I saw this happening (via OpenTrainTimes) yesterday evening - and thought it was quite a cunning workaround to whatever problems were happening at the time. I've never seen it done before, so I was curious as to how often it is used as a workaround?
I was on a northbound train (this one on RealTimeTrains) which was held at Waterbeach due to signalling problems at Ely. After a while I opened up OpenTrainTimes to try and figure out what was happening. Platforms 1 and 3 were empty, but there was a train showing in platform 2. The train ahead of me (this one), which I assume would normally use platform 1, had apparently been routed via the freight lines: I saw it at signal 287, then 295, then it reversed back into platform 3. I assume that whatever the problem was, it was preventing access to the platforms from the south, but not the north. I geekily admit to being quite disappointed when my own train went straight into platform 1 as normal and didn't have to use the same workaround
I was on a northbound train (this one on RealTimeTrains) which was held at Waterbeach due to signalling problems at Ely. After a while I opened up OpenTrainTimes to try and figure out what was happening. Platforms 1 and 3 were empty, but there was a train showing in platform 2. The train ahead of me (this one), which I assume would normally use platform 1, had apparently been routed via the freight lines: I saw it at signal 287, then 295, then it reversed back into platform 3. I assume that whatever the problem was, it was preventing access to the platforms from the south, but not the north. I geekily admit to being quite disappointed when my own train went straight into platform 1 as normal and didn't have to use the same workaround
