Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Hugh Jampton These are the 2-axle coal wagons that I see mostly; http://web.ukonline.co.uk/wagons/1-100/t355443.jpg The newer 4 axle ones are replacing these on some routes where clearances are not so much of an issue; http://web.ukonline.co.uk/wagons/901-1000/370xxx.jpg
QUOTE: Originally posted by martin.knoepfel The Foster Yeoman stone-trains were able to run at 100 mph
QUOTE: the situation in britain was such were br was busted up and different groups were asset stripping br components.the result being br service has suffered badly.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Tulyar15 Some coal traffic is moved in containers - to make it easier to send it on to places that aren't rail served. At the present I gather most of the container ports in Britain are working to full capacity. The government rejected a proposal for a second container port at Southampton but is considering a proposal for a new container port on the Thames Estuary in Essex. Other possibilities include new terminals near Glasgow or Liverpool. As a result of Ireland also being in the EU a lot of trade between Ireland and Europe passes thru Britain. I gather Holyhead, the main ferryport for Ireland is now the second busiest port in Britain though container trains no longer run there and all the freight passing thru Holyhead goes by road - only the aluminium plant there generates any rail freight.
QUOTE: Wouldn't it be easier to send goods from Ireland to the continent by ship, and skip Britain alltogether?
QUOTE: Originally posted by owlsroost Hugh Jampton/Townsend, Out of interest, as we don't get any coal trains anywhere near my area (East Anglia), what's the proportion of trains formed from 2-axle and 4-axle wagons in your areas ? Last time I was in the Doncaster/Barnetby/Knottingley area, from memory it was almost all EWS and Freightliner 4-axle hoppers (in the rain....) Tony
QUOTE: Originally posted by owlsroost QUOTE: Wouldn't it be easier to send goods from Ireland to the continent by ship, and skip Britain alltogether? The shipper puts it on a truck in (for example) Italy, and it's driven across Italy, France, (ferry or chunnel), Britain, (ferry), Ireland to the customer. No trans-shipment time or costs (which you'd have to do twice by ship), and trucks travel faster than ships. There are direct ferries from France (and maybe Spain) to Ireland, but it may well be cheaper/faster to do two short/fast crossings and drive across Britain than take a longer, more expensive direct sea crossing. Some of this traffic could easily be won by rail (at least as far as Holyhead/Liverpool) if only the European railways (especially France) would get their collective acts together and allow pan-european open-access to work properly (which is exactly how the trucking companies work). Tony
QUOTE: Are there any train ferries from Britain to Belgium?
QUOTE: Originally posted by Tulyar15 When Ed Burkhardt arrived here I think what impressed him most were the stone hopper wagons which have a conveyor belt running under them. At the rear of the set is a car with a directable conveyor which can be directed to unload into a waiting truck. This avoids the need for investment in hopper discharge facilities.
QUOTE: some of the iron ore wagons used in South Wales
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