matt_world2004
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- 5 Nov 2014
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In response to someone who said that TfL could use them for what stopping at Ealing Broadway?But you were arguing for the paths to be used to Slough and Reading!!
In response to someone who said that TfL could use them for what stopping at Ealing Broadway?But you were arguing for the paths to be used to Slough and Reading!!
But then why shouldn't the branch to the airport be owned by say NR?Why? The airport branch only serves the airport - what reason would TfL have for spending money to buy infrastructure which serves only one customer?
There are some seriously bonkers ideas being suggested in this thread.
But then why shouldn't the branch to the airport be owned by say NR?
110 vs 100 mph is 3 seconds per mile reduction.
You could probably only sustain that for about 5 miles from clearing Ladbroke Grove to decelerating for Airport Jn.
So about 15 seconds saved.
I wonder, if HEx survives into the Old Oak Common station era, whether it will stop there?
That is what l suggested. It could easily suit both parties.The airport paid for it so it's theirs. They could if they wanted and NR wanted to buy it sell it to them.
That is what l suggested. It could easily suit both parties.
What benefit would there be to network rail to own the airport stations. They are already responsible for maintenance and signalling for which Heathrow pays them
The complications will arise if Network Rail owns property in what is essentially the basement of buildings belonging to Heathrow Airports Ltd. and wishes to make some changes. Or if HAL wants to make changes which affect NR’s tunnels and stations. Much simpler if ownership of intertwined buildings remains in one set of hands.I suppose it makes it a tidier overall operation instead of a separately owned stub of the network which adds extra complication.
As the following slots (twice per cycle) are used for the Oxfords which are fast to Slough - surely two of the Hex paths could be for services which run fast to Maidenhead or Twyford? Still enabling the Slough calls.
What is the situation for the other two slots re what follows behind? Not sure on how close but everything else is fast to Reading so that likely won’t work.
The other option in theory might have been a Windsor. I always thought that should have had a dive under from the reliefs and joined Crossrail. Might have worked out well.
May I also add that the S Bahn is also available and costs a fraction of the CAT which is the Austrian version of the Heathrow Express.City Airport Train in Vienna is an obvious one. I've only used it because the Taurus working it was required! As there's also a regular RailJet/IC service to Hbf it's even more of a pointless service than HEx is.
It seems to me that Crossrail/Elizabeth Line when it is open will steal most traffic from Heathrow Express. Why, because most passengers do not start in Paddington itself, the vast majority come from all round London.
So, if I were travelling in via these “Main-Line” stations I suspect I would be using Crossrail: -
London Bridge (inc. Charing Cross & Cannon Street) – Thameslink to Farringdon and Crossrail to Heathrow
London Blackfriars – stay on train to Farringdon and then Crossrail to Heathrow
London Waterloo – Northern line to Tottenham Court Road and Crossrail to Heathrow
Fenchurch Street – Get off at West Ham, District/H&C to Whitechapel and Crossrail to Heathrow
Liverpool Street – Direct link to Crossrail
Kings Cross / St Pancras – Thameslink/H&C/Circle/Metropolitan to Farringdon (1 stop) and Crossrail to Heathrow (Do not forget a lot of passengers to these stations will be on Thameslink trains calling at Farringdon already so no need to even get off)
Euston – Northern to Tottenham Court Road and Crossrail to Heathrow
The exceptions are probably
Marylebone – Bakerloo to Paddington and then HEX or Crossrail to Heathrow
Victoria – Circle to Paddington and then HEX or Crossrail to Heathrow – although most places with trains to Victoria also have alternatives to London Bridge or Thameslink so via Farringdon to Crossrail would be good options
Paddington – either HEX or Crossrail
Similar arguments can be put for most Tube lines to use Crossrail due to number of interchanges in Central London.
Not entirely sure why you think someone from Waterloo/Charing Cross wouldn't take the Bakerloo or why someone at Kings Cross would go back on themselves to get Crossrail at Farringdon, especially if they're already getting on the Met line?
It's possible at Waterloo but as Bakerloo to Paddington is an 18 minute Journey and has additional cost at the end I'm speculating that most would go via Crossrail.
At Kings Cross you could do that and it is one extra stop overall, however most passengers from around London will come in on Thameslink Trains and will just stay on one stop to Farringdon, LNER and Cambridge flyer passengers would have both options but are a small % of passengers.
I realise now I forgot Moorgate, so Hertford North and Welwyn passengers would just go to Moorgate and get Crossrail direct from there.
If I remember the (pre-Covid) timetable correctly the trains which made the Slough, and in the peaks one of either Maidenhead or Twyford, stops on the Down Main were the trains immediately before the HExs. The gap thus created on the Down Main west of Airport Junction after the HExs took the branch meant that the Down train following the HExs had (just) enough headway to run non-stop to Reading without catching up the stopping train.As the following slots (twice per cycle) are used for the Oxfords which are fast to Slough - surely two of the Hex paths could be for services which run fast to Maidenhead or Twyford? Still enabling the Slough calls.
What is the situation for the other two slots re what follows behind? Not sure on how close but everything else is fast to Reading so that likely won’t work.
The other option in theory might have been a Windsor. I always thought that should have had a dive under from the reliefs and joined Crossrail. Might have worked out well.
At Waterloo you have to get on the tube anyway, so why not opt for the more direct option? Journey planner says 14 min, so not sure where that figure comes from. Waterloo -> Tottenham Court Rd -> Paddington takes 5+5+interchange time so it may well be broadly similar, so this will be personal preference and there's always a time penalty for an additional interchange.
At Kings Cross / STP you're forgetting all EMR and SE passengers, nor would I say LNER leisure travellers are a "small %"!
There was a court case four years ago about that https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-40059659 "Heathrow loses Crossrail access charge case".I would be surprised if there was not an element there of a deliberate effort by the airport's management to make Crossrail less competitive on price terms with the HEx, given that passengers using the latter obviously mak them more money.
It is 4 mins to Tottenham Court Road, then 28 mins to Heathrow on Crossrail for £5.10 at Peak, total time 32 mins, against 14 mins to Paddington and 15 mins on HEx for £24.60 at peak, total 29 mins. I know which route I'd go. 3 mins longer but save £19.50
I say that LNER/EMR and SE will be relatively small percentage as most passengers heading for Heathrow would be from London and Home Counties. LNER passengers coming from Newcastle are likely to use Manchester Airport rather than Heathrow. Similar with EMR passengers using East Midlands or Luton. If you look at where Heathrow passengers come from they are mostly from within Home Counties.
In any case EMR/SE passengers come in just above the Thameslink platforms to get to Farringdon rather than walking full length of St Pancras International station to the Circle line with luggage. Plus EMR passengers may be able to do a same platform swap at Luton to Thameslink for Farringdon which would be even easier for them.
My view is that Crossrail will provide greater access to Heathrow than HEx via Paddington once it is running, as not only does it have greater direct access to more destinations but also much better connections all round than Paddington at a lower cost. Thus HEx like GatEx will become a low use service that is hogging track space better used for other services, although if Heathrow Southern Access ever happens this would become a good use of paths from Paddington.
Agreed.That sounds horrendously operationally risky. I can see ex-Bristol services being routinely terminated short at Paddington to recover late running.
When Old Oak Common opens (assuming Main Line trains stop), an 'over the bridge' double-back changing at Old Oak will be quicker by the best part of 20-30 minutes.
And yes, before anybody says it, yes I get that passengers with luggage prefer not to have to change trains...
Agreed.
It would help if people didn't take everything but the kitchen sink with them when they went to the airport. Golden rule: if you can't carry it, don't take it.
Yep this is what I was saying.If I remember the (pre-Covid) timetable correctly the trains which made the Slough, and in the peaks one of either Maidenhead or Twyford, stops on the Down Main were the trains immediately before the HExs. The gap thus created on the Down Main west of Airport Junction after the HExs took the branch meant that the Down train following the HExs had (just) enough headway to run non-stop to Reading without catching up the stopping train.
A similar pattern worked in the Up direction, but because of the vagaries in the timekeeping of the Up trains it didn't always work.
Yep this is what I was saying.
2 HEx tph drop off the mainline, enabling the Oxfords in front of it to stop at Slough. Therefore creating a gap before the next Reading fast. I was asking about the other 2tph - and then what solutions, potentially using Maidenhead calls ahead and flighting - might enable a Slough call to remain.