So Sir David "Biggles" Rowland has been waving the flag for HS2.
Alas, in The Times today he promises oodles of jam, all of it delivered tomorrow.
No matter.
The article does reveal the proposed location of the High Speed Two London terminus:
The Times records:
Passengers may, however, have to travel to the suburbs of London to catch the trains because the terminus could be built up to five miles from the centre to reduce the cost of the line.
A site near Wormwood Scrubs in West London is being considered as a giant rail hub where passengers would switch from the high-speed line to Crossrail, the mainline railway being built under Central London to link tracks to the East and West.
It could have been worse.
Apparently Sir 'Biggles' initially suggested that the London terminus should be built in Manchester and served by air.
Monday, 23 March 2009
Biggles flies undone
How the railway works #1
There's gratitude!
This from Stagecoach...
Passengers using megabusplus.com will be able to travel between London’s St Pancras Station and nine key locations in the North of England - Hull, Scunthorpe, Doncaster, Castleford, Harrogate, York, Bradford, Halifax and Huddersfield.
The fast, integrated journey will be by comfortable coach and high-quality train, provided by East Midlands Trains, running in and out of St Pancras.
Nice of First to give their class 222s to EMT, so that Stagecoach have enough rail capacity to mount a raid on Hull Trains' flows.
Monday night diary clash
Sunday, 22 March 2009
Follow that cab!
Telegrammed by Our Independent Expert
Does the cab trade know something we don't?
Taxi drivers plying Preston railway station have reproduced images of the new IEP train on their business cards.
Railway hands with long memories will recall there's a great tradition of train-making in the city - with the prototype Deltic being built in English Electric's Strand Road works.
Perhaps this explains the Hitachi poster on show at Railtex earlier this month..."Proudly made in Britain!"
Is this perhaps stretching the Trades Description Act a little too far?
MacInsider Trading?
This from the Scotsman...
Transport Scotland's former chief executive Dr Malcolm Reed told the Scottish Parliament in January that his finance chief Guy Houston, a shareholder with FirstGroup, had only taken part in two meetings "after the deal had been struck" on the contract to run ScotRail.
But the agency has now admitted that Houston actually attended several other internal meetings at Transport Scotland when the decision over the lucrative ScotRail contract was still being discussed.
Last week, it emerged that when Transport Scotland was discussing the deal with the firm, Houston was increasing his shareholding.
Perhaps there is a chapter devoted to this disgraceful affair in Moir's lovely book?
Saturday, 21 March 2009
Moorgate closure benefits Railway Children
The Fact Compiler raises his bowler to FCC's Elaine Holt and Roger Perkins.
Who were both out yesterday evening, rattling the collection pot for the Railway Children, as the last Thameslink service left Moorgate.
A nice piece of PR that means even The Fact Compiler is struggling to find fault.Time for a nice lie down in a darkened room to recharge the vitriol levels.
DafT treats regionals with contempt
Two DafT press releases.
Both issued yesterday (Friday).
The first received at 14:50, the second at 23:30.
14:50 Rail passengers are set to benefit from a project costing more than £50 million to redouble one of the worst performing routes on the Cotswold Line, Transport Minister Andrew Adonis said today.
23:30 Rail passengers are set to benefit from a project costing more than £50 million to double parts of the Cotswold Line, from a single track service to two lines, Transport Minister Andrew Adonis said today.
Using your skill and judgment can you guess how many of today's newspapers were able to amend their copy in time?
Friday, 20 March 2009
Crossrail news from Franchise Frankie
Seen the stuff in NCE?
All together now...
Telegrammed by Alfred J Prufrock
Question: What is the book life of trains?
Answer: 30-35 years
Question: So given an even spread from new through to about to be scrapped what would the average age be?
Answer: 15-17 years.
Of course this only applies if you are replacing 300 or so vehicles a year
Question: How many vehicles are DafT replacing a year?
Answer: None
In which case we're in a Hymns Ancient and Modern Situation.
Change and decay in all around I see.
Funder of the railways oh invest in me.
Last train
Telegrammed by The Raver
Exciting news from Network Rail.
According to a press release issued today there is to be...
A NEW ERA FOR FOLKESTONE HARBOUR
Indeed.
One without trains.
First for redundancies
This from Transport Briefing...
Some 600 posts are slated to go at the company's rail division, which includes the Scotrail, First Great Western and First Capital Connect franchises and a stake in the TransPennine Express venture run in partnership with French transport firm Keolis.
Perhaps they'll be sent on their way with a copy of Moir's lovely book?
IEP Farm
Telegrammed by our man at 222 Marylebone Road
This written answer given in the House of Commons on the 18th March:
Theresa Villiers (Shadow Secretary of State for Transport, Transport; Chipping Barnet, Conservative) | Hansard source
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport whether his Department assessed Bombardier's bid under the Intercity Express Programme contract to be substantially compliant with the specifications set by his Department.
Paul Clark (Parliamentary Under-Secretary, Department for Transport; Gillingham, Labour)
Both bids, from Agility Trains and from Express Rail Alliance (which includes Bombardier) were of a very high quality and were deemed substantially compliant.
How did Orwell put it? All trains are substantially compliant, but some are more substantially compliant than others?
Station usage shocker
Telegrammed by The Master
You may remember the little faux pas from the spotters who run the 'Going Loco' forum where they managed to confuse reopening an old railway line with a brand-new one.
Well, it seems that they're at it again.
They've attempted some analysis of the latest station usage figures from ORR and come up with this gem:
"In a rather disappointing finding for the newly opened Ebbw Vale line the 2 stations with the lowest usage are both on it. Crosskeys was the least used station with 8 people in the 2007/08 period. 2nd least used station was Llanhilleth with 10."
Hardly surprising really.
Llanhilleth (28th April 2008) was opened three weeks after the reporting period and Crosskeys opened two months (7th June 2008) after the reporting period!
A career with DaFT certainly beckons.
UPDATE: This from an 'Anonymous' reader...
They've come up with another stunner today in their 'Front page news'
"The Rail Regulator has published its report on the average of rolling stock on the network, which shows that the average age has risen to a five year high. [b]The average age is now 15.5 years, compared to 15.7 in the Summer of 2004[/b]."
Err...
One hopes that putative careers at DafT have nothing to do with statistical analysis.
UPDATE: This from a completely 'Anonymous' reader...
I had hitherto thought that was patently obvious ...
Tom - we still miss you
Thursday, 19 March 2009
Directions and guidance
This from Mini-me in the House of Commons on the 4th March:
Paul Clark (Parliamentary Under-Secretary, Department for Transport; Gillingham, Labour) | Hansard source:
As for bonuses, let me say again that that is a matter for Network Rail.
However, I am sure that hon. Members would expect Network Rail's remuneration committee to be mindful of the public mood and not to award bonuses that the travelling public would consider unjustified by their own experiences of Network Rail's performance.
I am referring here to the hundreds of thousands of commuters on the West Coast Main Line whose services were cancelled and massively disrupted in the new year due to the poor maintenance of overhead wires.
Reprinted here, just in case the Remuneration Committee didn't hear it the first time...
UPDATE: This just in from Network Rail...
First with the news as ever! I'm sure I don't need to remind tfc that Network Rail's management incentive plan is calculated by using three main performance indicators agreed with the regulator - train performance, financial efficiency and asset stewardship.
Influential that you are, it is those factors that the remuneration committee will take into account when the year is over and the numbers have been crunched.
The minister's comments in Hansard two weeks ago mentions the travelling public's own experiences of Network Rail's performance on West Coast. Yes we had a some teething problems on West Coast, not helped of course by a plane crash in addition to the unrelated series of overhead line equipment failures.
Today, the real story on West Coast is that over 1,000 extra trains every week run and journey times slashed by up to 30%. Freight users enjoy a 70% increase in capacity while weekend passengers travelling to places such as Manchester, Liverpool and Birmingham benefit with shorter journey times and more services.
I'd gently also remind this blog's reader(s) that the latest Passenger Focus survey shows that 83% of passengers are satisfied - the highest number yet recorded.
Isn't this called shooting the messenger?
UPDATE: Captain Deltic harrumphs...
If 17% of readers were dissatisfied with Eye it wouldn't have become the dominant force in the railway blogsphere that makes even Network Rail sit up and engage with the real world.
Lies, damned lies, etc... etc...
Scottish Ps & Qs
Telegrammed by the Major
Disgraceful behaviour in the Scottish Parliament:
(MSP).....I have almost lost track of the amount of my correspondence on crossrail with the minister and Transport Scotland. Getting an answer from Mr Stevenson in writing is no easier than getting one in the chamber. It seems, on occasion, that he has delegated so much of his portfolio to Transport Scotland that all that is left for him to do is give us bad news and occasionally unveil new paint schemes for the trains.
Mike Rumbles: He has delegated everything. He just tells us what the civil servants want.
The Minister for Transport, Infrastructure and Climate Change (Stewart Stevenson): Bollocks.
Alison McInnes: Pardon?
The Presiding Officer: Members should be careful about the language that they use in the chamber.
Quite right too. Pardon is so non-U!
Livingstone to return?
***Former London Mayor Ken Livingstone - who lost last year to Conservative Boris Johnson - will challenge again in 2012.***
Non!
Telegrammed by Ithuriel
Lord Adonis may know more about railways than the average transport minister - and we have had some outstandingly average transport ministers in recent years, but not enough to spot when his officials are embroidering the truth.
In a letter to an MP whose constituent had asked the Walmsley Question (why not loco haulage for IEP?) the noble Lord rehearses all the old canards and as a clincher concludes:
"The French railways have recognised these arguments and so the next generation of the TGV, the AGV, will operate as distributed traction with all vehicles carrying passengers."
So there!
Except that French Railways have nothing to do with AGV, which is an Alstom private venture.
And French Railways are still ordering TGV Duplex with power cars at each end.
They have noted the AGV development, but really want double deck trains for capacity. Fitting traction packages underneath double deck coaches would be un peu difficile
When anyone tries to drag in the French to support a technical argument, it's a sure sign they know they've met their Waterloo.
Leafs on the line
1D48 Driver Spilt Tea
CCIL 407995
IRN
1940 Hrs – Advised by EC Controller thaty 1D48 was at a Stand on Down Main at Finsbury Park.
Advised by NXEC Control that driver has Spilt Tea over Controls and Lost His Front Lights. Train will Return to Kings Cross for Fitters Attention. Train will be Cancelled at Kings Cross.