Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
John B wrote:
MIG wrote: Peter Smyth wrote: According to the Hendon Times, Mill Hill East services will be reduced to a shuttle to Finchley Central off-peak and weekends from October 2006. http://www.hendontimes.co.uk/news/lo...3442.0.mill_hi ll_east_tube_link_to_london_cut.php And closure following closely no doubt. Yet another service reduction disguised as "reliability", even though for the time being there will still be through services at the busiest and potentially most problematic times. Why don't they genuinely improve reliability by doubling the track? The service is being made less attractive so that a decline in use can be given as an excuse to make more cuts, leading to more unattractiveness and further decline in use. The most reliable railway is one that runs no trains at all: none are ever late or cancelled. I disagree. It was planned to extend the Northern Line further, but the reason it has no trains at all is because the entire extension was cancelled! I don't think this is fair. It's uncontroversial among transport planning professionals that the more branches a service has, the more scope there is for it to go wrong. This is particularly pronounced in a system as complicated as the Northern Line, where minor delays in one branch have the potential to cause serious system-wide distruption once trains start arriving out of timetabled order in the wrong places. The Northern Line would be significantly more reliable if the junction at Camden were abolished and all trains ran either Edgware - City - Morden and High Barnet - Charing Cross - Kennington. This isn't feasible, at least until Camden Town is rebuilt (and possibly not even then): the station is not big enough to take the required volume of interchanging passengers. It would also be significantly more reliable if the signalling were replaced to allow ATO. This will happen, but not for years. On the other hand, the interchange at Finchley Central is easily capable of taking the required volume of Mill Hill East passengers, and this change can happen with immediate effect. The cost of the manoeuvre to MHE pax is very limited: they can get a once-every-four-mins train to Finchley, then a once-every-15-mins shuttle to MHE as-now. This increases the average expected through journey time by about 2 minutes (can't be bothered to do the proper maths), while providing no reduction in service frequency. If the result is to make a substantial reduction in total Misery Line misery, which it should be, then it seems like a good plan... It would be a good plan if they did it right! There's no excuse for sticking with a pathetic 15 minute frequency. What's the advantage to having the train waits at the terminus for most of the time??? The MHE branch doesn't go far enough to be of much use to many people, and having some trains go to Mill Hill East does make the service less reliable. Converting the branch into a shuttle service makes sense, but they should double the frequency (or better still, if as you say the main service is every 4 minutes, run the MHE train every 8 minutes). If they shortened the train length proportionally, it wouldn't even cost any more to run. The interesting thing to consider is how the MHE branch can be made more useful in the long term. One idea I put on my website is to have it as a branch of Crossrail Line 2, and extend it to Watford Junction via MHB, Edgware and Stanmore. This would mean that nobody in North London would have to detour to Euston to catch a train to The North, and more passengers would be attracted to the outer ends of lines, where there's plenty of spare capacity. Does anyone else have any other ideas for it? -- Aidan Stanger http://www.bettercrossrail.co.uk |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Crossrail Pudding Mill Lane Portal | London Transport | |||
Streatham Hill to Tulse Hill peak hour passenger services | London Transport | |||
Pudding Mill Lane | London Transport | |||
Whatever happened to the Mill Hill East extension? | London Transport | |||
Mill Hill East | London Transport |