brad465
Established Member
Something I've seen on routes with the ability to travel wrong sided is the line speed is almost always lower where routing is as such. I suspect the main reason is lack of stopping distance with signal aspects being lower (2 aspect being most common), but wanted to be sure if this is the main reason, and/or are other common reasons involved? 
Examples I know this to be the case are Tonbridge-Dollands Moor via Ashford on the SEML, which is 70/75mph in the wrong direction against 100mph for right routing. Another is the GWML between Swindon and Bath + Swindon to Bristol Parkway, which is 85mph vs 125mph for right routing at its top speed.
The SEML case though is to me confusing between Ashford and Dollands Moor, as both right and wrong siding are 4 aspect, but the wrong sided speed is lower so disproves my initial belief.


Examples I know this to be the case are Tonbridge-Dollands Moor via Ashford on the SEML, which is 70/75mph in the wrong direction against 100mph for right routing. Another is the GWML between Swindon and Bath + Swindon to Bristol Parkway, which is 85mph vs 125mph for right routing at its top speed.
The SEML case though is to me confusing between Ashford and Dollands Moor, as both right and wrong siding are 4 aspect, but the wrong sided speed is lower so disproves my initial belief.

