The Anonymous Widower

Will Electric Cars Ever Hack It?

I'[ve always had my doubts about electric cars and on BBC Breakfast,  Rory Cellan-Jones was showing a new charging system, to help you do long journeys in an electric car.

As someone, who used to enjoy driving but doesn’t now, I’m rapidly coming to the point, where I think in the next few years many people will come to my decision and almost abandon cars completely.

Electric cars will not be the solution, unless they dsolve the range and cost problems, so they will only be for those who just can’t break their habit of driving everywhere. They will also probably only work if they are small and I doubt we’ll ever see an electric Range Rover.

On the other hand, where electric power and more efficient hybrid power will work is in larger vehicles, like buses and delivery trucks.  Where I live some of the buses are hybrid and people like them because they are smoother and quieter than normally powered buses.

But we will change our lifestyles much more than you think.

As an example, these are things I do to avoid driving.

  1. I get my big grocery shopping done at Waitrose in Upper Street in the normal way and then they just bring it round an hour or so later.  Even if I had a car, it would be less efficient and I’d to drive several miles to find a supermarket with a car park.
  2. I walk to the end of my road to the Overground and can get a train or tube to virtually anywhere in London, quicker than I could drive.
  3. For local trips, there are several efficient bus routes. 
  4. Larger deliveries are easy, as delivery vehicles can park outside to unload.

So whether electric cars do hack it, I suspect that there are so many ideas to avoid driving, that they won’t be needed.

July 27, 2011 Posted by | Transport/Travel, World | , , | Leave a comment

Who’d Want To Run A Railway?

We sometimes criticise train companies because of poor performance, but then who could run a reliable service with people like this around?

I hope that he at least gets prosecuted for being drunk in charge of a scooter.

July 25, 2011 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | 2 Comments

More Bad News For Bombardier

Bombardier may think that as they’ve built the new Victoria line trains for London Underground, that getting the orders for the Picadilly  and Bakerloo lines will be very much a follow on.

That was until I saw this proposal from Siemens.  The trains would offer a bigger capacity, have a through walkway, be quite a bit lighter and use 20 percent less energy. They might even be air-conditioned. Incidentally this looks very much like a proposal I saw on the London Underground web site about seven or eight years ago, proposed by their own engineers.

Incidentally , Bombardier’s new trains for the Victoria line are not cracked up to what they should be, and I know quite a few passengers on the line, who prefer the old trains built in 1967.

So perhaps they lost the Thameslink contract because their proposal wasn’t technically as good as that of Siemens.

You have to remember too that the Thameslink contract was under PFI rules laid down by NuLabor.  As the rating agencies reckon that Siemens are a better financial risk than Bombardier, the finance part of the deal was more expensive for Bombardier, so their proposal would have been more expensive. In fact their consortium would have been paying an extra 1.5% a year for financing the deal compared to Bombardier.

July 23, 2011 Posted by | News, Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment

From London and Crewe to Dublin By Train and Ferry

Ireland has an economic problem, as is well known. Commentators will argue the various reasons, but something that doesn’t help is that getting from Great Britain to Eire is not as easy as to get from Birmingham to Scotland. There are lots of flights, but they are not convenient or acceptable for everyone who wants to travel.

If you go to Dublin by train and ferry there is one train at 9:10 in the morning from Euston, that gets you to Dublin at 17:15, which is a journey time of eight hours and five minutes.  I looked for tomorrow and the fare is only £32 one way.  But there is only one service during the day, with another overnight.

So how fast could a service be done if the line was electrified all the way to Holyhead? Crewe from Euston can be done in two hours quite easily and it is only 84 miles from Crewe to Holyhead.  The fastest services now take just short of four hours. but the trains are not electric or  have the smooth ride of an IC125. The fast ferries take two hours for the crossing, but the larger slower ones take three hours fifteen minutes.

If we assume that Crewe to Holyhead can be done at a similar speed as Liverpool Street to Norwich, it would appear that a time of about one hour ten minutes could be obtained on this part of the route. So this would mean a time from London of three hours ten minutes in a smooth modern electric train. If this could be paired with a fast ferry this could mean a time of under five and a half hours if the sea conditions were good enough.

But this is more than about electrifying the North Wales Coast line, which it would appear that the Welsh Assembly would probably like to do. It is about kick starting the Irish economy.  And that of North Wales too!

So surely instead of spending billions of euros propping the Irish up, wouldn’t it be better to spend use of that money to connect Eire to Europe more efficiently. After all, railwise, despite what some might believe, the UK is actually part of Europe.

It would be 84 miles of electrification and perhaps a subsidy to the Holyhead to Dublin ferries to make sure that the fast service was every three hours or so.  Surely, that would be a more affordable option, as it would also benefit North Wales, which is not one of the more prosperous parts of the EU.

But it is not just about London to North Wales and on to Dublin. Properly built the line would also connect Birmingham, Liverpool and Manchester to North Wales.  As an example Liverpool to Holyhead would be under ninety minutes, which is the magic time that makes day trips easy. I also think it would make trips between North and South Wales quicker, but it would probably mean a change at either Chester or Shrewbury.

There are also other issues on the horizon.  The major sources of employment on Anglesey, are the nuclear power station at Wylfa and the aluminium smelter. Who knows what will happen in the next few years? But if Holyhead and Anglesey had a first class electrified rail line to the rest of both Wales and the UK, it would help to attract long term jobs. It would of course help tourism and would probably make the University of Bangor even better.

July 23, 2011 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | Leave a comment

We Can Build Affordable Rail Stations When We Have To!

There are plenty of places on the UK rail network, where it would be advantageous to build new or replace old stations. Around Newmarket and Cambridge there are a lot of places where stations used to be and proposals have been actively pursued at Soham and Cherry Hinton, although the latter is a bit tenuous. Now that the services have been upgraded with newer trains, it would seem logical that improved stations might increase the number of passengers.

The reason these improvements are not carried out is cost.

But have Network Rail created a precedent  at Workington North station?  Although it had to be built to meet a need created by tragic circumstances, it proved that a working station could be built quickly and affordably. Albeit it only was in use for a year and a supreme example of what could be build with scaffolding.

So should some of the lessons learned be applied elsewhere? Of course they should!  Modern Railways are talking this month, about a proposal for a simple rebuilding of Fishguard & Goodwick station to create a transport interchange for the town.

The trains are coming, but there is no station, so they should go for it!

July 23, 2011 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

Another Non-Jobsworth

I had dinner with my son at Carluccio’s in Upper Street and we walked back to Highbury and Islington station to get our trains home.

I was intendimg to take the North London Line to Dalston Junction for a bus home and as I walked down the stairs to the platform, I noticed that the train doors were closed.  But the driver waved me to open the doors and get on!

He was on time at Dalston Junction despite waiting for me.

July 22, 2011 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment

Interchange at Stratford

Yesterday I took a friend down the North London line to take a train to her home in Ipswich. The interchange there is now very good and it is just down one set of steps, a short walk and a climb up between trains.  Both climbs can be avoided by lifts, if you have limited mobility or heavy luggage.

The only problem is that the proper Ipswich trains have non-sliding doors and this is a slight problem for some with less than perfect hands.  It’s exacerbated by the fact that no-one gets out of an Ipswich train at Stratford, so these trains need to have a better door mechanism, when they are refurbished next time.

Stratford is going to be a major interchange during and after the Olympics. If say I was travelling from Ipswich to say Oxford Circus on the Central line, then now it is better to change at Stratford rather than Liverpool Street. Other journeys may also be better with a change at Stratford.  For example.

  1. Ipswich to Gatwick, by changing to the Jubilee at Stratford for London Bridge.
  2. N**wich to Southampton, by changing to the Jubilee at Stratford for Waterloo.

The interchanges are much better than using the Underground or buses in central London.

You can make a list of places, that are directly connected to Stratford, but not to Liverpool Street.

  1. London Bridge, Charing Cross and Waterloo
  2. Canary Wharf, Greenwich and the O2.
  3. Camden Town, Kentish Town, Hampstead and the Heath.

When Thameslink is completed at London Bridge, many more places will be easier to get to, after a short trip from Stratford.

Chiltern are also threatening to connect at West Hampstead to the North London line, so this would mean East Anglia or Essex to Birmingham or Oxford would be a simpler journey in new trains all the way.

And then in 2016 or thereabouts there’s CrossRail.

July 22, 2011 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | 2 Comments

Where Have All The Jobsworths Gone?

I’ve had a friend staying for the last few days and I accompanied her to Stratford to get her train back to Ipswich this morning on the North London Line. Changing from the North London Line to the main line at Stratford is particularly easy, as the platforms are virtually next to each other. And there are lifts, if you aren’t so good on your pins.

My friend had bought her tickets on the TrainLine, which is a company, I only use as a last resort, as I know the system and can often get a better deal elsewhere. Her tickets were actually to Ipswich via Colchester and I know that ticket inspectors can take non-compliance with rules seriously.  So when the first train came, which was going to Colchester and then on to Ipswich, she took it.  But to be fair to National Express East Anglia, the inspector on the train accepted her ticket without question.

Then when I got home, I found that my recycling had been collected.  Nothing special about that, except perhaps that they’d done it an hour or so earlier than normal. But they had replaced one of my recycling bins with a brand new one, which they had clearly numbered.

So sometimes people do use a bit of initiative to do their jobs better! And of course make things more pleasant for their customers and clients.

There was slight downside this morning. A guy was cleaning the train between Stratford and Hackney Wick. In trying to remove one of the disposable newspapers, he inadvertantly touched someone.  The guy mouthed him off in no uncertain terms.

July 21, 2011 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | Leave a comment

The Neapolitan Line

The travel bunny on BBC Breakfast for London referred to the combined Metropolitan, District and Circle lines as the Neapolitan line today.  It’s actually quite obvious as they are shown as a multi-coloured line, but why have I never heard it before?

July 21, 2011 Posted by | News, Transport/Travel | , , , , | Leave a comment

Taxis In The Rain

it is raining hard tonight.  But one of the advantages is that I live near the old 641 trolley bus route and taxi drivers still use it as the cut back to the City and Liverpool Street station, as the road is wide.  So despite the rain, a guest who was going to a function in the City tonight had no difficulty getting a black cab.

But it’s raining so hard, that I’ve got a slight leak in my glass roof! At least I brought a bucket with me to London.

July 20, 2011 Posted by | Transport/Travel, World | , , | 2 Comments