The Anonymous Widower

Government Has ‘Double Standards’ For Allowing Drilling In Devon

The title of this post is the same as that of this article in The Telegraph.

This is the first paragraph.

The Government has been accused of “blatant double standards” for allowing drilling in Cornwall that is able to cause stronger tremors than fracking.

This is at the United Downs Geothermal Project in Devon.

It certainly looks like one rule for geothermal energy and another for fracking.

But then in a lecture in London, I heard a Professor of Engineering from Glasgow University, say that fracking was used in the Highlands of Scotland to obtain clean water.

May 5, 2019 Posted by | World | , , , | Leave a comment

Boeing 737: Much More Than Just The Max

The title of this post is the same as that of this article on cnet.

It is a serious history, that explains how Boeing ended up in their current position.

I will still take a lot of persuading to fly in one!

The Sunday Times today has an article which is entitled Boeing Biggest Worry: Who’ll Want To Fly In A 737 Max?

Enough said!

I can see Internet designers putting together easy-to-use web sites to help passengers avoid aircraft they don’t like. There are some now, but they are rather clunky and you need to be fairly tech-savvy.

May 5, 2019 Posted by | Computing, Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment

Custom House Station – 4th May 2019

I took these pictures as I walked pass Custom House station.

It appears to be substantially complete, with even an on display Elizabeth Line logo.

Note that this station was to a large extent built in a factory near Sheffield. Engineers in charge of the construction, told me that the quality and speed of construction were better, than building everything on-site.

May 5, 2019 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | 2 Comments

Mojitos On Display By The Tills In Dalston Marks And Spencer

As this picture shows, the well-publicised Mojitos are handy in Dalston Marks and Spencer, which is perhaps thirty metres from the London Overground at Dalston Kingsland station.

They are the two light-blue cans on the left of the shelf.

I had just relieved the shop of two bottles of my favourite 0.5% Southwold Ale.

Incidentally, I have never drunk any alcoholic drink out of a can, without using a glass as an intermediary.

These days, I don’t even drink soft drinks directly out of a can.

If Transport for London allowed sponsorship of rail lines, perhaps the North London Line would be sponsored by Marks and Spencer, as they have stores very close to the following stations.

  • Richmond
  • West Hampstead
  • Hapmstead Heath
  • Dalston Kingsland
  • Hackney Central
  • Stratford

I think there will be more.

May 5, 2019 Posted by | Food, World | , , , , | Leave a comment

Where Do They All Come From?

Not the lonely people in the Beatles, Eleanor Rigby, but although some may be lonely, I am referring to the passengers on the North London Line.

Today on the Saturday morning before the Bank Holiday, the Class 378 train was fairly full, with all seats taken and quite a few standing.

When the refurbished line opened in 2009 with new trains, there were six trains per hour (tph) of three-cars between Stratford and Willesden Junction stations. Now there are eight tph of five-cars. This is an increase in capacity of 2.22.

Travel this route in the Peak and it is difficult to find space to put your feet on the floor.

Passenger loading on this line seems to have got higher, since the train frequency increased from six tph to eight in December 2018.

So where do these passengers all come from?

  • Are passengers avoiding the Gospel Oak To Barking Line, because of the reduced capacity?
  • Has the increased frequency on the Victoria Line and new Class 717 trains on the Northern City Line, encouraged more passengers between Highbury & Islington and Stratford stations.
  • Are passengers fed up with being fried on the Central Line?
  • Is it people living in new developments along the line?
  • Is it just people are fed up with driving in North London’s traffic and using trains as an alternative?
  • Is it passengers using the line as an alternative after the non-appearance of Crossrail?

But whatever it is, action needs to be taken to create more capacity.

So what can be done?

Crossrail Needs To Be Opened

Crossrail’s non-appearance must make a difference, so when it finally opens, I will be very surprised if a proportion of passengers travelling to Highbury & Islington, don’t use Crossrail with its massive capacity as an alternative.

Class 710 Trains Will Finally Arrive On The Gospel Oak To Barking Line

When the Class 710 trains are working well on the Gospel Oak to Barking Line, this will mean that the three Class 378 trains, currently working the line, can go back home to the North, West and East London Lines fleet.

The Gospel Oak to Barking Line may also take passengers from the North London Line, once it is working with four tph and four-car trains.

Class 710 Trains On The Watford DC Line

The six Class 378 trains on the Watford DC Line will be replaced with Class 710 trains, thus adding six trains to the North, West and East London Lines fleet.

Extra Class 710 Trains For The North and West London Lines

Six new five-car Class 710 trains will also be delivered for the North and West London Lines.

As Clsas 710 trains can’t work the East London Line, does this mean that the six Class 378 trains cascaded from the Watford DC Line will go to the East London Line.

I have to ask what frequency of services could be run with an extra six trains.

In Gospel Oak-Barking Fleet Plan Remains Unclear, I calculated how many Class 378 trains were needed to run a full service on the North, East and West London Lines.

I said this about the trains needed for North and West London Lines.

Between Stratford and Richmond, trains take 59-64 minutes to go West and 62 minutes to come East.

Between Stratford and Clapham Junction, trains take 62 minutes to go West and 64 minutes to come East.

The round trip times are very similar and are around two and a half hours.

This means that the current eight tph service would need twenty trains

Extending this calculation gives the following numbers of trains for a combined North and West London Lines service.

  • Eight tph needs twenty trains.
  • Ten tph needs twenty-five trains.
  • Twelve tph needs thirty trains.

Could this mean that the North and West London Line will get these services?

Stratford and Willesden Junction – 10 tph

Willesden Junction and Clapham Junction – 5 tph

Willesden Junction and Richmond – 5 tph

There would be one train spare, to cover for maintenance, software updates and breakdowns.

Six-Car Trains

In Will The East London Line Ever Get Six-Car Trains?, I looked at the possibility of six-car trains on the East London Line.

I came to this conclusion.

I will be very surprised if Network Rail’s original plan on six-car trains on the East London Line happens in the next few years.

There are various reasons.

  • Bombardier don’t make Electrostars any more.
  • Trains need an end-door for tunnel evacuation.
  • Class 710 trains don’t have end doors.
  • Some platforms would probably need difficult and expensive lengthening.

But six-car trains on the North and West London Lines could be a possibility.

In By Overground To High Speed Two, I said this about running six-car trains on the North and West London Lines.

Only a few stations can handle six-car trains without selective door opening and even the rebuilt West Hampstead station still has platforms for five-cars.

Selective door opening would allow six-car trains to use the five-car platforms and passengers have in London have shown they can cope with moving forward to get out at certain stations. Especially, as the walk-through design of the train, makes this a lot easier.

These numbers of trains would be needed to run the following frequencies to Richmond and Clapham Junction stations.

  • Four tph – 20 trains
  • Five tph – 25 trains
  • Six tph – 30 trains

Obtaining these numbers of Class 710 trains would probably not be a big problem, if they were needed and the budget was available.

Conclusion

The new Class 710 trains and the moving around of trains should keep services going for a couple of years.

May 4, 2019 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , | 5 Comments

How Strange!

Just looked at my bank account and the credit on my main account, was exactly the same as the balance on my credit card.

What are the chances of that?

May 4, 2019 Posted by | Finance & Investment | | 1 Comment

West Drayton Station – 3rd May 2019

I  took these pictures at West Drayton station.

Look at the bridge. It is very little different to this picture, which was taken in 2015.

Stairs have been added, but there is no sign of the lifts.

It is surely obvious to the around two million passengers who use the station every year, that little progress is being made at West Drayton station.

Obviously, it was not obvious to Sadiq Khan and his advisers sitting in their bunker South of the River!

He should remember, that he’s a Mayor for all Londoners and not those, who voted him in as an MP.

If there’s a North London candidate in the next Mayoral Election, they will get my vote, even if they’re from the Moster Raving Looney Party!

May 4, 2019 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | 1 Comment

Taplow Station – 3rd May 2019

I went to Reading today and on the way, I noticed that a step-free bridge was being erected at Taplow station.

So on the way back, I stopped and took some pictures.

I took this other set of pictures before Crossrail construction had started.

The old Victorian bridge has been scrapped Wikipedia says this.

The station is a popular location for railway photographers and enthusiasts owing to the secluded location, long views of track alignments and the low number of station users at off-peak times. When a special train is due, the footbridge and platforms will usually have a large number of photographers and enthusiasts along them. The original footbridge dating from 1884 was removed in totality in mid-2018, and replaced by a second temporary structure. The refurbishment of the lattice footbridge (damaged by railway contractors) appears to have been cancelled; a new footbridge with lifts at the London end of the station has started construction in autumn 2018.

I do hope that the designers of the new footbridge are providing a bridge with lots of space and good views.

I would have thought that the a double version of the  winner of the Network Rail/RIBA competition could have been used.

It would appear to be more affordable for a start, but it probably wasn’t designed, when the contract was awarded.

Conclusion

I do think that there has been some bad decisions made concerning Taplow station.

May 3, 2019 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | 3 Comments

Why Do Some Train Operators Still Buy Half-Trains?

This picture shows the unloved-by-SWR Class 707 trains.

South Western Railway‘s predecessor; South West Trains bought thirty of these trains and SWR is replacing them with Class 701 trains.

Sixty of these new trains will be ten-cars in length and thirty will be five-car.

Why?

Consider.

  • Most Class 707 trains, always seem to run as ten-car units, formed of two trains.
  • There are four cabs, rather than two.
  • A ten-car Class 701 train has twenty more seats than two five-car trains.
  • Including standing passengers, a ten-car Class 701 train has eight percent more capacity, than two five-car units.
  • Staff have to get out of the train and back in, to go between the front and back of the train.
  • I’ve even seen trains delayed because the conductor was helping a disabled passenger in the other train.

Running two half-trains as a full-size train must surely be more stressful for the staff and more uneconomic for train operators.

The only place for five-car trains, is surely on routes with short platforms.

The Cut-And-Paste Aventra

It should also be noted that Bombardier’s new Aventras and other recently-designed trains, can be cut and pasted to adjust the trains that an operator needs.

At the present time, services on the Gospel Oak to Barking Line, which can only accept four-car trains are being run by four-car Class 378 trains, which have been shortened from their normal five-car length by removing a car.

So for instance if on a route, South Western Railway needed to run eight-car trains due to a temporary length restriction, they could shuffle a ten-car and a five-car train to get an eight-car and a seven-car,

In a list of Aventra variants, the following are detailed.

Tfl Rail

Class 345 trains will be nine-car, but currently they are running as seven-cars.

London Overground

Class 710 trains will be used in three ways.

It has puzzled me, why the Lea Valley sets are not to be built as eight-car trains and I discuss this in Latest On The New London Overground Class 710 Trains.

Greater Anglia

Class 720 trains will be `22 ten-car and 89 five-car trains.

I think that Greater Anglia have some routes, that cannot accept ten-car trains.

As I showed for Hertford East station in Could London Overground Extend To Hertford East Station?

So will we be seeing some creative shuffling to get a tailored fleet, with perhaps some eight-car trains for routes like those to Hertford East?

I think that six ten-car trains and four five-car trains can be converted into ten eight-car trains.

South Western Railway

Class 701 trains will be 60 ten-car trains and 30 five-car trains.

Do South Western Railway need a sub-fleet of eight-car trains?

They can easily create one, by shuffling the trains.

West Midlands Trains

Class 730 trains will be 36 three-car trains and 45 five-car trains.

These are like-for-like replacements of the current fleet.

c2c

Class 711 trains will be six ten-car trains.

They will be replacing Class 387 trains on a short-term lease.

Conclusion

It appears to me, that for the train operator to have maximum flexibility, that you need to start with a long train and a short train and be able to shuffle cars around to get the train fleet you need.

Certainly a fleet of both ten-car and five-car Aventras gives you the possibility of creating a sub-fleet of eight-car trains.

Interestingly, the Hitachi Class 800 trains appear to have a similar ability.

 

 

 

May 2, 2019 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | 3 Comments

Are Class 378 Trains Better For Canoodling?

A couple, who were probably married or in a long term relationship, judging by their body language were at it yesterday.

She was sitting on the perch seat by the door.

He was standing in front, facing her, whispering sweet nothings or his supper preferences in her ear, as the train with standing room only trundled towards Whitechapel.

You see this type of behaviour regularly.

Was encouraging it a design objective?

May 2, 2019 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | 1 Comment