659 late - is this a record for a passenger train?![]()
I was 450 late, on an inbound eurostar, before. That was bad enough at the time. Can't imagine being 659 late!
659 late - is this a record for a passenger train?![]()
Dumbarton is not the best of places for a coach transfer as there isn't a car park at all, although at that time the street outside will be pretty empty. It doesn't give much time for boarding though as the first services to Balloch and Helensburgh are not far behind it. Using platform 3 isn't an option either as it will be occupied as well. The waiting room/booking office are also on the other platform so not much use either.
I sometimes used to be a bit naughty and switch them myself on evening trains
Anyone know why it took 8+ hours for a replacement loco to arrive. Did the driver have to walk out then taxi to said loco.
Anyone know why it took 8+ hours for a replacement loco to arrive. Did the driver have to walk out then taxi to said loco.
Well, it had to get from Polmadie to Helensburgh Upper at that point it had to wait for the driver of the sleeper to make their way to Helensburgh to collect it (as the driver from Polmadie didn't sign beyond there) which required a Network Rail MOM to bring a road-rail vehicle to collect them as the nearest access point to the failed train was some three miles away over moor land, then they had to drive the loco back to the sleeper and hook it all together and then, seemingly, the rescue locomotive itself was not in the best of health...
They would be better putting them on to the train at Dalmuir, which does have a car park alongside the platform used by the WHL train. Of course the coach will have much more comfortable seats than the train, since no coach operator would be mad enough to fit hard seats.
BTW, the late morning train from FW, mentioned by an earlier poster, will run all winter from this year.
Thanks for posting that at the same time, otherwise I feared nobody would believe us!
Thanks for posting that at the same time, otherwise I feared nobody would believe us!
The driver of the replacement loco did did not have route knowledge up to where the failed train was, and the failed train was in the middle of nowhere so, (and this is genuinely what happened!) - the MOM went up on a Road-Rail Vehicle to the failed train, took the driver back to a road to drive them down to the replacement loco.
And then the replacement loco broke down and the first one started working.
All in all, 5/10!
Well, it had to get from Polmadie to Helensburgh Upper at that point it had to wait for the driver of the sleeper to make their way to Helensburgh to collect it (as the driver from Polmadie didn't sign beyond there) which required a Network Rail MOM to bring a road-rail vehicle to collect them as the nearest access point to the failed train was some three miles away over moor land, then they had to drive the loco back to the sleeper and hook it all together and then, seemingly, the rescue locomotive itself was not in the best of health...
It's quite a tale isn't it! I've heard that the initial plan was for the driver to make their own way to Helensburgh. Considering the remoteness of the location and the distance involved I can only imagine that the drivers response to that plan would not have been considered suitable for pre-watershed broadcast![]()
Thank you very much, MrEd, for that extremely helpful and informative reply. I will take from it that there is a reasonable degree of staff flexibility. Clearly if trains are running at 25% staffing, as noted by Crepello, above, there are going to be problems.
Not accurate
Again, not accurate!
Apologies, the 37 question was rhetorical, I didn’t make that very clear though. Thank you for a most interesting post, love to read things like that.37/4s handled load 6 with ease in the 80s and 90s (and providing ETS too). In the era of 37/0s, load 6 or even 7 + 74-ton ETHEL was not unheard of and they seemed to manage just fine. Obviously it depended how well-maintained the 37 was but I doubt that any drivers would have batted an eyelid at taking a single 37 (or even a 27) over the route with load 6 in the BR Blue era.
Interestingly, I have in my collection a repair book from 37114, when it was first reallocated from March to Eastfield to replace Class 27s on secondary passenger work in 1981. Many of these were initially in poor condition after years of hammer on the Eastern region, and did not seem a massive improvement over the 27s they replaced. A Mallaig driver famously wrote at the bottom of his entry (lamenting an inoperable boiler, draughty cabs, low power and continuous wheel slip) ’About time this wreck went to Doncaster for overhaul or scrap. Give us back our 27s, at least they work.’ Yet the 37s on the WHL grew to be a great success story...
They are, just unpowered ones! What's worrying is - as happened earlier this year when there was a breakdown on the HML the rescue loco was delayed as it needed to be fuelled first - could you imagine Tracy island receiving the call for thunderbird 2 and saying, sure we'll save the world, just got to fuel it first!!
To be fair, CS don't actually have any thunderbirds in the conventional sense; not like the strategically-placed, ready-to-go-as-soon-as-possible 67s on the East Coast, and 57s on the West (which, incidentally, are the only two operators with dedicated "thunderbirds" so CS aren't unique).
Of course, until the mk5 coaches land on the WHL, GBRF do have a 66 on hand at Fort William during the nights of sun, tues, thurs and sat that could help. Another sods law that it was a day the bulks had ran south in the morning.
I would guess the mk5 would maybe have an emergency coupler that would be used in future maybe? Anyone know at all?
As reported directly to me by the relevant Network Rail controllers...
No idea where you're getting that from, but they didn't even have one member of platform staff to dispatch off Platform 10, thereby clogging up the Up Bay, Down Slow and (briefly) the Up Slow with displaced trains. So I'd say they did run out of dispatch staff, and Network Rail advise they were dealing with the problem on the Caledonian Sleeper, so...
If i was GBrf i would get a few more 73/9 re-builds done.
Biggest problem now is the rescue locomotive has to be dellner coupler fitted as Mk5 Sleepers are all dellner couplers.
Who came up with that great idea as these are not multiple units.
Thanks for the reply, I think that’s a bit short sighted especially for failures on single line, but hey ho.There will be no other coupler fitted other than the current dellner making rescues impossible unless its a 73 or 92 to the rescue.
Thanks for the reply, I think that’s a bit short sighted especially for failures on single line, but hey ho.
They are, just unpowered ones! What's worrying is - as happened earlier this year when there was a breakdown on the HML the rescue loco was delayed as it needed to be fuelled first - could you imagine Tracy island receiving the call for thunderbird 2 and saying, sure we'll save the world, just got to fuel it first!!
There will be no other coupler fitted other than the current dellner making rescues impossible unless its a 73 or 92 to the rescue.