telstarbox
Established Member
I think that one would depend on the two sets of traffic lights.
Likely the same for Soton Ctl to Woolston as well, knowing the dog-leg route that the direct railway takes.Totton to Redbridge, but most people would get a bus rather than a train into Southampton Central and back out.
A slightly more sensible one might be Lymington Town to Sway. Though the journey times by rail are quicker, you'd likely have a good 15 minutes wait at Brockenhurst. Bitterne to Swaythling must have a similar situation too.
Definitely if you measure from the entrance on the street of one station to the entrance on the street to the next, in so avoiding the time taken to enter, go down to platform, wait for train and then come back up and exit at the other end. Would also work for a distance of two or more stations (Marble Arch to Tottenham Court Road for example).
Top Gear did the London challenge in about 2007 where Richard Hammond (cycling) beat The Stig (on Public Transport, albeit with several legs) from Kew Bridge to City Airport.
Probably quite a few Tube examples.
It would also depend on the time of day. Cycling along Oxford Street between TCR and Marble Arch at 7am on a Sunday would be incredibly quick, whereas the same journey at 4pm on a Saturday would be much slower, with Oxford Street full of jammed buses AND all the pedestrian lights being used.Within central London, with stations close together, a bike is far more likely to be faster on journeys not between adjacent stations, since the train has the intermediate stop(s). Eg the Central Line can probably do Tottenham Court Road to Holborn a bit quicker than I can cycle it, but I might just beat it TCR to Chancery Lane even with my old sit-up-and-beg bike. I must get a stopwatch and try it!
Similarly, with mainline trains, If the traffic lights are in my favour, I'm sure I could beat a train from Farringdon to Blackfriars, given the stopping time at City Thameslink.
Blaenau Ffestiniog - Porthmadog also, but possibly only in that direction unless you insist on National Rail only!
It's 9.6 miles, and the train does it in between 19 (the RSC 11pm non-stop service!) and 33 minutes. Average is about 27 minutes. Don't know about you, but I don't fancy my odds of averaging 17.5-21mph over country roads with some towns on either end, not to mention negotiating J15 on the M42 with my body and bike intact afterwards...I’d back myself to beat Chiltern’s direct services from Warwick to Stratford on Avon
It's 9.6 miles, and the train does it in between 19 (the RSC 11pm non-stop service!) and 33 minutes. Average is about 27 minutes. Don't know about you, but I don't fancy my odds of averaging 17.5-21mph over country roads with some towns on either end, not to mention negotiating J15 on the M42 with my body and bike intact afterwards...
Of course the train frequency "leaves something to be desired", so the GJT is rather lower by bike![]()
Is that on an e-bike or pedal power only? You must be a bit fitter than meReckon I could do it. On a good day I can average 18mph down little country lanes with lots of junctions for 2 hours. For half an hour I’d be closer to 20mph, especially on those roads (I’ve cycled Most of it before). Would need to have the lights in favour of course.
Is that on an e-bike or pedal power only? You must be a bit fitter than me![]()