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-   -   Post Office Railway open from 28th July (https://www.londonbanter.co.uk/london-transport/15358-post-office-railway-open-28th.html)

BevanPrice June 9th 17 08:30 AM

Post Office Railway open from 28th July
 
On 08/06/2017 19:18, Certes wrote:
On 08/06/17 18:25, wrote:
Will the tentative journeys on offer run from Whitechapel all the way
out to Paddington via Mt. Pleasant, BTW?


BBC: "Two new trains, based on the originals, will carry up to 32
passengers on a 0.6 mile (1km) section of the line."


At £16 per 0.6m, it is even more expensive (per mile) than Heathrow Express.




Roland Perry June 9th 17 08:35 AM

Post Office Railway open from 28th July
 
In message , at 09:30:19 on Fri, 9 Jun 2017,
BevanPrice remarked:

Will the tentative journeys on offer run from Whitechapel all the way
out to Paddington via Mt. Pleasant, BTW?

BBC: "Two new trains, based on the originals, will carry up to 32
passengers on a 0.6 mile (1km) section of the line."


At £16 per 0.6m, it is even more expensive (per mile) than Heathrow Express.


So is the Snowdon Mountain Railway (at about £5/mile).
--
Roland Perry

Graeme Wall June 9th 17 09:02 AM

Post Office Railway open from 28th July
 
On 09/06/2017 09:14, tim... wrote:


"Graeme Wall" wrote in message
...
On 08/06/2017 22:14, tim... wrote:


"Graeme Wall" wrote in message
...
On 08/06/2017 19:36, tim... wrote:


"Scott" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 8 Jun 2017 13:18:02 +0100, "tim..."
wrote:



"Graeme Wall" wrote in message
...
On 08/06/2017 01:02, Basil Jet wrote:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-40189937

In the diary.

you really have to go on the first day

He may not have put it in the diary for the first day :-)

but surely if the intention is to visit at some time in the future,
you can remember a more approximate date (August for example)
without diarising it


I'm now puzzled Tim, did you mean I ought to go on the first day or
why do I have to go on the first day?

why are you recording the first day it is opening, if you don't
intend on visiting it ASAP


I could be making a note to avoid it that day as it will be crowded.


but if you didn't note it at all you wont know that it was open




Again I could just be using a figure of speech to note that I was aware
it would be open from date so could visit it after that time if I so
wished.

--
Graeme Wall
This account not read.


Scott June 9th 17 11:36 AM

Post Office Railway open from 28th July
 
On Thu, 8 Jun 2017 22:13:52 +0100, "tim..."
wrote:



"Scott" wrote in message
.. .
On Thu, 8 Jun 2017 19:36:31 +0100, "tim..."
wrote:



"Scott" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 8 Jun 2017 13:18:02 +0100, "tim..."
wrote:



"Graeme Wall" wrote in message
...
On 08/06/2017 01:02, Basil Jet wrote:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-40189937

In the diary.

you really have to go on the first day

He may not have put it in the diary for the first day :-)

but surely if the intention is to visit at some time in the future, you
can
remember a more approximate date (August for example) without diarising it

Personally, no. If I want to do something I find it best to get it
into the diary (a) to stop me arranging something else on the same day
by mistake and (b) as an incentive to make it happen. I sometimes
put TV programmes in the diary to make sure I don't forget to watch or
record.


but "catch up" excepted (which doesn't always work) you may only get one
chance to watch/record a TV program

once this museum is open, there are hundreds of future occasion that you can
visit

I attach a mystical quality to my diary. If it's in the diary this
makes if far more likely to happen.

I accept we all operate differently.

David Cantrell June 12th 17 12:23 PM

Post Office Railway open from 28th July
 
On Fri, Jun 09, 2017 at 09:35:09AM +0100, Roland Perry wrote:
BevanPrice remarked:
At ?16 per 0.6m, it is even more expensive (per mile) than Heathrow Express.

So is the Snowdon Mountain Railway (at about ?5/mile).


So is Thornton Heath to Selhurst.

Outrageous!

--
David Cantrell | Bourgeois reactionary pig

It's my experience that neither users nor customers can articulate
what it is they want, nor can they evaluate it when they see it
-- Alan Cooper

Basil Jet[_4_] June 13th 17 04:35 PM

Post Office Railway open from 28th July
 
On 2017\06\13 17:03, wrote:
On Tue, 13 Jun 2017 07:56:45 -0700 (PDT),
wrote:

On Thursday, 8 June 2017 22:45:35 UTC+1, Charles Ellson wrote:
On Thu, 8 Jun 2017 13:42:36 +0100, Roland Perry
wrote:

In message , at 10:04:18 on Thu, 8 Jun
2017,
d remarked:
Its a shame that what is in effect a national asset has gone to waste. Given
the traffic situation in London there must be some business case for it.

The sorting offices have long been dispersed away from Central London
and well away from the PO railway.


I'm pretty sure, if memory serves me rightly, that the thing that ended the viability of the PO railway was the opening of the major postal distribution hub at Willesden. Some people did suggest extending the POR there, but that was pretty much a non-starter - can you imagine the cost?


No imagination this country , what would be wrong with a bit of mixed
gauge out of Euston.


Since rail ferries carry trains on boats, and Le Shuttle carries cars on
trains, why not have a train-train which carries the PO railway wagons
on mainline gauge flat wagons with narrow gauge rails laid on top of
them? There should be enough paths on the DC lines for them. The only
problem (yes, I did say *only* problem) would be that the mainline
railway runs in the day and is maintained at night whereas the PO
railway ran at night and was maintained in the morning IIRC.

Arthur Figgis June 13th 17 05:12 PM

Post Office Railway open from 28th July
 
On 13/06/2017 17:35, Basil Jet wrote:


Since rail ferries carry trains on boats, and Le Shuttle carries cars on
trains, why not have a train-train which carries the PO railway wagons
on mainline gauge flat wagons with narrow gauge rails laid on top of
them?



https://www.flickr.com/photos/train-pix/14875380020

(Glasgow subway gauge)


--
Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK

Basil Jet[_4_] June 13th 17 05:31 PM

Post Office Railway open from 28th July
 
On 2017\06\13 18:12, Arthur Figgis wrote:
On 13/06/2017 17:35, Basil Jet wrote:


Since rail ferries carry trains on boats, and Le Shuttle carries cars on
trains, why not have a train-train which carries the PO railway wagons
on mainline gauge flat wagons with narrow gauge rails laid on top of
them?



https://www.flickr.com/photos/train-pix/14875380020

(Glasgow subway gauge)


Great stuff... I thought you meant the carried trains were Subway gauge,
but no, the carrying train is Subway gauge!

Graeme Wall June 13th 17 07:20 PM

Post Office Railway open from 28th July
 
On 13/06/2017 18:12, Arthur Figgis wrote:
On 13/06/2017 17:35, Basil Jet wrote:


Since rail ferries carry trains on boats, and Le Shuttle carries cars on
trains, why not have a train-train which carries the PO railway wagons
on mainline gauge flat wagons with narrow gauge rails laid on top of
them?



https://www.flickr.com/photos/train-pix/14875380020

(Glasgow subway gauge)



My Goodness, even narrow gauge locos on broad gauge wagons, 5th photo down:

http://www.irsociety.co.uk/Archives/22/Guinness.htm


--
Graeme Wall
This account not read.


Anna Noyd-Dryver June 22nd 17 01:21 PM

Post Office Railway open from 28th July
 
wrote:
On 08.06.17 16:55, Recliner wrote:
wrote:


Has anybody here ever ridden the line in its entirety? It doesn't have
any sort of wayside signalling, does it?


Given that the original trains were unmanned, what would be the point of
wayside signalling?


There were some manned, battery-powered trains, however.


Where 'some' = 'one', IIRC.

If there was a
curve in the line that would obscure the line of sight and another train
were stopped beyond the curve?


Presumably the manually driven trains were only allowed out when control
measures were in place to stop automatic trains from running.

Also worth noting that the trains could obtain speeds upwards of 35 miles.

The trains were stopped and started by turning the
power off and on on the section of track they were travelling on.


Did power supply from the track feed into a relay for the trains' brakes?


Yes. AIUI there were three voltages that could be applied, for full speed,
medium and low speed. Zero voltage applied the brakes.

What would happen if another, unmanned train were on the track ahead?


I don't know but I'd imagine some measure was in place to prevent
collisions. Perhaps the presence of a train in one section rendered the
previous section dead?

Will the tentative journeys on offer run from Whitechapel all the way
out to Paddington via Mt. Pleasant, BTW?


No, AIUI it's just from the depot to Mount Pleasant station and back.


Anna Noyd-Dryver





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