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Old April 10th 08, 08:15 PM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
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Default Thameslink NGEMU procurement - now in motion

In article ,
D7666 wrote:
On Apr 10, 10:34*am, "Paul Scott"
wrote:


~ The capability to move a short distance without the traction supply being
present;"


Where is Sir Isaac Newton ?


Perhaps the DfT are envisaging some sort of Newton's Cradle scheme for
getting trains out during power failures ? Put a train in at high speed
at the south end and a corresponding one pops out of the north ...

Nick
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Old April 10th 08, 08:33 PM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
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Default Thameslink NGEMU procurement - now in motion

Nick Leverton wrote:
In article
,
D7666 wrote:
On Apr 10, 10:34 am, "Paul Scott"
wrote:


~ The capability to move a short distance without the traction
supply being present;"


Where is Sir Isaac Newton ?


Perhaps the DfT are envisaging some sort of Newton's Cradle scheme for
getting trains out during power failures ? Put a train in at high
speed
at the south end and a corresponding one pops out of the north ...


No - just alter the gradients so that it's low at Blackfriars and St
Pancras, but much higher in the middle.. :-)

Paul


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Old April 10th 08, 08:42 PM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
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Default Thameslink NGEMU procurement - now in motion

In article ,
Paul Scott wrote:
Nick Leverton wrote:
In article
,
D7666 wrote:
On Apr 10, 10:34 am, "Paul Scott"
wrote:


~ The capability to move a short distance without the traction
supply being present;"

Where is Sir Isaac Newton ?


Perhaps the DfT are envisaging some sort of Newton's Cradle scheme for
getting trains out during power failures ? Put a train in at high
speed
at the south end and a corresponding one pops out of the north ...


No - just alter the gradients so that it's low at Blackfriars and St
Pancras, but much higher in the middle.. :-)


Ah of course, their famous Brontosaurus In The Room scheme :-)

Nick
--
Serendipity: http://www.leverton.org/blosxom (last update 2nd April 2008)
"The Internet, a sort of ersatz counterfeit of real life"
-- Janet Street-Porter, BBC2, 19th March 1996
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Old April 10th 08, 10:02 PM posted to uk.transport.london
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Default Thameslink NGEMU procurement - now in motion

On 10 Apr, 22:33, (Colin Rosenstiel) wrote:
I believe there is enough evidence in the public domain to strike
both Kings Lynn and Eastbourne from the route, namely the recent
discovery of Kings Lynn in the IEP programme, and the dissapearance
of places like Eastbourne and Littlehampton from the Thameslink
final route maps in the more recent South London RUS...


IEPs on the Cambridge fasts then?


It's looking likely. The South London RUS saw a major contraction in
the route map at the south end to inner-ish suburban, and there's also
been a recent disappearance of 2 ECML trains per hour from the final
MML/ECML split (was 14/10, now 16/8).

The old plan would have made poor use of King's Cross, leaving it half-
empty just as its redevelopment was complete. Although I don't know
what use the suburban shed will be post 2015.

U

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http://londonconnections.blogspot.com/
A blog about transport projects in London
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Old April 10th 08, 11:13 PM posted to uk.transport.london
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Default Thameslink NGEMU procurement - now in motion

In article
,
(Mr Thant) wrote:

The old plan would have made poor use of King's Cross, leaving it half-
empty just as its redevelopment was complete. Although I don't know
what use the suburban shed will be post 2015.


Yes, I'd wondered about that too.

--
Colin Rosenstiel
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Old April 11th 08, 08:24 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
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Default Thameslink NGEMU procurement - now in motion

On 10 Apr, 21:15, Nick Leverton wrote:
In article ,

D7666 wrote:
On Apr 10, 10:34*am, "Paul Scott"
wrote:
~ The capability to move a short distance without the traction supply being
present;"


Where is Sir Isaac Newton ?


Perhaps the DfT are envisaging some sort of Newton's Cradle scheme for
getting trains out during power failures ? *Put a train in at high speed
at the south end and a corresponding one pops out of the north ...

Nick
--
Serendipity:http://www.leverton.org/blosxom(last update 2nd April 2008)
* * * * "The Internet, a sort of ersatz counterfeit of real life"
* * * * * * * * -- Janet Street-Porter, BBC2, 19th March 1996



I suspect that they are thinking of a hybrid arrangement with
batteries or super capacitors, as have been proposed for light rail
schemes to avoid wiring up historic city squares.

There are a number of alternatives.

1) A development contract to the man who created the clockwork wind up
radio.

2 Or my favourite, RATOG (Rocket Assisted Take Off Gear) used on
carriers in the 1950s when the steam catapult was u/s.

3) Or the hydrogen peroxide powered steam turbine from the Spearfish
torpedo which gave over a megawatt

Over to Prof Breen.
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Old April 11th 08, 08:35 AM posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london
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Default Thameslink NGEMU procurement - now in motion



I suspect that they are thinking of a hybrid arrangement with
batteries or super capacitors, as have been proposed for light rail
schemes to avoid wiring up historic city squares.


the original artists' impressions of Manchester Metrolink, and I think
from ageing memory Leeds supertram, showed no wires, which is a far
cheaper way of avoiding complaints!

SB
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Old April 11th 08, 09:15 AM posted to uk.transport.london
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Default Thameslink NGEMU procurement - now in motion

In message
, at
15:02:00 on Thu, 10 Apr 2008, Mr Thant
remarked:
IEPs on the Cambridge fasts then?


It's looking likely.


Terminating at KX, presumably. That's a shame, I was looking forward to
being able to get a through train.
--
Roland Perry


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