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Old August 5th 03, 05:54 AM posted to uk.transport.london
Clive D. W. Feather Clive D. W. Feather is offline
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Jul 2003
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Default Success of Central Line Closure answer to Track Maintenance

In article , CJG
writes
Interesting - it's also a National Rail thing - apparently, long
possessions allow a lot more work to be done a lot more cheaply than
the same time's worth of overnighters.

Sorry to look at it from the negative view point. But maybe National
Rail and London Underground are just being ripped off by their
contractors.


And maybe not.

If the last train reaches the depot at 01:00, you need until 02:00 to
get the power off, check it, and get all your people and equipment in
place to re-start the work you stopped last night.

At 04:30 you need to start packing up and ensuring the line is safe and
everybody is off it so that the power can be switched on in time for the
first train at 05:30.

Suppose we're talking about track replacement. At finishing time you've
got to assemble the joint between the last new rail and the first old
one, and check that all track circuits in the area you've worked on are
working correctly. Then the first thing you're going to do the next
evening is disassemble that same joint and break the track circuit.
Wasted effort.

Result: 2.5 hours work for 4.5 hours effort and probably a full day's
pay at night rate. The rest of the time is wasted. To get 100 hours of
genuine work (e.g. rail replacement) you use up 40 days.

If you shut the line for a long weekend (say Thursday lunchtime to
Tuesday morning) you can get that same 100 hours in one long run. Which
is better? Yes, it's more disruptive, but it's far more productive.

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