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Old August 30th 16, 05:40 PM posted to uk.railway,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.transport.london
Graeme Wall Graeme Wall is offline
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Default Why are Chiltern's London services crap?

On 30/08/2016 18:30, e27002 aurora wrote:
On Mon, 29 Aug 2016 11:19:30 -0700 (PDT), Patrick Hearn
wrote:

On Monday, August 29, 2016 at 8:28:32 AM UTC+1, e27002 wrote:
On Mon, 29 Aug 2016 00:27:24 +0200, Robin9
wrote:

Corrected versio.

e27002 aurora;157776 Wrote:


It is intended to be a four track mainline. The fasts to Birmingham
would use the fast pair. The stopping service to Aylesbury, and
Milton Keynes would use the slow pair.

A four track mainline? How many trains a day will run
on it? And carrying how many passengers? The Chiltern
trains I've seen are three coaches long!

Since the privatisation of the railways, it seems no-one
any longer cares about track and signalling costs and cares
even less about who is paying for them.

Network Rail are projecting demand forward to 2043.

Most stations on the GCGW joint route had four tracks between the
platforms. Moreover,
enough land was purchased to enable a four track route.

Sadly, the socialists, and their nationalized railway, did rather a
good(1) job of managing decline. The British taxpayer is now paying
the price.

(1) for some perverse value of good.


Total Route Modernisation included building wider platforms on the formation, so making re-four tracking much more difficult. It was under the Conservatives btw.

Patrick


British Railways was clearly a socialist creation. Its creation
followed the 1945 post war labour victory.


Where do you get this strange idea that the Labour party is socialist?



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Graeme Wall
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