Voyager 2093
Member
4007 & 4008 are at Temple Mills currently.
It arrived on 30th January.
Here's it shunting around.]
Spent your whole life in Britain and never seen a proper-sized train?Nice livery, shame about the rest of it! Is it only me who thinks it looks like an incredibly fat slug/whale?
Everything I've read seems to indicate that the Velaro D and Velaro e320 are effectively different length sets/half-sets of what is effectively the same train, and as well as the majority of the technical components they also share the troubled gestation.Interesting to see the 374 here on the day a Railway Gazette casts doubt on DB's plans to operate London-Germany services because of Valero D delays.
http://mobile.railwaygazette.com/index.php/news/news/profile/20719
Obviously realise the Valero D is different than the e320 (Class 374).
It being a "proper-sized train" has nothing to do with it.Spent your whole life in Britain and never seen a proper-sized train?
Nice livery, shame about the rest of it! Is it only me who thinks it looks like an incredibly fat slug/whale?
It being a "proper-sized train" has nothing to do with it.Our continental train builders have no problems making their proper-sized trains look nice, the E320s' older cousin, the original Siemens Velaro, being one of the best cases in point. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, of course, but in my opinion they've gone and made a bit of a hash of it, aesthetically speaking, with the Velaro D and E320. I support bronzeonion's view.
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What does have the capacity to completely sink the DB London services (rather than just delaying them) is a continuation of the ridiculous security/passport theatre imposed on Eurostar by lobbyists for the airline industry.
Nice livery, shame about the rest of it! Is it only me who thinks it looks like an incredibly fat slug/whale?
What does have the capacity to completely sink the DB London services (rather than just delaying them) is a continuation of the ridiculous security/passport theatre imposed on Eurostar by lobbyists for the airline industry.
As far as I'm concerned anything that stops me being the victim of a terrorist attack has to be a good thing.
In the rest of Europe, where countries are complete members of the Schengen agreement, it doesn't seem as though they experience any increase in terrorist activity.
Spent your whole life in Britain and never seen a proper-sized train?
In all fairness the travelling public couldn't care less what the train looks like. To be honest its just a train.
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As far as I'm concerned anything that stops me being the victim of a terrorist attack has to be a good thing.
I'm not talking about the general traveling public though, this is my opinion.
That's fair enough but I'm afraid you'll always be in the minority in terms of public opinion. With respect to the actual design I wonder whether our loading gauge will often be a determining factor when considering the design of a train.
Its Duck Vader! Sweet jesus that thing is ugly
As far as I'm concerned anything that stops me being the victim of a terrorist attack has to be a good thing.
Really?
Even without the passports & security you would still need to buy a named ticket with a reserved seat.
the tube is still a much higher risk target for example, easy to slip in & (maybe) out with a hoodie on.
Despite all the media hype, the risk of terrorist attacks on British mainland is way lower than it was in the 80s when the PIRA were active.
If so many people are inconvenienced because of a very small terrorist risk I have to ask, have we already lost the very freedoms we stand for.
As a Londoner of 22 years I'm very much aware of the threat that terrorists pose to the Tube. However it's not practical to do anything more to protect the Tube from a terrorist attack. However, that doesn't mean that we should seek to reduce security measures on other rail services which have no discernable benefit and only increase the risks.
Which freedoms are you referring to? The freedom to be blown up? It's worth mentioning here that the security checks at St Pancras are no more of an inconvenience than they are at say Heathrow so whats the problem? Are you too impatient to queue? Would you rather be killed?
There is little, if any, fundamental difference between Eurostar and any other InterCity train service. If the passport checks were not there, I doubt that there would be any security checks either, just since it is then not possible to smuggle contraband between the CTA and Schengen. As with airports, any self-respecting terrorist would easily be able to get around security as it stands today - do you really think they passport check and scan all the low-paid, outsourced cleaners which most likely clean the secure areas of the stations and the trains?
There is no real security provided on Eurostar at the moment, which hasn't been a problem because it is not going to be a target. Terrorists try to kill as many people in as much of a media frenzy as they can - how is this at all possible on Eurostar? The blast forces of any explosion dissipate with the square of distance from it, and all tunnels on HS1 are far larger than any other on the network. The Eurostar services are by far the least densely packed trains on the whole network, so any explosion wouldn't directly affect anywhere near the same number of people as one on the 7/7 tube trains. Apart from the stations, none of the network on Eurostar is easy for the public and media to access, so there wouldn't be the same kind of immediate media reaction which terrorists crave. Then remains the fact that for the entirety of HS1, the Chunnel, and the LGV Nord there is no comprehensive security checking in place. As a result, the security can only protect Eurostar services alone, which for the reasons I said above would not be particularly good targets when simply detonating in the insecure areas of the Kings' Cross-St Pancras complex would do far more damage. As the Volgograd bombings showed, it doesn't matter if you scan people before they get on trains if you clump everyone together before security into one large target-able mass.
I'm sorry but your missing the point here. Eurostar services would be considered to be a high profile target hence the extra security. I really don't understand why people have issues with the security arrangements at St Pancras. Why is it such a problem?