Kettering in Northamptonshire and Wigston near Leicester has reached a major milestone by being officially declared ready and safe for electric trains.
The testing phase also explored how the Midland Main Line could be made even more efficient in future, such as having masts further apart to reduce costs and construction time.
Thanks. The last publicity photo that shows new housing, which if they'd panned back/around a bit I think you'd be able to see Grayling Road. I think it could've led to a good caption.The electrification between Kettering and Wigston has been delivered both on time and under budget and is now officially ‘ready’ for electric trains.
Let’s hope the wheels keep in motion in terms of further electrification of the MML!
Full article here
Fantastic news. I really hope this helps give government/DfT and most importantly HMT, the confidence to carry on.The electrification between Kettering and Wigston has been delivered both on time and under budget and is now officially ‘ready’ for electric trains.
Let’s hope the wheels keep in motion in terms of further electrification of the MML!
Full article here
how on earth did it come by that nameyou'd be able to see Grayling Road.
Grayling is both a fish and a butterfly. Roads near the MH one include other butterfly names.how on earth did it come by that name
I wonder does “within budget” mean within the base budget or once the contingency margin is added. As the margin is often quite a large percentage it would be less impressive if the latter.
As a systems engineer I'd say systems integration issues are the least predictable. With civils it's relatively easy to see if the concrete isn't there on time, but visualising in advance if something doesn't work when connected together or there isn't the evidence for a critical approval is much more tricky (even if the components themselves are proven). Also it takes place right at the end so there's much less time left to recover. Look at Crossrail where everyone thought it was on plan until a few months before commissioning, or in an earlier era the Channel Tunnel.Civil work is possibly the least predictable but so is ordering products which are not state-of-the-art and so have dubious added development costs. Think 769, 701 and 442 programs. Software is additionally a dark art and only proven packages are really trustworthy.
Look at Crossrail where everyone thought it was on plan until a few months before commissioning
+The electrification between Kettering and Wigston has been delivered both on time and under budget and is now officially ‘ready’ for electric trains.
Let’s hope the wheels keep in motion in terms of further electrification of the MML!
Full article here
My bold - oh dear.The railway line between Kettering in Northamptonshire and Wigston near Leicester has reached a major milestone by being officially declared ready and safe for electric trains.
The testing phase also explored how the Midland Main Line could be made even more efficient in future, such as having masts further apart to reduce costs and construction time.
I think it's more to do with the fact that a lot of the ECML uses head span OLE, which tends to become quite vulnerable when there is a de-wirement, often affecting multiple lines. The MML electrification uses more newer, sturdier and independently tensioned OLE equipment. So it being more spaced out shouldn't be an issue here compared to older OLE schemes.Is the spacing of the masts not an ongoing weakness in the overhead line equipment for the East Coast Mainline ?.
However, once you start increasing the distance between masts, you increase the wire deflection due to wind effects unless the wire tension is increased. With storm effects increasing due to climate change, increasing the distances between masts may be another East Coast waiting to happen.I think it's more to do with the fact that a lot of the ECML uses head span OLE, which tends to become quite vulnerable when there is a de-wirement, often affecting multiple lines. The MML electrification uses more newer, sturdier and independently tensioned OLE equipment. So it being more spaced out shouldn't be an issue here compared to older OLE schemes.
I hear what you are saying but money has to be saved because His Majesty’s Treasury has the final say.However, once you start increasing the distance between masts, you increase the wire deflection due to wind effects unless the wire tension is increased. With storm effects increasing due to climate change, increasing the distances between masts may be another East Coast waiting to happen.
Yes, exactly. Penny wise, pound foolish.I hear what you are saying but money has to be saved because His Majesty’s Treasury has the final say.
I was thinking of the Moses Gate collapse and the Farnworth Tunnel saga.With civils it's relatively easy to see if the concrete isn't there on time,