HSTEd
Veteran Member
- Joined
- 14 Jul 2011
- Messages
- 18,652
We are continually increasing road capacity to match projected traffic, "predict and provide".
Perhaps we could use the same model on railways rather than using price increase to suppress demand.
If the railways have been doing that since privatisation, it clearly hasn't proven very effective?
Running in daytime does not "inevitably" impact on passenger service frequencies if the timetable is properly planned. The principle of first on the graph applies and if the freight service was there before an altered passenger service. The TOC should ask the freight operator if they can flex their timings. Often the answer is yes.
Well unless you've invented a way for a passenger train to pass through a freight train without interacting with it, they do.
Lots of proposed improvements to passenger rail service get shot down because low performance drag freights "have" to be allowed to run, using equipment and practices that haven't changed since the Beeching era.
Most of crossrails trains simply dead end at Paddington because a handful of freight trains want to continue operating very slowly on the GWML, the passenger rail service through Altrincham is a joke for the benefit of freight trains etc etc etc
Huge infrastructure is constructed to allow these toy train operators to continue to operate like it's the 50s, and lines that could be filled with passenger trains cannot be filled with passenger trains.
EDIT:
Also a lot of people here comparing intermodal container loads between lorries and trains, when many modern lorry trailers hold rather than more than a 40' intermodal container by virtue of having enormous internal volume.
Lots of loads cube out before they run out of mass allowance
A modern 15.7m long trailer, 4.9m tall, has a cubic capacity on order of 132 cubic meters.
That is pretty much two 40' (non high cube) containers.
Even a standard 13.7m length, 4.7m height, trailer manages 102 cubic meters.
Good luck competing with this with our tiny loading gauge.
A lorry trailer is more comparable to a 53' high cube container these days.
Last edited: