edwin_m
Veteran Member
Isn't there a restriction on diesel locos taking power at Queen Street LL due to fire alarms, or is that just DMUs?
Isn't there a restriction on diesel locos taking power at Queen Street LL due to fire alarms, or is that just DMUs?
What's wrong with losing through services. Perhaps some of the places don't need through services any more or at least not so vers electrifying part of a route vers costs of electrifying a whole route....because the Government is penny wise & pound foolish!! lol!
The spending on electrification schemes should be doubled imo.
If part of a route is electrified the other part/s can become disadvantaged.
eg Blackpool lost its through trains to London when the WCML was electrified.
The same for instance could happen to Plymouth / Penzance etc.
Reading to Gatwick Airport line has 2 trains an hour off peak Monday to Saturday and that's not fully electrified along its route. They are thinking of increasing the frequency to with another platform at Redhill. So you probably need at least 4 trains an hour currently for an existing line to be electrified. Am I right or wrong on that?
Reading to Gatwick Airport line has 2 trains an hour off peak Monday to Saturday and that's not fully electrified along its route. They are thinking of increasing the frequency to with another platform at Redhill. So you probably need at least 4 trains an hour currently for an existing line to be electrified. Am I right or wrong on that?
It probably has more to do with how difficult a line is to be electrified than frequency of service.
For instance a line which only needs one feeder station is a lot cheaper than one which needs two.
Likewise a line with lots of junctions would be more expensive than a line with none.
Also Reading to Gatwick has the difficulty of which electrification do you go for? Infill with 3rd rail and GW would likely have to have a micro fleet of trains to run the service. Infill with OHLE and there would be a lot of change points between power types along the route. Replace the existing 3rd rail with OHLE and all the trains trough Guildford and Redhill would need to be dual voltage.
You could say straying off at a bit of a tangent but with regard to lines being electrified' - how much of the rail network actually is electrified in so much as the rails carry an electric current (i.e. for signalling) ? Wouldn't this be the majority of the network apart from sections still using semaphore, token sections and single blocks (like the Sudbury branch)?
Reading to Gatwick Airport line has 2 trains an hour off peak Monday to Saturday and that's not fully electrified along its route. They are thinking of increasing the frequency to with another platform at Redhill. So you probably need at least 4 trains an hour currently for an existing line to be electrified. Am I right or wrong on that?
--- old post above --- --- new post below ---
What's wrong with losing through services. Perhaps some of the places don't need through services any more or at least not so vers electrifying part of a route vers costs of electrifying a whole route.
Uhm, no thanks. When I'm coming home on a Friday evening after a long week away, the last thing I need is to have a small delay on the London-Edinburgh train mean that I miss my connection and have an extra hour-plus added to my journey. Again.Agreed- I see no problem (for the time being) o f running loads of electric services London -Edinburgh - then loads of shuttle services Edinburgh - Dundee and Aberdeen - -if you have a through service it is loads of running diesel under the wires.
Any chance you can remember what thread that was in?...someone mentioned in another thread that the EU won't allow any new 3rd rail...
Any new electrification might have to be overhead, someone mentioned in another thread that the EU won't allow any new 3rd rail. I don't know if that also applies to the replacement of life expired 3rd rail
If diesel under the wires offends you, make it bi-mode or drags - whatever it takes to keep the through trains.
Any chance you can remember what thread that was in?
Any fact in the Daily Mail is instantly suspect.
Any fact in the Daily Mail is instantly suspect.![]()
Could you be kind enough to point out where 3rd rail is prohibited in that document?http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:32001L0016&from=EN
Don't know if the DM article refers to that directive. btw when was the last new bit of 3rd rail laid anywhere (either brand new lines or in-fill)?
As the poster of said quote, I should perhaps say that it was a dig at the Daily Mail not any real or unreal EU regulation, itself from a post that was current at the time relating to this article in the DM, and specifically this quote:
(which subsequently became both here and in the MO comments as 'The EU won't allow third rail!!!111!!!'.Dan Bloom (Mail Online) said:For efficiency reasons, and because an EU directive says new lines must be able to take European trains, Network Rail is installing overhead electric wires instead of an electrified 'third rail'.
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:32001L0016&from=EN
Don't know if the DM article refers to that directive. btw when was the last new bit of 3rd rail laid anywhere (either brand new lines or in-fill)?
Reading to Gatwick Airport line has 2 trains an hour off peak Monday to Saturday and that's not fully electrified along its route. They are thinking of increasing the frequency to with another platform at Redhill. So you probably need at least 4 trains an hour currently for an existing line to be electrified. Am I right or wrong on that?
--- old post above --- --- new post below ---
What's wrong with losing through services. Perhaps some of the places don't need through services any more or at least not so vers electrifying part of a route vers costs of electrifying a whole route.
As the poster of said quote, I should perhaps say that it was a dig at the Daily Mail not any real or unreal EU regulation, itself from a post that was current at the time relating to this article in the DM, and specifically this quote:
(which subsequently became both here and in the MO comments as 'The EU won't allow third rail!!!111!!!'.Originally Posted by Dan Bloom (Mail Online)
For efficiency reasons, and because an EU directive says new lines must be able to take European trains, Network Rail is installing overhead electric wires instead of an electrified 'third rail'.
![]()
Blimey. The man at the Mail is wrong in an inventive way. It never fails to amaze me how much effort they go to to fabricate "BLAME THE EU" stories...
Reading to Gatwick Airport line has 2 trains an hour off peak Monday to Saturday and that's not fully electrified along its route. They are thinking of increasing the frequency to with another platform at Redhill. So you probably need at least 4 trains an hour currently for an existing line to be electrified. Am I right or wrong on that?
Railway myths, both of them.
It probably has more to do with how difficult a line is to be electrified than frequency of service.
For instance a line which only needs one feeder station is a lot cheaper than one which needs two.
Likewise a line with lots of junctions would be more expensive than a line with none.
Also Reading to Gatwick has the difficulty of which electrification do you go for? Infill with 3rd rail and GW would likely have to have a micro fleet of trains to run the service. Infill with OHLE and there would be a lot of change points between power types along the route. Replace the existing 3rd rail with OHLE and all the trains trough Guildford and Redhill would need to be dual voltage.
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:32001L0016&from=EN
Don't know if the DM article refers to that directive. btw when was the last new bit of 3rd rail laid anywhere (either brand new lines or in-fill)?