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Old December 31st 12, 10:05 AM posted to uk.transport.london
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Default Met line signalling

In this months Modern Railways it says the Met is going to get Citiflo 650
moving block signalling in the next few years which does away with lineside
signals. Which raises a couple of questions - why didn't they just use the
same system as on the jubilee line given that the 2 lines run side by side
for a long distance, and what will happen on the uxbridge branch which is
shared with the piccadilly? Will the latter be terminated at Rayners Lane?

B2003

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Old December 31st 12, 11:28 AM posted to uk.transport.london,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.railway
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Default London Met line signalling

On 31 Dec, 11:05, wrote:
In this months Modern Railways it says the Met is going to get Citiflo 650
moving block signalling in the next few years which does away with lineside
signals. Which raises a couple of questions - why didn't they just use the
same system as on the jubilee line given that the 2 lines run side by side
for a long distance, and what will happen on the uxbridge branch which is
shared with the piccadilly? Will the latter be terminated at Rayners Lane?

My Modern Railways is still awaited. This also raises the question of
the section, north of Harrow-on-the-Hill, utilized by Chiltern. One
more reason to withdraw to Moor Park I guess.
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Old December 31st 12, 12:41 PM posted to uk.transport.london,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.railway
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Default London Met line signalling

On 31/12/2012 12:28, 77002 wrote:
On 31 Dec, 11:05, wrote:
In this months Modern Railways it says the Met is going to get Citiflo 650
moving block signalling in the next few years which does away with lineside
signals. Which raises a couple of questions - why didn't they just use the
same system as on the jubilee line given that the 2 lines run side by side
for a long distance, and what will happen on the uxbridge branch which is
shared with the piccadilly? Will the latter be terminated at Rayners Lane?

My Modern Railways is still awaited. This also raises the question of
the section, north of Harrow-on-the-Hill, utilized by Chiltern. One
more reason to withdraw to Moor Park I guess.


These questions are answered in the Modern Railways article
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Old December 31st 12, 01:13 PM posted to uk.transport.london,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.railway
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Default London Met line signalling

On 31 Dec, 13:41, Philip wrote:
On 31/12/2012 12:28, 77002 wrote:

On 31 Dec, 11:05, wrote:
In this months Modern Railways it says the Met is going to get Citiflo 650
moving block signalling in the next few years which does away with lineside
signals. Which raises a couple of questions - why didn't they just use the
same system as on the jubilee line given that the 2 lines run side by side
for a long distance, and what will happen on the uxbridge branch which is
shared with the piccadilly? Will the latter be terminated at Rayners Lane?


My Modern Railways is still awaited. *This also raises the question of
the section, north of Harrow-on-the-Hill, utilized by Chiltern. *One
more reason to withdraw to Moor Park I guess.


These questions are answered in the Modern Railways article


I look forward to reading it when the Post Office manage to deliver my
copy.
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Old December 31st 12, 02:17 PM posted to uk.transport.london,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.railway
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Default London Met line signalling

On 31 Dec, 14:13, 77002 wrote:
I look forward to reading it when the Post Office manage to deliver my
copy.


Seems an unreasonably long wait. When did they first go on the shelves
at WH Smug's? 22nd December?

--
gordon


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Old December 31st 12, 02:35 PM posted to uk.transport.london,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.railway
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Default London Met line signalling

gordonT wrote:
On 31 Dec, 14:13, 77002 wrote:
I look forward to reading it when the Post Office manage to deliver my
copy.


Seems an unreasonably long wait. When did they first go on the shelves
at WH Smug's? 22nd December?

He's presumably waiting for the US Mail to deliver it?
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Old December 31st 12, 07:00 PM posted to uk.transport.london,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.railway
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Default London Met line signalling

On Mon, 31 Dec 2012 04:28:48 -0800 (PST)
77002 wrote:
On 31 Dec, 11:05, wrote:
In this months Modern Railways it says the Met is going to get Citiflo 650
moving block signalling in the next few years which does away with lineside
signals. Which raises a couple of questions - why didn't they just use the
same system as on the jubilee line given that the 2 lines run side by side
for a long distance, and what will happen on the uxbridge branch which is
shared with the piccadilly? Will the latter be terminated at Rayners Lane?

My Modern Railways is still awaited. This also raises the question of
the section, north of Harrow-on-the-Hill, utilized by Chiltern. One
more reason to withdraw to Moor Park I guess.


The article says the S stock will be fitted with the ATP system used by
Chiltern.

B2003

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Old December 31st 12, 07:28 PM posted to uk.transport.london,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.railway
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Default London Met line signalling

On 31/12/2012 20:00, d wrote:
On Mon, 31 Dec 2012 04:28:48 -0800 (PST)
77002 wrote:
On 31 Dec, 11:05, wrote:
In this months Modern Railways it says the Met is going to get Citiflo 650
moving block signalling in the next few years which does away with lineside
signals. Which raises a couple of questions - why didn't they just use the
same system as on the jubilee line given that the 2 lines run side by side
for a long distance, and what will happen on the uxbridge branch which is
shared with the piccadilly? Will the latter be terminated at Rayners Lane?

My Modern Railways is still awaited. This also raises the question of
the section, north of Harrow-on-the-Hill, utilized by Chiltern. One
more reason to withdraw to Moor Park I guess.


The article says the S stock will be fitted with the ATP system used by
Chiltern.


No it doesn't:

"Wayside signals will, however, be retained on the stretch of the Met
south of Amersham that is used by Chiltern services. Included in the
contract [with Bombardier for the installation of Cityflo 650
signalling] is a requirement to make this section fit for the Selcab
Automatic Train Protection used on Chiltern DMUs. Selcab is the 20-year
old ATP system fitted as a trial on Chiltern in the wake of the 1988
Clapham accident; it has not been used on the Met infrastructure up
until now."

All trains will have ATP: On the S stock it will be provided by the
Cityflo 650 system. On Chiltern DMUs it will be provided by Selcab
equipment via some form of compatibility layer with the wider Cityflo
650 system.

Philip.

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Old January 8th 13, 06:51 AM posted to uk.transport.london,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.railway
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Default London Met line signalling

On 31 Dec 2012, 20:28, Philip wrote:
On 31/12/2012 20:00, wrote:





On Mon, 31 Dec 2012 04:28:48 -0800 (PST)
77002 wrote:
On 31 Dec, 11:05, wrote:
In this months Modern Railways it says the Met is going to get Citiflo 650
moving block signalling in the next few years which does away with lineside
signals. Which raises a couple of questions - why didn't they just use the
same system as on the jubilee line given that the 2 lines run side by side
for a long distance, and what will happen on the uxbridge branch which is
shared with the piccadilly? Will the latter be terminated at Rayners Lane?


My Modern Railways is still awaited. *This also raises the question of
the section, north of Harrow-on-the-Hill, utilized by Chiltern. *One
more reason to withdraw to Moor Park I guess.


The article says the S stock will be fitted with the ATP system used by
Chiltern.


No it doesn't:

"Wayside signals will, however, be retained on the stretch of the Met
south of Amersham that is used by Chiltern services. Included in the
contract [with Bombardier for the installation of Cityflo 650
signalling] is a requirement to make this section fit for the Selcab
Automatic Train Protection used on Chiltern DMUs. Selcab is the 20-year
old ATP system fitted as a trial on Chiltern in the wake of the 1988
Clapham accident; it has not been used on the Met infrastructure up
until now."

All trains will have ATP: On the S stock it will be provided by the
Cityflo 650 system. On Chiltern DMUs it will be provided by Selcab
equipment via some form of compatibility layer with the wider Cityflo
650 system.

Modern Railways has reached me. And, I have read the article. It is
very interesting, but why does TfL have to be so non-standard. Can
they not utilize a system compatible with the rest of the UK.
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Old January 8th 13, 08:58 AM posted to uk.transport.london,misc.transport.urban-transit,uk.railway
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Default London Met line signalling

On Mon, 7 Jan 2013 23:51:53 -0800 (PST)
e27002 wrote:
All trains will have ATP: On the S stock it will be provided by the
Cityflo 650 system. On Chiltern DMUs it will be provided by Selcab
equipment via some form of compatibility layer with the wider Cityflo
650 system.

Modern Railways has reached me. And, I have read the article. It is
very interesting, but why does TfL have to be so non-standard. Can
they not utilize a system compatible with the rest of the UK.


Don't be silly - they can't even utilise a system compatible with their
own ATO lines already in operation! TfL are the dictionary definition of
an organisation that has to constantly reinvent the wheel. And waste god
knows how many hundreds of millions in the process.

B2003



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