John Baker
Blimey - the new complicated forum?
London liked everything to be double - deck, even going back to the old horse - drawn tram days.
Going back to a previous topic Railfan and Railroad this months gives a list of all operable steam locomotives in North America - ie including Canada.
It's an alarmingly short list, not least because, from what I've seen of US Railroad museums, there's no shortage of preserved steam locos.
I guess that factors like relative size must have an impact - a "big" engine in the UK, such as a Gresley A4, only weighed 160 tons including tender - but it does seem a shame that so many superb locomotives are simply "stuffed and mounted."
Simon: I was shocked to see that there are only 4 operating steam locos in Ontario. We have been hampered by not grabbing the locos when they were feshly retired. As well, there weren't places to run them. We have one branchline that was bought by preservationists (after they missed out on a number of other ones -- they finally decided to do it entirely by themselves rather than trying to get goernment support), and a group in an engine house with yard.
I can't speak for the Americans, but remember that Canada is a country with the population of London spread out in the second largest country by area in the world (Russia is still bigger!)
--David
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
Murphy - most of our abandonments have - hopefully - already happened so we can speak with some experience.
Firstly a gentle reminder. Wyoming, Montana and the Dakotas are twice as big as France but their combined population is roughly that of South London. There are 68 people per square mile in the US and 600 in the UK. What I'm saying is that we don't have the luxury of abandoning land.
Not far from here was a short suburban route between Laisterdyke and Shipley which has, I'd say, met a fairly typical fate. Since abandonment in 1964 the Laisterdyke end has been used as a landfill site, various new properties and businesses have been constructed on other bits and in the Idle area the old alignment is now used by a highway.
Some parts remain recognisable - at the Shipley end even the former station survives - but for the most part you'd need to know the history of the route to spot any evidence.
In more rural areas former alignments are used as long distance footpaths and an organisation called Sustrans has converted some abandonments into cycle paths. More often than not, though, where an abandoned formation passes through agricultural country the farmers "reclaim" the land for their own use.
Simon Reed wrote:When Central Railways are up and running the tunnels might be a good place to shelter from flying pigs....
I'm not even sure what that meant, but I thought it ws funny!
In what way did "VAMBAC" differ from PCC technology?
Was "VAMBAC" the result of the PCC "not being invented here?"
cogload wrote:Indeed. I can see a close flying formation of 3 Old Spots outside the window now......oink.
Woodhead will always be an emotive topic, and coincidentally today marks the 25th anniversary of it's complete closure.
Murphy's question on the last page regarding what we do with abandoned roadbeds is very pertinent here.
As I understand it, although the tunnels remain intact the roadbed on the Lancashire side is now submerged under the extended Torside reservoir. On the Yorkshire side at least one bridge before Penistone has been demolished and there's very little left of Worsley Bank or Wath.
At present there is'nt a great demand for East - West freight traffic flows across the North of England. If that situation changed I would imagine that the Hope Valley has capacity without requiring extensive investment.
I fail to see, therefore, what market Central Railways hope to tap. Certainly both WCML and ECML are running at close to capacity at the moment but utilising the Woodhead route for North - South flows would'nt help this problem.
Dave - Vambacs and PCC's have essentially the same two design innovations, ie. Stepless Control and Resilient wheels. I've enjoyed several PCC rides in Newark and Philadelphia. The Newark examples were pretty much at the end of their lives when I rode them but were still quite acceptable compared to European products of the same era.
Incidentally - for those interested in L&Y operations in Yorkshire the Kirklees Light Railway is holding it's first ever enthusiast's event on September 16th and 17th.
KLR runs on the roadbed of the Clayton West branch at 15" gauge, including a run through the standard gauge Skelmanthorpe tunnel.
It's a fine little railway and well worth a visit.
Simon Reed wrote: Woodhead will always be an emotive topic, and coincidentally today marks the 25th anniversary of it's complete closure.
Basically the problem with the Woodhead line was it was obsolete almost by the time it was electrified. Back in the 1930's when the project was conceived freight trains were re-marshalled on either side of the Pennines - Mottram Yard in Manchester and Wath in Yorkshire (later also Tinsley and the Woodhead electfication was extended there in 1960 when Tinsley Yard opened).
But no sooner had Tinsley Yard opened than BR started to concentrate on train load feight, particularly Merry-Go-Round (MGR) coal trains that were designed to run non-stop from pit to power station. In the case of the Woodhead line this meant two loco changes in a relatively short distance.
As traffic declined during the 1970's it got to the stage where half the trains were light engines! Often a crew would arrive with a westbound freight at Mottram and find no east bound train. They could only wait a certain length of time otherwise they would not be able to return home in time without doing excessive hours.
That said, had more electrification happened, especially if the East Coast Main line been electrified a lot sooner, the case for converting the Woodhead to 25kv AC would have been much stronger. Indeed in the 1955 proposal to electrify the ECML it was assumed this would happen and electrification of the Retford - Sheffield line was included in this proposal. (Just as well this did not happen as it would have finished off the Midland Main Line!).
The line which they are missing is the southern Manchester CLC ring really. This closed in '85 due to the bridge over the MSC at Glazebrook being cream crackered.
However there are plenty of Transpennine routes available; the Hope requires resignalling and that will be cheaper than rebuilding 35miles over double track at roughly £3m a mile plus extras.
What is interesting is where (or of) they shift Trafford Park Freight Terminal. Apparently some are eyeing that up for housing; also glad to see that the govt have finally given a half hearted and grudging go-ahead for the Metrolink tram system extension. Probabley one eye on a few marginals in the Greater Manchester Area I should think.
On the other hand, one of the arguments in favour of rebuilding the Woodhead is that not only was the infrastructure newer (brand new tunnel built in the 1950's!) but it was also built to a more generous loading gauge. Immediately after WW1 the Great Central considered importing some ex US Army 2-10-2's that had been used in France to work the line - these would have been out of the gauge for most lines in Britain. Also in the 1948 loco exchanges it was one of the few "foreign" lines that GWR locos were able to run on, again due to gauging considerations.
As I understand it the current proposals are based around being able to run lorries (trucks in US parlance ) piggy back style and double stack container trains. This is not possible on most lines here but again it would be possible on the Woodhead line, though they'd have to have the tunnel single track. (I seem to remember reading somewhere the running tunnels of the Chunnel were each built to the same size as the new Woodhead tunnel!).
daveklepper wrote:You can still ride PCC's in regular service in the USA: Boston's Mattapan-Ashmont line after the Ashmont station is rebuilt in about 10 months, Kenosha, San Frfancisco's F Line, and Phily;s Gerrad Avenue, Rt. 15. More to come!
Had'nt heard about Trafford Park.
A lot of investment went into Trafford Park in 1987/8 when Longsight FLT closed. In terms of relocation the area around Ashburys and Gorton, as John suggests, would be good for road links but would be on the wrong side of the city for most industry and would, in railway terms, be logistically difficult to access from the South unless you took a convoluted route around the OA&GB.
I might live to eat my words but in view of the relative modernity of Trafford Park and the lack of a viable alternative (ironically the former Longsight site would be ideal) I'd anticipate Frightener hanging onto it.
On Trans-Pennine capacity it would be relatively easy to re-quadruple the Standege route between Heaton Lodge and Marsden, but I'd agree that the biggest missing link is the old Glazebrook bridge. The impressive embankments on either side are still intact.
There is - of course - a PCC in the UK. Ex New York 3rd Avenue 674 lives at Crich although it is a non-runner and looks likely to remain that way.
Oh, the joys of Friday Nightshift. £35 an hour until 06.00 with nothing to do but accept two trailers at about 02.30. It's nights like this that I wish I'd gone onto the Railways....
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