To which the solution, surely, is to use a liquid with a much lower freezing point? (And similar viscosity and density and all that.)
They did, you can see the ethylene glycol mentioned on various cut away diagrams of the APT. It was a very cold winter when the launch took place so they probably did not have enough antifreeze. Water alone has a lot of issues so a production APT would have probably had synthetic hyrdaulic fluid developed for the job.
Do Mrk Ivs have hydro-kinetic braking BTW?
Which was presumably why BR had trials for flashing green signals and ATP in various areas, noteably Stoke Bank and the GWML.
Yeah that is the reason to show that the next section is also green apparently.
The design breif was actually 170mph orginally and the train ran regularly at 150mph on many sections north of Crewe. I dont read anywhere that 155mph peak or sustained speeds where track and signalling allowed for it was ever dropped during this project.
I really don't see the APT - P (prototype ) as being a failure by any means- political failure or meddling yes, PR disaster yes. 787 flight anyone?
The problems with the kinetic brakes and the final friction brake system were fixed, the pantograph was replaced by a compeletly safe one and the tilting mechanisms were brought to a level of reliability acceptable for them being prototypes. The tilting system was still prototype and the passenger nausea issue was known about and addressed with subsequent designs around Europe.
Even a compromise to sustained 125mph running and fewer stops in the mid eighties would have been a major improvement on the WCML timings, and there-in lay the political issue: the recently privatised British Airways had the Glasgow-Heathrow route as a major cash cow and feeder to international flights. Also there were few tory seats in the NW and west of scotland. A sub 4 hour journey time city-centre to centre would have threatened the actual flight plus airport - city centre time
At the time I was very surprised we got wires on the ECML and Ayr route, but then again there were plenty Tory seats on the ECML in north yorkshire, durham and so on, and Ayr was held by the tories.
There are several legacies of the APT : of course the 225s which I had at 140mph once, quite impressive, and of course there was paving the way for Platiclinos and Vomitager DEMUs.
The final one is that tilting and going faster than 140mph are "two quantum leaps" as quoted from the documentary on the IC225s . In other words, if you want to go fast, then do what the french did and build HS2.