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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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I think this discussion has grown out of all proportion. In the off peak when things are not quite running to time, the line controllers will often just send the odd train in 4 to MHE, which is in effect the same service as a shuttle (15 mins). The shuttles are set up currently in times of severe disruption, but from what I can see, I don't quite grasp the reason for the mass debate? Introducing a shuttle service is a good idea, but the way they're planning to do it isn't, and has triggered speculation about whether they're running the service down prior to closure. Whats the current interval off peak anyhow? The other flaw in the main arguments are a "through service", a "through service" to what exactly? Camden? Change. Bank? Change. Euston? Change. Only the second of those examples would require a change. The Tube is unlike the rest of the railway where changes can be painstaking and frustrating. The tube network is a whole series of walks, transfers and interchanges. So a few dozen people at Finchley Central are left waiting an extra 2 minutes for a MHE train, whats the major deal? The big deal is that they're worsening the service, whereas it would be so easy for them to improve the service. The notion of reducing train lengths incidentally to save costs is ridiculous in this instance because there would have to be customised rolling stock for a branch line. Commonality of fleet breeds reliable trains, fact. The notion that it is a ridiculous notion is itself ridiculous! Firstly it's commonality of modular components and equipment layout that gives a reliability advantage - not how far the back cab is from the front cab! Secondly, the rest of the fleet's big enough to gain a commonality advantage. Having one train different is unlikely to impact on the reliability of the rest of the fleet, even if the reliability of the train that's different is adversely affected. And thirdly, shorter trains are cheaper to maintain because there's less of them to maintain! Supposing a 2 car train was sufficiently different from the rest of the fleet that the maintenance cost per car km was doubled. That still leaves you ahead of where you'd be if you ran a 6 car train. Anyone know whether the change is borne from TfL or a TubeLines infastructure related cost? Not for certain, but it's more likely to be TfL. -- Aidan Stanger http://www.bettercrossrail.co.uk |
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