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Piccadilly Line service to T5
Someone showed me this evening TfL's press release of 18 July on the
Piccadilly Line extension to T5, which I had missed when it was issued. On that day BAA handed over the extension to LU. The press release is at http://www.tfl.gov.uk/corporate/medi...ntre/5507.aspx Ken Livingstone is quoted as saying "This is a major milestone in the delivery of the new Piccadilly Line extension to Heathrow Terminal 5. From March 2008, passengers will benefit from faster, more frequent services on the line along with increased capacity." I assume that by "faster" he means that they will absorb some of the generous recovery allowances in the current timetable. But I wonder how he justifies the "more frequent" tag? According to the press release, trains will run to Heathrow every 5 minutes, as at present, with alternate trains serving T4 and T5. The T4 trains will have a layover of 7 minutes at T4, so passengers for T123 should wait and catch the next T5 train in order to reach T123 more quickly. So T123 and T5 will effectively have a 6 tph service (every 10 minutes) westbound, T5 will have 6 tph eastbound, and T123 will have 12 tph eastbound. I'm amazed that they think 6 tph will satisfy the demand for journeys to T123 and T5, compared with 12 tph to T123 today. How on earth is this "more frequent"? And if it's not more frequent, how can it produce "increased capacity"? -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
Piccadilly Line service to T5
On Sep 13, 8:26 pm, "Richard J." wrote:
But I wonder how he justifies the "more frequent" tag? According to the press release, trains will run to Heathrow every 5 minutes, as at present, with alternate trains serving T4 and T5. The T4 trains will have a layover of 7 minutes at T4, so passengers for T123 should wait and catch the next T5 train in order to reach T123 more quickly. So T123 and T5 will effectively have a 6 tph service (every 10 minutes) westbound, T5 will have 6 tph eastbound, and T123 will have 12 tph eastbound. I'm amazed that they think 6 tph will satisfy the demand for journeys to T123 and T5, compared with 12 tph to T123 today. How on earth is this "more frequent"? And if it's not more frequent, how can it produce "increased capacity"? Who knows - the problem here is that PiccEx Junction is incomplete; there is no direct route for trains from T4 to reach T5 without a main line reversal east of T123. As a result, T5 will get a permanent crap service unless T4's service is drastically reduced. |
Piccadilly Line service to T5
"Richard J." wrote in message . uk... Someone showed me this evening TfL's press release of 18 July on the Piccadilly Line extension to T5, which I had missed when it was issued. On that day BAA handed over the extension to LU. The press release is at http://www.tfl.gov.uk/corporate/medi...ntre/5507.aspx Ken Livingstone is quoted as saying "This is a major milestone in the delivery of the new Piccadilly Line extension to Heathrow Terminal 5. From March 2008, passengers will benefit from faster, more frequent services on the line along with increased capacity." I assume that by "faster" he means that they will absorb some of the generous recovery allowances in the current timetable. But I wonder how he justifies the "more frequent" tag? According to the press release, trains will run to Heathrow every 5 minutes, as at present, with alternate trains serving T4 and T5. The T4 trains will have a layover of 7 minutes at T4, so passengers for T123 should wait and catch the next T5 train in order to reach T123 more quickly. Yeah, I can really see that working, Not! tim |
Piccadilly Line service to T5
Richard J. wrote:
But I wonder how he justifies the "more frequent" tag? According to the press release, trains will run to Heathrow every 5 minutes, as at present, with alternate trains serving T4 and T5. The T4 trains will have a layover of 7 minutes at T4, so passengers for T123 should wait and catch the next T5 train in order to reach T123 more quickly. So T123 and T5 will effectively have a 6 tph service (every 10 minutes) westbound, T5 will have 6 tph eastbound, and T123 will have 12 tph eastbound. I'm amazed that they think 6 tph will satisfy the demand for journeys to T123 and T5, compared with 12 tph to T123 today. How on earth is this "more frequent"? And if it's not more frequent, how can it produce "increased capacity"? But is the current Heathrow service 12tph? Last I heard, the Picc's 24tph peak serivce dropped to something like 21tph between the peaks, and half the trains went to Heathrow. I'm interested that they will be running a longer line, yet there aren't any new trains. Are they reducing peak service between Arnos and Cockfosters, or west of Rayners? |
Piccadilly Line service to T5
"Richard J." wrote in message . uk... Someone showed me this evening TfL's press release of 18 July on the Piccadilly Line extension to T5, which I had missed when it was issued. On that day BAA handed over the extension to LU. The press release is at http://www.tfl.gov.uk/corporate/medi...ntre/5507.aspx Ken Livingstone is quoted as saying "This is a major milestone in the delivery of the new Piccadilly Line extension to Heathrow Terminal 5. From March 2008, passengers will benefit from faster, more frequent services on the line along with increased capacity." I assume that by "faster" he means that they will absorb some of the generous recovery allowances in the current timetable. But I wonder how he justifies the "more frequent" tag? The way Ken spins things, he might just mean there are 'faster, more frequent services on the line' to T5, compared to the current service to er.. T5 Paul S |
Piccadilly Line service to T5
"John Rowland" wrote in
message Richard J. wrote: But I wonder how he justifies the "more frequent" tag? According to the press release, trains will run to Heathrow every 5 minutes, as at present, with alternate trains serving T4 and T5. The T4 trains will have a layover of 7 minutes at T4, so passengers for T123 should wait and catch the next T5 train in order to reach T123 more quickly. So T123 and T5 will effectively have a 6 tph service (every 10 minutes) westbound, T5 will have 6 tph eastbound, and T123 will have 12 tph eastbound. I'm amazed that they think 6 tph will satisfy the demand for journeys to T123 and T5, compared with 12 tph to T123 today. How on earth is this "more frequent"? And if it's not more frequent, how can it produce "increased capacity"? But is the current Heathrow service 12tph? Last I heard, the Picc's 24tph peak serivce dropped to something like 21tph between the peaks, and half the trains went to Heathrow. Surely, more than half the trains go Heathrow? Certainly, much less than half go to Rayners Lane, so unless a lot are terminating at Northfields, Heathrow must be getting more than half. If you look at the journey planner, it looks like it is indeed 12 tph to Heathrow, and not just in the peaks. |
Piccadilly Line service to T5
On Sep 14, 1:18 pm, "Recliner" wrote:
"John Rowland" wrote in Richard J. wrote: But I wonder how he justifies the "more frequent" tag? According to the press release, trains will run to Heathrow every 5 minutes, as at present, with alternate trains serving T4 and T5. The T4 trains will have a layover of 7 minutes at T4, so passengers for T123 should wait and catch the next T5 train in order to reach T123 more quickly. So T123 and T5 will effectively have a 6 tph service (every 10 minutes) westbound, T5 will have 6 tph eastbound, and T123 will have 12 tph eastbound. I'm amazed that they think 6 tph will satisfy the demand for journeys to T123 and T5, compared with 12 tph to T123 today. How on earth is this "more frequent"? And if it's not more frequent, how can it produce "increased capacity"? But is the current Heathrow service 12tph? Last I heard, the Picc's 24tph peak serivce dropped to something like 21tph between the peaks, and half the trains went to Heathrow. Surely, more than half the trains go Heathrow? Certainly, much less than half go to Rayners Lane, so unless a lot are terminating at Northfields, Heathrow must be getting more than half. If you look at the journey planner, it looks like it is indeed 12 tph to Heathrow, and not just in the peaks. The Current Off Peak Piccadilly line service is every 20 mins Cockfosters - Uxbridge every 20 mins Cockfosters - Rayners Lane every 5 mins Cockfosters - Heathrow every 20 mins Arnos Grove - Northfields In the peak the Northfields trains, more or less run to Ruislip and there is a 5 minute service, both to Heathrow and Rayner's Lane. The new timetable starting in January ("Shadow Running" when T5 trains start running, empty from/to T123) I understand will be every 10 minutes to T4 and every 10 minutes to T5, via T123. I think that the T4 trains will then reverse at Arnos Grove, with no more Northfield "locals". There shouldnt be a change to the Rayners Branch. No doubt someone has the official stuff - if its been done yet! |
Piccadilly Line service to T5
chunky munky wrote:
The Current Off Peak Piccadilly line service is every 20 mins Cockfosters - Uxbridge every 20 mins Cockfosters - Rayners Lane every 5 mins Cockfosters - Heathrow every 20 mins Arnos Grove - Northfields In the peak the Northfields trains, more or less run to Ruislip and there is a 5 minute service, both to Heathrow and Rayner's Lane. The new timetable starting in January ("Shadow Running" when T5 trains start running, empty from/to T123) I understand will be every 10 minutes to T4 and every 10 minutes to T5, via T123. I think that the T4 trains will then reverse at Arnos Grove, with no more Northfield "locals". There shouldnt be a change to the Rayners Branch. That's a drop from 21tph to 18tph through the pipe, and from 18tph to 12tph at Cockfosters. I suspect you've got something wrong there. |
Piccadilly Line service to T5
On Sep 14, 5:40 pm, "John Rowland"
wrote: chunky munky wrote: The Current Off Peak Piccadilly line service is every 20 mins Cockfosters - Uxbridge every 20 mins Cockfosters - Rayners Lane every 5 mins Cockfosters - Heathrow every 20 mins Arnos Grove - Northfields In the peak the Northfields trains, more or less run to Ruislip and there is a 5 minute service, both to Heathrow and Rayner's Lane. The new timetable starting in January ("Shadow Running" when T5 trains start running, empty from/to T123) I understand will be every 10 minutes to T4 and every 10 minutes to T5, via T123. I think that the T4 trains will then reverse at Arnos Grove, with no more Northfield "locals". There shouldnt be a change to the Rayners Branch. That's a drop from 21tph to 18tph through the pipe, and from 18tph to 12tph at Cockfosters. I suspect you've got something wrong there. Something's got to go round at Arnos instead! It might well be the 20min either Uxbridge or Rayners Service. Either way the service is going to become much more complicated than at present! And probably more un-reliable if you are after a certain destination. |
Piccadilly Line service to T5
John Rowland wrote:
I'm interested that they will be running a longer line, yet there aren't any new trains. Are they reducing peak service between Arnos and Cockfosters, or west of Rayners? The direct line to T5 and back adds very little extra distance compared to the T4 loop. If they need an extra train or two, Tube Lines should be able to supply that from the existing fleet. They told me some years ago that this was the intention. Also, if the press release is right about the service being faster, then the time saved on the existing journey would help to compensate for the extra distance and dwell time for the extension to T5. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
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