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-   -   Victoria Line on Friday (https://www.londonbanter.co.uk/london-transport/2521-victoria-line-friday.html)

Malcolm & Nika December 10th 04 07:35 PM

Victoria Line on Friday
 
2 trains stabled in Brixton every night. Also Walthamstow, but they are no
help to the south end.

"Paul Corfield" wrote in message
...
On 10 Dec 2004 02:33:43 -0800, wrote:

The Victoria Line was out of action from Seven Sisters to Victoria due
to engineering work at Highbury this morning. Now unless trains could
get from Northumberland Park to the southern section why wasn't the
reversals at Warren St and Kings Cross used.


Can you tell me how much of a service could be run with possibly 4
trains (not sure what stables remotely and where on the Vic) between
Brixton and say Warren St or Kings Cross?

It would be demonstrably unsafe to allow passengers to flood onto
Victoria Line platforms at places like Green Park or Euston with a 10 or
15 minute headway service operating. It gets very busy with a 1-2 min
headway.

You might not like that answer and I would agree that the Vic Line being
closed as it was is unacceptable but it would be folly to try to operate
a service that was not capable of being safely operated.

Is this the new improved underground that we were promised (and paying
through the nose for)


No it is not new or improved when a major disruption like this happens.
However money clearly is being spent on the Victoria Line tracks as
there are stretches where new sleepers and track have been installed and
the rail grinder is currently operating to provide a smoother, quieter
ride. It's a long way from perfect but there are plenty of people
trying to make things better. You may well have a different view.
--
Paul C


Admits to working for London Underground!





Paul Weaver December 11th 04 10:55 AM

Victoria Line on Friday
 
On Fri, 10 Dec 2004 19:53:52 +0000, Dave Newt wrote:

wrote:
I bet that there was a lot of them. More cost effective to bus the
dozen or passengers I would have thought.


You're joking, yeah? I take it you haven't been there on a weekday
morning. There are very often no seats by Blackhorse Road.


Most of those on the seats are going to Zone 1. If the service ends at
severn sisters, they'd have to change onto national rail.

IIRC, All stations North of Serven Sisters has national rail lines into
Liverpool street (and nowhere else), so theres no benefit. Perhaps going
to Tottenham Hale and changing to get to Stansted.

Of course, the 50 or so an hour that use the Victoria Line between these
stations (and not furthur) could be sent by bus, but that would take
forever, and that's not why they buy season tickets.

Paul Corfield December 12th 04 08:59 AM

Victoria Line on Friday
 
On Sat, 11 Dec 2004 11:55:14 +0000, Paul Weaver
wrote:

On Fri, 10 Dec 2004 19:53:52 +0000, Dave Newt wrote:

wrote:
I bet that there was a lot of them. More cost effective to bus the
dozen or passengers I would have thought.


You're joking, yeah? I take it you haven't been there on a weekday
morning. There are very often no seats by Blackhorse Road.


Most of those on the seats are going to Zone 1. If the service ends at
severn sisters, they'd have to change onto national rail.


Well I opted for a bus to Turnpike Lane and then the Tube. Strangely the
buses were not inundated as they usually are when there's a problem on
the Victoria Line so I assume that people did find the service between
Walthamstow and Seven Sisters some use.

IIRC, All stations North of Seven Sisters has national rail lines into
Liverpool street (and nowhere else), so theres no benefit. Perhaps going
to Tottenham Hale and changing to get to Stansted.


There are plenty of bus links from the stations on the north end of the
line as well as NR links. You would find that the Victoria Line would be
far busier on this section if the parallel bus services were reduced or
removed. There are very large numbers of people who travel between
Walthamstow and Seven Sisters and beyond by bus (123 or 230) or who
change to other buses heading north or south or west at Tottenham Hale
(41 and 192) or Seven Sisters (41 plus the obvious routes to Edmonton
and Enfield as well as into town).

Of course, the 50 or so an hour that use the Victoria Line between these
stations (and not furthur) could be sent by bus, but that would take
forever, and that's not why they buy season tickets.


It doesn't take forever by bus (loads of people opt to use the bus in
preference to the tube) and there are certainly more than 50 people per
hour using the tube just over this section.
--
Paul C


Admits to working for London Underground!

Tom Anderson December 12th 04 01:53 PM

Victoria Line on Friday
 
On Sat, 11 Dec 2004, Paul Weaver wrote:

On Fri, 10 Dec 2004 19:53:52 +0000, Dave Newt wrote:

wrote:
I bet that there was a lot of them. More cost effective to bus the
dozen or passengers I would have thought.


You're joking, yeah? I take it you haven't been there on a weekday
morning. There are very often no seats by Blackhorse Road.


Most of those on the seats are going to Zone 1. If the service ends at
severn sisters, they'd have to change onto national rail.

IIRC, All stations North of Serven Sisters has national rail lines into
Liverpool street (and nowhere else),


pedant

Except Blackhorse Road.

tom

--
There are no MPs in the position opposite the Liberal Democrats. -- Chris Lightfoot


Jason December 13th 04 03:03 PM

Victoria Line on Friday
 
On 10 Dec 2004 05:47:57 -0800, wrote:

Another thing, what was the point of shuttling trains from Walthamstow
to Seven Sisters. To stop the drivers from getting bored no doubt. Mind
you thaye could have gone and had a quick game of squash.


Here an amazing idea: perhaps to allow passengers to travel to/from
Seven Sisters, which means access to/from numerous alternative routes.

If you haven't noticed all the stations between Walthamstow Central
and Seven Sisters have National Rail connections, meaning the option
of making a connection to Liverpool Street, the GOBLIN and North
London lines, and through the later two the Piccadilly, Northern,
Jubilee, and Bakerloo lines.

--
Cheers,

Jason.

Jason December 14th 04 03:16 PM

Victoria Line on Friday
 
On 10 Dec 2004 07:39:40 -0800, wrote:

I bet that there was a lot of them. More cost effective to bus the
dozen or passengers I would have thought.


What on earth is this a reply to?

Learn to quote from the original message if you must make such
profound insights...

--
Cheers,

Jason.

Dr John Stockton December 14th 04 08:05 PM

Victoria Line on Friday
 
JRS: In article , dated
Tue, 14 Dec 2004 16:16:36, seen in news:uk.transport.london, Jason
posted :
On 10 Dec 2004 07:39:40 -0800, wrote:

I bet that there was a lot of them. More cost effective to bus the
dozen or passengers I would have thought.


What on earth is this a reply to?

Learn to quote from the original message if you must make such
profound insights...



He may well be using the new Google service, which seems to ignore
accepted Usenet convention.

--
© John Stockton, Surrey, UK. Turnpike v4.00 MIME ©
Web URL:http://www.uwasa.fi/~ts/http/tsfaq.html - Timo Salmi: Usenet Q&A.
Web URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/news-use.htm : about usage of News.
No Encoding. Quotes before replies. Snip well. Write clearly. Don't Mail News.

Paul Weaver December 15th 04 01:26 PM

Victoria Line on Friday
 
"Dr John Stockton" wrote in message
...
He may well be using the new Google service, which seems to ignore
accepted Usenet convention.


HE is (see the headers). Outlook express has done this for years, sadly it's
the only usenet client approved for use here at work and takes a mighty
effort to fix it for every reply. At least I remember to snip irellevent
problems.

Of course Jason's newsreader should thread the messages accordingly, where
it's easy to see the original post.

--
Everything above is the personal opinion of the author, and nothing to do
with where he works and all that lovely disclaimery stuff.
Posted in his lunch hour too.



Stimpy December 17th 04 08:38 PM

Victoria Line on Friday
 
Paul Weaver wrote:

He may well be using the new Google service, which seems to ignore
accepted Usenet convention.


HE is (see the headers). Outlook express has done this for years,
sadly it's the only usenet client approved for use here at work and
takes a mighty effort to fix it for every reply.


If you apply the OE-Quotefix patch, the problem goes away



Paul Weaver December 22nd 04 03:30 PM

Victoria Line on Friday
 
On Fri, 17 Dec 2004 21:38:44 +0000, Stimpy wrote:

Paul Weaver wrote:

He may well be using the new Google service, which seems to ignore
accepted Usenet convention.


HE is (see the headers). Outlook express has done this for years,
sadly it's the only usenet client approved for use here at work and
takes a mighty effort to fix it for every reply.


If you apply the OE-Quotefix patch, the problem goes away


Ahh, but that would break the Computer Use policies. While I'll "bend"
them enough to be able to do my job (i.e. vnc, putty, mozilla etc), I
don't think modifiying a usenet client would qualify :D. If it would, I'd
install a decent client.

--
Everything I write here is my personal opinion, and should not be taken as fact.



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