sprinterguy
Established Member
Deleted-Noticed it had already been mentioned!
Okay, I might have you on the Liverpool Street to Stratford but I am right with KGX - Finsbury Park because it is a three minute journey and you spend one minute and thirty five seconds either under canopies/in tunnels.
Should know, I filmed the route!:roll:
St Leonards Warrior Square-Hastings is about 90% in one tunnel;
Hastings-Ore is about the same;
Rochester-Chatham about 95% in one tunnel;
Chatham-Gillingham is about 80% in a tunnel![]()
Don't forget St Leonards Warrior Square - West St Leonards. Unfortunately Dover Priory - Western Docks no longer exists but I'll mention it since the tunnel bit's still in use!
To clear up Finsbury Park-Kings Cross:
Distance:
2.41 miles (201 chains)
Tunnels:
Gasworks Tunnels: 528 yds / 22 = 24 chains
Copenhagen Tunnels: 594 yds / 22 = 27 chains
24 + 27 = 51 chains
So that equals:
160 chains in open air
51 chains in tunnels
Distances on the railway are measured in chains and miles. 1 Chain is 22 yards and there are 80 chains in a mile. If you want it in metric 1 chain is just over 20 metres.
Technically speaking though the station and platforms are still there, just the tracks have been removed and the platforms have been filled in for a car park (I think Southeastern missed an opportunity there though - an hour to London to the port in dover! and connections to the north as well via Kings Cross / St Pancras!)
As for the tunnel part I think its about 50% tunnel and 50% out, but then again it does have a slow speed limit around that corner (15mph i think?)
One for 4SRKT,
City Hospital-Botanic on NIR.
I prefer miles, yards and metres, whoever invented chains needs shooting!
So do I! I think the only place that chains are actually used regularly still is on the railways. In fact the reason I joined this board was to ask about some measurements I had seen on a local line marked in chains as I thought that no-one used them, turned out I was wrong and the railway still did much to my surprise!
Distances on the railway are measured in chains and miles. 1 Chain is 22 yards and there are 80 chains in a mile. If you want it in metric 1 chain is just over 20 metres.
The distance between the stumps on a cricket pitch is also 1 chain.
I prefer miles, yards and metres, whoever invented chains needs shooting!
(Please note that I don't mean that)
Metric (m, km etc) is used on, from what I can gather, the LUL and any modern light rail network in the UK (the Tyne & Wear Metro, Manchester Metrolink, Croydon Tramlink, Nottingham Express Transit, and Sheffield Supertram), and, if I'm not wrong, one of the preserved (steam) railways in Wales (it may be the Welsh Highland Railway), as well as the CTRL (and HS2) too.