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Paul Corfield April 1st 08 09:51 PM

SSL upgrade changes - Metronet Administration
 
There was an internal comms message at LU today advising of settlement
of various contractual issues relating to Metronet Administration. One
of the bigger changes relates to Bombardier and the SSL upgrade.
Bombardier will produce the SSL trains but the related signalling
contract with Westinghouse will be descoped with the new signalling
being put out to tender.

There isn't a TfL press release yet but I found this one from Bombardier

http://www.bombardier.com/en/0_0/pre...564&sCateg=1_0

It's all subject to a final court hearing relating to administration but
there is possibly some light at the end of the tunnel (pardon the pun).

--
Paul C


Admits to working for London Underground!

Mizter T April 1st 08 11:25 PM

SSL upgrade changes - Metronet Administration
 

On 1 Apr, 22:51, Paul Corfield wrote:

There was an internal comms message at LU today advising of settlement
of various contractual issues relating to Metronet Administration. One
of the bigger changes relates to Bombardier and the SSL upgrade.
Bombardier will produce the SSL trains but the related signalling
contract with Westinghouse will be descoped with the new signalling
being put out to tender.

There isn't a TfL press release yet but I found this one from Bombardier

http://www.bombardier.com/en/0_0/pre...=0_0&lan=en&ac...

It's all subject to a final court hearing relating to administration but
there is possibly some light at the end of the tunnel (pardon the pun).


But will the SSL signalling contract be retendered or will 'New
Metronet'* (in TfL/LU ownership) not merely carry on dealing with
Westinghouse? The following is taken the Bombardier press release...

"The signalling portion of Bombardier's SSL contract, currently sub-
contracted to Westinghouse Rail Systems Limited ("WRSL"), has been
transferred to Metronet and re-negotiated directly between WRSL and
Metronet."


Whatever the specifics this new (and as yet to be confirmed)
arrangement will obviously put the emphasis for the SSL upgrade fully
back in the hands of LU. Will there be enough money for it all, or are
upgrade plans going to have to be cut down somewhat first?

I also note that the previous plans to transfer both the BCV and SSL
train maintenance operations and hence staff over to Bombardier have
also been ditched, and this will stay 'in-house' with Metronet.

Dare I ask the possibly blasphemous question of whether this is
actually for the best - not for some ideological reason but merely
because the model of trains getting maintained by their manufacturers
seems to work fairly well elsewhere? Of course that said such
arrangements do add further layers of contractual shenanigans, whereas
on the other hand having it all done in-house by the LU-owned 'New
Metronet' does bridge the gap somewhat between the infrastructure
people and the day-to-day railway, perhaps meaning that various
rolling stock issues can get dealt with better. (And I haven't
forgotten that the Tube Lines infraco has had problems with Alstom who
maintain the Northern line fleet.)


-----
* I'm using the the phrase 'New Metronet' merely to distinguish the
infraco under it's forthcoming LUL ownership from the old Metronet as
owned (and abused by) by its five private shareholders.

John B April 1st 08 11:30 PM

SSL upgrade changes - Metronet Administration
 
On Apr 1, 10:51 pm, Paul Corfield wrote:
One
of the bigger changes relates to Bombardier and the SSL upgrade.
Bombardier will produce the SSL trains but the related signalling
contract with Westinghouse will be descoped with the new signalling
being put out to tender.


Sounds pretty accurate. The Bombardier PR implies that the SSL
contract will be re-awarded to Westinghouse, cutting out Bombardier as
middleman, but Invensys (Westinghouse's parent) confirms that that's
just the work to make S-stock work with the existing signalling; the
new signalling contract will indeed be retendered:

http://www.invensys.com/media/defaul...tent_no_id=518

--
John Band
john at johnband dot org
www.johnband.org

Richard J.[_2_] April 2nd 08 12:20 AM

SSL upgrade changes - Metronet Administration
 
John B wrote:
On Apr 1, 10:51 pm, Paul Corfield wrote:
One
of the bigger changes relates to Bombardier and the SSL upgrade.
Bombardier will produce the SSL trains but the related signalling
contract with Westinghouse will be descoped with the new signalling
being put out to tender.


Sounds pretty accurate. The Bombardier PR implies that the SSL
contract will be re-awarded to Westinghouse, cutting out Bombardier as
middleman, but Invensys (Westinghouse's parent) confirms that that's
just the work to make S-stock work with the existing signalling; the
new signalling contract will indeed be retendered:

http://www.invensys.com/media/defaul...tent_no_id=518


Does this mean that there's now a chance that the Thales (ex-Alcatel)
Seltrac signalling system that Tube Lines are installing could also be used
on SSL? It would at least avoid problems on the areas where the Piccadilly
shares tracks with the Met and District.
--
Richard J.
(to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address)



Tom Anderson April 2nd 08 12:43 AM

SSL upgrade changes - Metronet Administration
 
On Tue, 1 Apr 2008, Mizter T wrote:

I also note that the previous plans to transfer both the BCV and SSL
train maintenance operations and hence staff over to Bombardier have
also been ditched, and this will stay 'in-house' with Metronet.

Dare I ask the possibly blasphemous question of whether this is actually
for the best - not for some ideological reason but merely because the
model of trains getting maintained by their manufacturers seems to work
fairly well elsewhere?


I understand that the MoD has contracts like that with defence suppliers,
ie BAe, where instead of buying N aircraft (or whatever) outright and then
making separate maintenance arrangements to keep M of them flying, they
just contract with the manufacturer to make M aircraft available at all
times. The manufacturer then has flexibility as to how they do that, and
of course can coordinate manufacturing, repair, replacement, etc. Seems to
be a popular and clever model; i can't say how well it works in practice.

tom

--
We don't contact anybody or seek anybody's permission for what we do. Even
if it's impersonating postal employees. -- Birdstuff

Boltar April 2nd 08 08:06 AM

SSL upgrade changes - Metronet Administration
 
On Apr 2, 1:20 am, "Richard J." wrote:
Does this mean that there's now a chance that the Thales (ex-Alcatel)
Seltrac signalling system that Tube Lines are installing could also be used
on SSL? It would at least avoid problems on the areas where the Piccadilly
shares tracks with the Met and District.


That would be far too logical. This is Britain , thats not the way
things are done here. No , far better to have lots of different
systems and different trains then wonder why everything is a
logistical and maintenance nightmare a few years down the line.

B2003


Paul Scott April 2nd 08 10:35 AM

SSL upgrade changes - Metronet Administration
 
Tom Anderson wrote:

I understand that the MoD has contracts like that with defence
suppliers, ie BAe, where instead of buying N aircraft (or whatever)
outright and then making separate maintenance arrangements to keep M
of them flying, they just contract with the manufacturer to make M
aircraft available at all times. The manufacturer then has
flexibility as to how they do that, and of course can coordinate
manufacturing, repair, replacement, etc. Seems to be a popular and
clever model; i can't say how well it works in practice.


Apparently the new RAF refuelling aircraft are basically a normal Airbus
(with big tanks in the cargo hold) which the contractor can lease out on the
open market, e.g. at weekends when the RAF is shut. Extended range Ryanair
flights in 'austerity' seating with limited luggage perhaps?

Paul S



Recliner April 2nd 08 01:13 PM

SSL upgrade changes - Metronet Administration
 
"Paul Scott" wrote in message

Tom Anderson wrote:

I understand that the MoD has contracts like that with defence
suppliers, ie BAe, where instead of buying N aircraft (or whatever)
outright and then making separate maintenance arrangements to keep M
of them flying, they just contract with the manufacturer to make M
aircraft available at all times. The manufacturer then has
flexibility as to how they do that, and of course can coordinate
manufacturing, repair, replacement, etc. Seems to be a popular and
clever model; i can't say how well it works in practice.


Apparently the new RAF refuelling aircraft are basically a normal
Airbus (with big tanks in the cargo hold) which the contractor can
lease out on the open market, e.g. at weekends when the RAF is shut.
Extended range Ryanair flights in 'austerity' seating with limited
luggage perhaps?


I don't know if all of the A330s will be fitted with the refuelling
gear -- one assumes they will. If so, this adds to the weight. I assume
that there must also be some sort of control panel, etc, for the
operation of the refuelling equipment, which presumably takes space in
behind the cockpit area. So, they're not exactly standard A330s.

I'm wondering if they will be used as cargo aircraft when not being used
by the RAF, rather than to carry pax? And will the RAF also use them
for carrying pax, as they do with the old VC-10s and Tristars? In
effect, they may be used more as troop transporters than as refuellers
(unlike the USAF, the RAF can't affordf dedicated fleets of both types).



Tom Anderson April 2nd 08 02:34 PM

SSL upgrade changes - Metronet Administration
 
On Wed, 2 Apr 2008, Recliner wrote:

"Paul Scott" wrote in message

Tom Anderson wrote:

I understand that the MoD has contracts like that with defence
suppliers, ie BAe, where instead of buying N aircraft (or whatever)
outright and then making separate maintenance arrangements to keep M
of them flying, they just contract with the manufacturer to make M
aircraft available at all times. The manufacturer then has
flexibility as to how they do that, and of course can coordinate
manufacturing, repair, replacement, etc. Seems to be a popular and
clever model; i can't say how well it works in practice.


Apparently the new RAF refuelling aircraft are basically a normal
Airbus (with big tanks in the cargo hold) which the contractor can
lease out on the open market, e.g. at weekends when the RAF is shut.
Extended range Ryanair flights in 'austerity' seating with limited
luggage perhaps?


And will the RAF also use them for carrying pax, as they do with the old
VC-10s and Tristars? In effect, they may be used more as troop
transporters than as refuellers (unlike the USAF, the RAF can't affordf
dedicated fleets of both types).


Yes. They'll be able to do boh, or rather all three: there are big fuel
tanks in the wings and under the floor for the refuelling, the floor is
fitted to take standard military cargo pallets, and i understand there are
pallets which just have seats on, for when you want to move people! Which
they do most will depend entirely on what needs to be done, and that
depends on where we decide to have our next little war. If it's somewhere
convenient in Europe or north Africa, say if Serbia blows up again, or we
get serious about Darfur and similar, they'll mostly be transports. If we
get roped into something somewhere awkward like southeast Asia, or
Venezuela, then they might well be doing more tankering.

I don't know about maximum takeoff weights and all that, but presumably,
you can move a certain amount of people, cargo and fuel all at once. This
generates an interesting capability to have a very long-range
self-contained airborne force, with soldiers and their equipment and
stores on the plane, and a some Pumas and Apaches flying along with them
and refuelling when necessary! I suspect the size of such a force would be
rather miniscule, though, and i wouldn't envy a helicopter pilot the job
of flying any significant distance in one sitting.

tom

--
We don't contact anybody or seek anybody's permission for what we do. Even
if it's impersonating postal employees. -- Birdstuff

Paul Corfield April 2nd 08 04:03 PM

SSL upgrade changes - Metronet Administration
 
On Wed, 02 Apr 2008 00:20:27 GMT, "Richard J."
wrote:

John B wrote:
On Apr 1, 10:51 pm, Paul Corfield wrote:
One
of the bigger changes relates to Bombardier and the SSL upgrade.
Bombardier will produce the SSL trains but the related signalling
contract with Westinghouse will be descoped with the new signalling
being put out to tender.


Sounds pretty accurate. The Bombardier PR implies that the SSL
contract will be re-awarded to Westinghouse, cutting out Bombardier as
middleman, but Invensys (Westinghouse's parent) confirms that that's
just the work to make S-stock work with the existing signalling; the
new signalling contract will indeed be retendered:

http://www.invensys.com/media/defaul...tent_no_id=518


Does this mean that there's now a chance that the Thales (ex-Alcatel)
Seltrac signalling system that Tube Lines are installing could also be used
on SSL? It would at least avoid problems on the areas where the Piccadilly
shares tracks with the Met and District.


There is obviously a chance if Thales bother to bid for the work.
Obviously Invensys have some advantage given they've been involved in
design work so far and I can't see that they will have agreed to not bid
as part of the overall Metronet settlement.

Obviously having a coordinated and compatible signalling solution
between JNP and SSR will bring advantages and answers to a number of
problems.

We shall see what the suppliers decide to bid and at what price.
--
Paul C


Admits to working for London Underground!



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