London Banter

London Banter (https://www.londonbanter.co.uk/forum.php)
-   London Transport (https://www.londonbanter.co.uk/london-transport/)
-   -   Busiest Stretch of line (https://www.londonbanter.co.uk/london-transport/1441-busiest-stretch-line.html)

John Rowland February 16th 04 08:06 AM

Busiest Stretch of line
 
"Peter Masson" wrote in message
...

I suspect Tower Hill to Gloucester Road, on the
District and Circle Line of LUL, is even busier.


[crossposted to utl]

I doubt that this is the busiest part of the tube, because it has flat
junctions at both ends.

--
John Rowland - Spamtrapped
Transport Plans for the London Area, updated 2001
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acro...69/tpftla.html
A man's vehicle is a symbol of his manhood.
That's why my vehicle's the Piccadilly Line -
It's the size of a county and it comes every two and a half minutes



Richard J. February 16th 04 09:38 AM

Busiest Stretch of line
 
John Rowland wrote:
"Peter Masson" wrote in message
...

I suspect Tower Hill to Gloucester Road, on the
District and Circle Line of LUL, is even busier.


[crossposted to utl]

I doubt that this is the busiest part of the tube, because it
has flat junctions at both ends.


For new readers, the original question was "what would you say was the
busiest strech of line (ie: Most Trains Per Hour) in GB?"

The peak frequency on the District/Circle lines is 4 trains every 8.5
minutes, i.e. about 28 tph per track. IIRC the Central line has 30 or
more tph in the peaks.

If "stretch of line" includes multiple-tracked sections, then (as
previous posters on uk.railway have said) the approaches to London
Bridge or Waterloo are contenders, but can anyone quote tph figures for
the peaks there?
--
Richard J.
(to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address)



Clive D. W. Feather February 16th 04 02:49 PM

Busiest Stretch of line
 
In article , John Rowland
writes
I suspect Tower Hill to Gloucester Road, on the
District and Circle Line of LUL, is even busier.


[crossposted to utl]

I doubt that this is the busiest part of the tube, because it has flat
junctions at both ends.


At one point it was certainly the busiest bit of the subsurface network,
with IIRC 33 tph in each direction during the peaks. It might well have
been the busiest point on the network. Unfortunately, "Sharing the
Circle" seems to have disappeared from the Web.

However, if we're counting the number of trains passing a station,
either Finchley Road or Hammersmith (D&P) would be my first suspect.

--
Clive D.W. Feather, writing for himself | Home:
Tel: +44 20 8495 6138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org
Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work:
Written on my laptop; please observe the Reply-To address

Peter Masson February 16th 04 06:18 PM

Busiest Stretch of line
 

"Clive D. W. Feather" wrote in message
...

However, if we're counting the number of trains passing a station,
either Finchley Road or Hammersmith (D&P) would be my first suspect.

Mile End?

Peter



[email protected] February 16th 04 08:28 PM

Busiest Stretch of line
 
In article ,
(Richard J.) wrote:

John Rowland wrote:
"Peter Masson" wrote in message
...

I suspect Tower Hill to Gloucester Road, on the
District and Circle Line of LUL, is even busier.


[crossposted to utl]

I doubt that this is the busiest part of the tube, because it
has flat junctions at both ends.


For new readers, the original question was "what would you say was the
busiest strech of line (ie: Most Trains Per Hour) in GB?"

The peak frequency on the District/Circle lines is 4 trains every 8.5
minutes, i.e. about 28 tph per track. IIRC the Central line has 30 or
more tph in the peaks.

If "stretch of line" includes multiple-tracked sections, then (as
previous posters on uk.railway have said) the approaches to London
Bridge or Waterloo are contenders, but can anyone quote tph figures for
the peaks there?
--
Richard J.
(to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address)



The Northern Line has a 30tph service between Kennington and Morden during
the peak hours (a train every 2 minutes).

Roger

Proctor46 February 17th 04 08:21 PM

Busiest Stretch of line
 
Busiest Stretch of line

Victoria to Oxford C.

Roland Perry February 18th 04 08:05 PM

Busiest Stretch of line
 
In message , Richard J.
writes
If "stretch of line" includes multiple-tracked sections, then (as
previous posters on uk.railway have said) the approaches to London
Bridge or Waterloo are contenders, but can anyone quote tph figures for
the peaks there?


The lines through Clapham Junction, surely? Most of the Waterloo trains,
plus some for Victoria and a few for Willesdon Junction.

Look for the stopping ones he

http://www.livedepartureboards.co.uk...ary.aspx?T=CLJ

[I think I counted 96 for the 21:00 hour - but it's a bit tricky...]

then add about 10tph for the non-stop and set-down only ones (I assume
the latter aren't shown)?
--
Roland Perry

Yokel February 21st 04 03:18 PM

Busiest Stretch of line
 
"Roland Perry" wrote in message
...
In message , Richard J.
writes
If "stretch of line" includes multiple-tracked sections, then (as
previous posters on uk.railway have said) the approaches to London
Bridge or Waterloo are contenders, but can anyone quote tph figures for
the peaks there?


The lines through Clapham Junction, surely? Most of the Waterloo trains,
plus some for Victoria and a few for Willesdon Junction.

Look for the stopping ones he

http://www.livedepartureboards.co.uk...ary.aspx?T=CLJ

[I think I counted 96 for the 21:00 hour - but it's a bit tricky...]

then add about 10tph for the non-stop and set-down only ones (I assume
the latter aren't shown)?


It's a matter of definition of what a "multiple track" section is. Clapham
Junction may indeed be the busiest railway station in Britain (if not the
world), but it is no less than four locations in the Timetable Data Base.
It is operated as four routes (Silverlink to Willesden [P2], the SWT Reading
route [P3-6], the SWT Main Line [P7-11] and the South Central Main Line
[P12-15]) and one actual junction (between the Kensington route [P16/17] and
the South Central slow lines). It is unusual for trains to be switched
between these routes except in emergency - just as well as otherwise we
would never be able to sort out the platforming for the departure posters
there!

So that impressive "sea of metal" you see looking east (12 running lines
plus connections and part of Clapham Yard) is effectively three multi-track
sections, for that is how it is normally operated.
--
- Yokel -
oo oo
OOO OOO
OO 0 OO
) ( I ) (
) ( /\ ) (

"Yokel" now posts via a spam-trap account.
Replace my alias with stevejudd to reply.




All times are GMT. The time now is 06:32 AM.

Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2006 LondonBanter.co.uk