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-   -   Overground down again (https://www.londonbanter.co.uk/london-transport/14232-overground-down-again.html)

Clive D. W. Feather[_2_] March 4th 15 07:33 PM

Overground down again
 
In message
-septem
ber.org, Recliner wrote:
If there are no sets of reversing points between new cross and dalston
junction them someone ****ed up badly in the track design and they need to
put some in in case this sort of thing happens again.

I think there's crossovers at Shadwell and Canada Water.


There is a scissors crossover at the south end of the central two
platforms of Dalston Junction and another between there and Haggerston.
Then there's a third at the north end of Shadwell and a fourth at the
south end of Canada Water.

--
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[email protected] March 5th 15 08:17 AM

Overground down again
 
On Wed, 4 Mar 2015 17:16:41 +0000 (UTC)
Recliner wrote:
wrote:
And how often do you use it? I used it every almost every weekday for about

a
month and the service was appalling. Plus they had a nice habit of running
"fast" trains to highbury when the service really was screwed which nicely
****ed over the people who were waiting at Dalston having taken a reverser
there.

I thought you told us you used the quicker Victoria line option?


I do now, though when the jubilee line is up the spout like it was 2 nights
ago its back to the DLR and Overground again so I still experience the joy
of the ELL from time to time.

--
Spud



[email protected] March 5th 15 08:24 AM

Overground down again
 
On Wed, 4 Mar 2015 10:52:20 -0800 (PST)
Mark wrote:
On Wednesday, 4 March 2015 17:22:31 UTC, wrote:
It should have remained a tube line. Linking it into the NR network was just
asking for problems. If it was a self contained tube line it could have had a
much better service frequency in the central section and since everyone

thinks
closing the moorgate branch on thameslink was no big deal since everyone can
hope on the tube - the same logic applies, right? People from south london
could hope out at new cross (gate) and change.


1. It was an infrequent, slow "tube" line. Without the extra passengers gained
by
extra destinations there'd have been no justification for increased frequency
- new
routes open up latent demand.


I'm not suggesting it should have been pickled and left. If could still have
been extended to north to highbury and south queens road as a tube line and
whats more it could have been converted to ATO so allowing very high
frequencies.

2. If it was rebranded back to London Underground, it wouldn't magically speed
up.
It's an old and slow route, quite similar to parts of the District Line really.


The track has been more or less completely relaid throughout the length of
the old ELL. The only reason the service is slow is the semi comatose drivers
that seem to be employed on it. They'll close the doors. Wait up to 10 seconds
for god knows what, then slooooowly pull away at a snails pace.

2. People wouldn't change in massive numbers at New Cross Gate - they didn't
to the old East London Line.


They would if it was a much more frequent service to canada water.

3. Even if they did, New Cross Gate station wouldn't be able to cope with that
amount of interchange (even after rebuilding is complete)


Well that might be a fair point, I don't know, I've never been there.

4. Capacity and number of services at London Bridge are very reduced until
2018.
Overground via Canada Water has become the common route for stations between
Norwood Junction and New Cross Gate. That's not just passenger choice - in the
peaks the London Bridge service to these stations is now next to non-existent.
(There
isn't a single southbound non-Overground train at Sydenham between 16:20 and
18:20, for example.)


National Rails engineering works are irrelevant in this context since they
had no bearing on the ELL conversion to overground.

5. We've really done this one to death now, surely?


Well this is usenet.

--
Spud


David Cantrell March 5th 15 10:56 AM

Overground down again
 
On Wed, Mar 04, 2015 at 04:29:23PM +0000, d wrote:

Was a stupid idea to extend onto NR tracks anyway


Those of us who live south of New Cross disagree.

as it means the overground
timetable is frequently up the bloody spout. One of the reasons I gave up
using it along with the nonsensical reversing of 2 out of 3 trains at Dalston
so providing a **** poor service to Highbury where 80% of northbound passangers
actually want to go.


80% of northbound passengers don't even want to go as far as Dalston.

--
David Cantrell | Godless Liberal Elitist

THIS IS THE LANGUAGE POLICE
PUT DOWN YOUR THESAURUS
STEP AWAY FROM THE CLICHE

[email protected] March 5th 15 11:15 AM

Overground down again
 
On Thu, 05 Mar 2015 11:56:39 +0000
David Cantrell wrote:
On Wed, Mar 04, 2015 at 04:29:23PM +0000, d wrote:

Was a stupid idea to extend onto NR tracks anyway


Those of us who live south of New Cross disagree.


You have more than enough railways in south london. You didn't need another
route.


as it means the overground
timetable is frequently up the bloody spout. One of the reasons I gave up
using it along with the nonsensical reversing of 2 out of 3 trains at Dalston
so providing a **** poor service to Highbury where 80% of northbound

passangers
actually want to go.


80% of northbound passengers don't even want to go as far as Dalston.


From canada water they do.

--
Spud



Basil Jet[_4_] March 5th 15 09:48 PM

Overground down again
 
On 2015\03\04 18:52, Mark wrote:

2. People wouldn't change in massive numbers at New Cross Gate - they didn't
to the old East London Line.

3. Even if they did, New Cross Gate station wouldn't be able to cope with that
amount of interchange (even after rebuilding is complete)

4. Capacity and number of services at London Bridge are very reduced until 2018.
Overground via Canada Water has become the common route for stations between
Norwood Junction and New Cross Gate. That's not just passenger choice - in the
peaks the London Bridge service to these stations is now next to non-existent. (There
isn't a single southbound non-Overground train at Sydenham between 16:20 and
18:20, for example.)


Wow. I'm surprised New Cross Gate station can cope with that amount of
interchange.

Mizter T March 5th 15 10:47 PM

Overground down again
 

On 05/03/2015 22:48, Basil Jet wrote:

On 2015\03\04 18:52, Mark wrote:

2. People wouldn't change in massive numbers at New Cross Gate - they
didn't
to the old East London Line.

3. Even if they did, New Cross Gate station wouldn't be able to cope
with that
amount of interchange (even after rebuilding is complete)

4. Capacity and number of services at London Bridge are very reduced
until 2018.
Overground via Canada Water has become the common route for stations
between
Norwood Junction and New Cross Gate. That's not just passenger choice
- in the
peaks the London Bridge service to these stations is now next to
non-existent. (There
isn't a single southbound non-Overground train at Sydenham between
16:20 and
18:20, for example.)


Wow. I'm surprised New Cross Gate station can cope with that amount of
interchange.


There's been significant works at NXG (Mark refers to the 'rebuilding'
above) - new footbridge and lifts etc, which have provided some
breathing space:
http://www.londonreconnections.com/2014/new-cross-gate/

David Cantrell March 6th 15 10:42 AM

Overground down again
 
On Thu, Mar 05, 2015 at 09:24:08AM +0000, d wrote:

I'm not suggesting it should have been pickled and left. If could still have
been extended to north to highbury and south queens road as a tube line and
whats more it could have been converted to ATO so allowing very high
frequencies.


I don't see much benefit from having another one station branch down to
Queens Road. You'd pretty much have to close one of either New Cross or
New Cross Gate at least. But which one? If you only consider the ELL
then it's obviously silly to have both of them, but when you look at the
network as a whole, they allow easy changes onto two different routes
further south.

--
David Cantrell | Nth greatest programmer in the world

Human Rights left unattended may be removed,
destroyed, or damaged by the security services.

[email protected] March 6th 15 12:17 PM

Overground down again
 
On Fri, 06 Mar 2015 11:42:22 +0000
David Cantrell wrote:
On Thu, Mar 05, 2015 at 09:24:08AM +0000, d wrote:

I'm not suggesting it should have been pickled and left. If could still have
been extended to north to highbury and south queens road as a tube line and
whats more it could have been converted to ATO so allowing very high
frequencies.


I don't see much benefit from having another one station branch down to


As a standalone line no, but if considered as a feed line off the southern
network then it makes sense.

Queens Road. You'd pretty much have to close one of either New Cross or
New Cross Gate at least. But which one? If you only consider the ELL
then it's obviously silly to have both of them, but when you look at the
network as a whole, they allow easy changes onto two different routes
further south.


The DLR has many different branches but the ATO copes there. I'm sure it
could have managed on an ELL with this layout.

--
Spud



[email protected] March 6th 15 03:32 PM

Overground down again
 
On 03.03.15 18:31, eastender wrote:
One faulty train at Hoxton has knocked out the entire Highbury-New
Cross-Clapham-West Croydon-Crystal Place network.

E.


Whinge, whinge, whinge.

BTW, there is additional weekend engineering works on the ELL this
weekend. Perhaps you would want to take a minute to find out the details
this time round, rather than complaining on this forum.


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