The Planner
Veteran Member
- Joined
- 15 Apr 2008
- Messages
- 17,543
If it was really that cheap it would have happened already, its another location that has had so many studies done on it and never gets anywhere.
There is awful lot more than 1tph of freight on the WLL. Also there are 7tph passenger, not 5tph although 2tph of those passenger paths don't currently run but you couldn't link them up with the Brighton Main Line as the paths wouldn't work there.Could a change in signalling in the West London Line accommodate more trains? 5 tph passenger and 1 tph freight isn't a lot, especially when all passenger services stop at all stations.
Can freight go via Horsham and Dorking, or are passenger services there too frequent? (Or is most freight on the BML to / from Gatwick / Kent?)There is awful lot more than 1tph of freight on the WLL. Also there are 7tph passenger, not 5tph although 2tph of those passenger paths don't currently run but you couldn't link them up with the Brighton Main Line as the paths wouldn't work there.
When I said 1tph of freight, I meant on the Brighton Main Line, as there is only an hourly freight path and if you doubled the freqeuncy of the East Croydon - Watford Junction service you would use up the hourly freight path on the Brighton Main Line which you can't do.
Can freight go via Horsham and Dorking, or are passenger services there too frequent? (Or is most freight on the BML to / from Gatwick / Kent?)
Sorry, I did not know there were more pathsThere is awful lot more than 1tph of freight on the WLL. Also there are 7tph passenger, not 5tph although 2tph of those passenger paths don't currently run but you couldn't link them up with the Brighton Main Line as the paths wouldn't work there.
When I said 1tph of freight, I meant on the Brighton Main Line, as there is only an hourly freight path and if you doubled the freqeuncy of the East Croydon - Watford Junction service you would use up the hourly freight path on the Brighton Main Line which you can't do.
No worries, the West London Line really is one of the hardest routes to plan, capacity is so restricted there and there really are pretty much no spare paths.Sorry, I did not know there were more paths
West London Jn is absolutely critical - enables a route from the NLL at Camden to Acton when the main NLL is blocked via Hampstead.
West London Junction is the entire ladder, presumably?
I’ve been living under a rock too, clearly! LNR no longer terminate at Rugeley? And the Brum semi fasts aren’t extended to Liverpool anymore? Pre-lockdown I used that lnr often before switching to Chiltern, so perhaps why I hadn’t realised!LNR is having a full recast in December. The plan is:
2tph Euston-(Watford 1tph)-Leighton-Bletchley-MKC-Wolverton-Northampton-semifast to Brum.
1tph Euston-MKC-Trent Valley-Crewe
2tph Euston-Tring semifast
2tph Euston-MKC Harrow-Bushey-Watford-all stations to MKC
plus a few peak extras.
They have never terminated at Rugeley via the Trent Valley, they still do via the Chase line.I’ve been living under a rock too, clearly! LNR no longer terminate at Rugeley? And the Brum semi fasts aren’t extended to Liverpool anymore? Pre-lockdown I used that lnr often before switching to Chiltern, so perhaps why I hadn’t realised!
I’ve been living under a rock too, clearly! LNR no longer terminate at Rugeley? And the Brum semi fasts aren’t extended to Liverpool anymore? Pre-lockdown I used that lnr often before switching to Chiltern, so perhaps why I hadn’t realised!
It’s a wonder why Willesden Junction was never developed into a more prominent hub like Clapham Jcn was. Compared with stopping outersuburban trains at Wembley Central and Harrow & Wealdstone, this would generate a lot more usage as passengers would only have a single change to get to a variety of destinations within north and west London.
Perhaps the cuts at that time, and that the services / stops never returned, indicate how important such interchange actually was.It was, once. Until 1914, most LNWR expresses stopped there, and many of the other railway companies serving London (including those South of the Thames) had local services of some sort to the station. For instance, you could change from LCDR boat trains to a Willesden service at Herne Hill, rather than making your way from Victoria to Euston.
Most of these services fell foul of WWI cuts, and Willesden Junction never regained the place it should have occupied in the London railway ecosystem.
100 years ago? The passenger dynamic has changed since then, but I note that just like another discussion about calls at New Cross Gate today, it is noted that stopping trains at either Willesden Junction or New Cross Gate coupled with London's current zonal fare structure, would lead to less revenue.Perhaps the cuts at that time, and that the services / stops never returned, indicate how important such interchange actually was.
Perhaps the cuts at that time, and that the services / stops never returned, indicate how important such interchange actually was.