ABB125
Established Member
Thanks - I use Windows, so I'm not sure if there's an equivalent
But from the updated timings refered to above, it appears to have gained 30s on its scheduled time through Stafford. -1/2 at Colwich and -1 at Norton Bridge. Now whether the schedule reflects line speed is obviously debatable.According to the tweets the OHLE did affect the train as they felt it wasn't at line speed going through the affected area
It’s 400miles, there’s always some maintenance somewhere. Also lots of freight and a couple of sleepers in the way.
Or just one or 2 issues, OHLE damage at Stafford just before the train went through which hindered the attempt, then going through Carstairs, i think it can be done without those issues & another attempt next week.
Carstairs is 90mph from before Carstairs South Junction (73m00ch), then 95mph past the station (73m35ch to 74m23ch) whence 100mph until past Lanark Junction.It could have done it if it wasn't for a couple of issues, seems it had to slow down at Stafford for OHLE & speed & at Carstairs[not sure what the speed limit is through Carstairs for expresses, seemed to have to go slower than normal line speed], plus it failed by only 21 seconds, it is possible to do, needs a clear run with no issues such as OHLE.
Wonder if it's better trying an overnight run, one time if there's no maintenance taking place?
There's no guarantee there won't be another, new issue next week of course!
Carstairs is 90mph from before Carstairs South Junction (73m00ch), then 95mph past the station (73m35ch to 74m23ch) whence 100mph until past Lanark Junction.
Carstairs Station is at 73m49ch.
Might need to be earlier than that to miss the 2-track south of Rugby.It could go ahead before the sleepers are due to depart from Euston, well the Glasgow sleeper anyway, think 10pm departure could well miss the sleepers & freight
Well thank you for posted that as no-one believes me and I was on the train (if it's the same on). Now there's a story. Maybe for another thread...There was I believe a run where an HST was specially authorised 125mph on the WCML in some places and that was before even 110mph was permitted.
I'll be rooting for the class 370 next week, not that I dislike 390's but at the time 370's were a big thing and I had a soft spot for them.FAILURE is confirmed! A time of 3 hours, 53 minutes and 1.12 Seconds.
No problem, there is a photo on Flickr of said train with details in the caption to that effect but my details originate actually from Modern Railways magazine. I believe the run was in 1982 but it might have been 1981, will need to review sources.Well thank you for posted that as no-one believes me and I was on the train (if it's the same on). Now there's a story. Maybe for another thread...
Might need to be earlier than that to miss the 2-track south of Rugby.
Roughly zero. That will have to wait until Carstairs is renewed!First part of the run 'dissection' - the TSR at Carstairs was anticipated to impact the run less than it did. It cost about 90 seconds apparently - what are the chances Network Rail can solve that one by next week?![]()
Interesting point raised, as much as this was a record attempt - Avanti apparently have aspirations to follow suit with LNER and speed up the regular London-Glasgow timing by cutting stops from the hourly fasts. A staff member mentioned these aspirations - the fasts would call at only Preston and Carlisle mirroring LNER calling at only York and Newcastle to Edinburgh. No suggestion of the running time for that though.
That was the plan for a long time, from Virgin days, as the NR WCML RUS describes.Interesting point raised, as much as this was a record attempt - Avanti apparently have aspirations to follow suit with LNER and speed up the regular London-Glasgow timing by cutting stops from the hourly fasts. A staff member mentioned these aspirations - the fasts would call at only Preston and Carlisle mirroring LNER calling at only York and Newcastle to Edinburgh. No suggestion of the running time for that though.
There’s been various TSRs around that area for well over a year at least, Good luck for next week .Carstairs is 90mph from before Carstairs South Junction (73m00ch), then 95mph past the station (73m35ch to 74m23ch) whence 100mph until past Lanark Junction.
Carstairs Station is at 73m49ch.
Looking at the 2014 working timetable, when 1S82 16:30 Euston-Glasgow only called at Preston, 1S82 took 1h38m between passing Crewe and passing Gretna Junction. The following hour's service, 1S90 17:30 Euston-Glasgow which called at Warrington, Wigan, Preston, Lancaster, Oxenholme and Carlisle, took 1h57m for the same distance.Interesting point raised, as much as this was a record attempt - Avanti apparently have aspirations to follow suit with LNER and speed up the regular London-Glasgow timing by cutting stops from the hourly fasts. A staff member mentioned these aspirations - the fasts would call at only Preston and Carlisle mirroring LNER calling at only York and Newcastle to Edinburgh. No suggestion of the running time for that though.
It could depart Euston 22.15/22.20 & pass the Highland sleeper around Crewe as the sleeper is at Crewe around 23.50, looking at the pathing, there's an AWC to Manchester at 22.00 next AWC is at 22.30 Wolves which use the FL, other departures are on the SL or DC, & no ECS movements timed around then either
Oh I pretty much knew that was the case but one can always dream!Roughly zero. That will have to wait until Carstairs is renewed!
They seemed to suggest it was in the short term pipeline but perhaps they picked up on the plans slightly wrongly?That was the plan for a long time, from Virgin days, as the NR WCML RUS describes.
But it was contingent on extra services running to pick up the missing stops (plus Crewe and maybe Rugby).
The Norton Bridge enhancements were part of that plan, freeing up paths south of Crewe.
But the DfT never let Virgin expand the fleet, and Avanti has chosen to deploy its new trains on an extra Liverpool service instead.
So we are left with a handful of Blackpool services which don't quite fit the bill (the Alliance/GA Open Access plans muddied the waters as well).
I think getting rid of diesels hauling freight over Shap and Beattock came into it too (no progress there).
It's what might happen with HS2 though.
4h08 was what the Preston only limited stop was timed for iirc, so perhaps 4h13 for the Carlisle stop and a bit of contingency.I would guess it would also be around 4h10. I remember back in BR days a number of services were timed do it in 3h59 between London and Edinburgh, I even rode some that did. Basically if you got through York and Newcastle ontime you were fine. The railway is lot more busy now, getting to York in 1h40 is easy, but getting onto the platform isn't. I expect WCML will have the same issues that are prevent LNER from going for a 4 hour service (which should be possible with the Azuma) 2 many trains getting in the way.
I'm not sure anything did - it was bang on time in the Penrith area and back to bang on time by Gretna - I wonder if the timings around Carlisle were left pretty vague?But from the updated timings refered to above, it appears to have gained 30s on its scheduled time through Stafford. -1/2 at Colwich and -1 at Norton Bridge. Now whether the schedule reflects line speed is obviously debatable.
Looking again at the updated timings, there seemed to be a bigger loss through Carlisle, (1 1/4 up to 1 1/4 down which would be 2 1/2 mins if accurate). Any idea what happened there?
So almost 4 mins extra for each additional stop.Looking at the 2014 working timetable, when 1S82 16:30 Euston-Glasgow only called at Preston, 1S82 took 1h38m between passing Crewe and passing Gretna Junction. The following hour's service, 1S90 17:30 Euston-Glasgow which called at Warrington, Wigan, Preston, Lancaster, Oxenholme and Carlisle, took 1h57m for the same distance.
I think it was the TSR at Carstairs that killed it.I'm not sure anything did - it was bang on time in the Penrith area and back to bang on time by Gretna - I wonder if the timings around Carlisle were left pretty vague?
Certainly feels that way - perhaps this has already been answered but it seems that the Pendolino was simply not timed for an average speed as high as the APT managed through Scotland - what changed in this regard?I think it was the TSR at Carstairs that killed it.
Certainly feels that way - perhaps this has already been answered but it seems that the Pendolino was simply not timed for an average speed as high as the APT managed through Scotland - what changed in this regard?
For those saying it was RT at certain locations, it left Euston 1 min early.
The old 1630 London - Glasgow used to crawl through Carlisle (as the 0540 Edinburgh - London does). I didn't use the former often but when I did, I wondered if the Carlisle stop could be done without impacting the end to end. We used to crawl between Motherwell and Glasgow for other services, so if it stops perhaps it would have just caught them up closer to Glasgow (or totally failed as another train would be in its path instead)Looking at the 2014 working timetable, when 1S82 16:30 Euston-Glasgow only called at Preston, 1S82 took 1h38m between passing Crewe and passing Gretna Junction. The following hour's service, 1S90 17:30 Euston-Glasgow which called at Warrington, Wigan, Preston, Lancaster, Oxenholme and Carlisle, took 1h57m for the same distance.
So you'd probably save 15 minutes with stops at Preston and Carlisle only.
Some of the EPS speeds are lower than the APT tilt speeds - APT 115 through Carstairs for instance, the limit is much lower today.Certainly feels that way - perhaps this has already been answered but it seems that the Pendolino was simply not timed for an average speed as high as the APT managed through Scotland - what changed in this regard?
Some of the tilt speeds were higher back then and the APT-P did not really break the speed limits - it did not exceed the 125mph ceiling by much more than 5mph.It wasn’t allowed to break the speed limits!
I wondered if the Carlisle stop could be done without impacting the end to end.