70014IronDuke
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- 13 Jun 2015
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(Please note, not yet another thread on whether the full Waverley route - or anything quite like it - could/should be reopened!)
In the distant past, I remember reading that BR thought it quite likely that the government would not allow the closure of the Waverley route and had drawn up a new, but presumably very limited, timetable designed to provide some sort of minimum service meant to pass the political needs at the lowest cost. It would have made the route a kind of "Heart of the Borders Line" in the modern vernacular, I suppose.
(Mind you, I don't actually know what the final timetable consisted of, except for the Edinbugh - St Pancras sleeper. I never went on the route, alas. ISTR photos of Cl 26s on four carriage locals, but perhaps that's my imagination.)
I presume it would have entailed long single-track sections, with something like a 1 train per 2 hour service - if that?
Does anyone know if this is true, ie a real default timetable was drawn up, and what if consisted of in its essentials? Or was it just Railway World speculation back in the day?
And if so, what would the chances have been of it surviving, or would it have been like the GC's Rugby - Nottingham rump that lasted a few years after the closure of the Aylesbury - Rugby section and lasted into the early 70s before the axe finally fell? (I suspect the latter.)
In the distant past, I remember reading that BR thought it quite likely that the government would not allow the closure of the Waverley route and had drawn up a new, but presumably very limited, timetable designed to provide some sort of minimum service meant to pass the political needs at the lowest cost. It would have made the route a kind of "Heart of the Borders Line" in the modern vernacular, I suppose.
(Mind you, I don't actually know what the final timetable consisted of, except for the Edinbugh - St Pancras sleeper. I never went on the route, alas. ISTR photos of Cl 26s on four carriage locals, but perhaps that's my imagination.)
I presume it would have entailed long single-track sections, with something like a 1 train per 2 hour service - if that?
Does anyone know if this is true, ie a real default timetable was drawn up, and what if consisted of in its essentials? Or was it just Railway World speculation back in the day?
And if so, what would the chances have been of it surviving, or would it have been like the GC's Rugby - Nottingham rump that lasted a few years after the closure of the Aylesbury - Rugby section and lasted into the early 70s before the axe finally fell? (I suspect the latter.)