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Post by vic09 on Apr 8, 2012 10:19:28 GMT
What do you think?? I think the central line. I was at marble arch the other day and they are coming in litrally less than a minute apart?
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Post by alfie on Apr 8, 2012 10:38:48 GMT
May have been delays, vic! Certainly they can get very close at Stratford. The Central Line runs up to 30tph in the peak through the centre. I'll take a look at the timetable and get back, but I'll say it's either the Victoria or the Central.
The Northern Circle DMI's claim every train to be a minute behind each other, but it's never true..
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kabsonline
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Post by kabsonline on Apr 8, 2012 11:39:09 GMT
Surely it will be a line with ATO as trains on these lines can run a lot closer to each other as it is safer. So its either got to be the Central, Jubilee or Victoria Lines. But then the Jubilee seems to have a reduced train frequency compared to the Central and Victoria as it is not as busy with gaps being up to 4 minutes so I would say either the Central or Victoria
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Apr 8, 2012 11:48:42 GMT
Insofar as working timetables are concerned, the closest headways are two minutes and apply to, for example -
Central - 07.48½ to 08.52½ Leytonstone westbound.
Jubilee - 08.18 to 09.02 Westminster eastbound and 17.33 to 18.19 Westminster westbound.
And - from 23 April 2012 - on the Victoria Line in both peaks!
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Post by Deleted on Apr 8, 2012 13:46:08 GMT
I'd say the Vic must have some of the closest headways, bearing in mind how close the trains can get to each other!
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Apr 8, 2012 14:08:32 GMT
It's as I have posted above, unless you mean 'actual' rather then 'scheduled'.
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Post by alfie on Apr 8, 2012 16:40:07 GMT
If it's 'actual' then on the Central Line at Stratford it's been seen for one train to leave whilst another pulls in..justabouts.
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Post by jardine01 on Apr 8, 2012 19:11:49 GMT
Yet i would of thought the Jubilee line would be the closest together as they have moving block signaling. However evenutually i think the Jubilee line will run 33 TPH after 2012.
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Ben
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Post by Ben on Apr 8, 2012 21:21:09 GMT
Thanks for injecting some actual facts Reg Historically, was the winner of this acolayde the District/South Circle? Or perhaps before that the Bakerloo? Frequency has definitely come up on the forum before somewhere...
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Post by alfie on Apr 8, 2012 22:11:05 GMT
South Circle gets 26tph at some points in the day, probably been like that a very long time.
I've heard some things about 40tph being bandied about..I don't believe it though. Before defensive driving and all that..
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Tom
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Post by Tom on Apr 9, 2012 8:21:04 GMT
There are certainly some signals on the northern half of the circle line which are designed with a headway of 40tph, though the actual throughput is limited by the signal with the lowest headway.
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Colin
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Post by Colin on Apr 9, 2012 10:31:14 GMT
And that's the fact that a lot of people either don't know or conveniently forget - it is the signal system itself that determines how many trains can be run.
It's got nothing to to do with top speeds, personal opinions or anything else.
The more signals you have, the more trains you can run - up to a finite limit of course - but that's the fundamental principle on any railway.
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Post by tubeprune on Apr 10, 2012 7:58:42 GMT
And that's the fact that a lot of people either don't know or conveniently forget - it is the signal system itself that determines how many trains can be run. It's got nothing to to do with top speeds, personal opinions or anything else. The more signals you have, the more trains you can run - up to a finite limit of course - but that's the fundamental principle on any railway. It's actually a bit more complicated than that. The overall limiting factor on headway may be other things like the dwell time at the busiest station (say Victoria) or the ability of the terminus to turn round trains (say Brixton). Also, the top speed of a route will affect the throughput. As the speed rises, so does the braking distance. As the braking distance rises, the spacing between trains becomes greater. It is also interesting that, when multi-home signals were being installed on the Underground in the early 1920s, they discovered that 3 homes was the useful limit. Any more didn't help the frequency. Even speed control didn't help much unless the dwell time was extended. If I could find the thread, I think we'll see we've done all this before.
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Post by superteacher on Apr 10, 2012 16:20:51 GMT
The Central line can operate 33tph, which is quite useful when clearing a backlog, although as has been mentioned earlier, 30tph is the maximum currently timetabled on that line.
The Vic is meant to get 33tph next year.
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Post by jardine01 on Apr 10, 2012 19:05:43 GMT
30 tph is the limit really any more trains is just going to cause bunching up Also there is less recovery time, when things go wrong
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Post by superteacher on Apr 10, 2012 19:10:59 GMT
30 tph is the limit really any more trains is just going to cause bunching up Also there is less recovery time, when things go wrong Have you had experience of a 33tph service so back up your comments? The main problems will be station dwell times and ensuring quick turnarounds at Brixton. If things go wrong though, I do agree that bunching will happen very quickly.
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Post by jardine01 on Apr 10, 2012 22:31:33 GMT
Well obviously i am not a railway controller! But look at the central line which could in theory run more than 30 TPH but can't due to liverpool street dwell times. For Brixton for quick turnarounds i have an idea why dont they just have a spare driver ready sitting in the opposite end cab to set the train off at terminus? Or they will just have to sprint to the other side of the train however I doubt due to heath and Safety! When things go wrong you will have trains stuck in tunnels rather than in platforms.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 11, 2012 9:00:09 GMT
At Brixton, the intent is a driver steps off the south end, and a new driver steps onto the north end. There should be/be being a klaxon installed so the south end driver can sound it to advise the north end driver that he/she is clear and it is good to go.
Victoria, with its extended dwell times is one of the main pinch points on the Victoria Line.
Brixton should not be an issue - even if you went down to a 90s timetable (40tph), it still means trains have nearly 3 mins to change ends and be ready to go back north. Seeing as the trains are designed to complete this within 60 seconds, using the procedure above, this should not be a problem.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 11, 2012 9:51:54 GMT
30 tph is the limit really any more trains is just going to cause bunching up Also there is less recovery time, when things go wrong jardine01 - Please stop commenting on things you either know nothing about, or cannot justify. Aside from junctions and termini, headways between trains are affected by platform reoccupation time, dwell time, and operating margin. Operating margin and variations in dwell time make the difference between theoretical shortest headways, actual headways, and timetabled headways. Even platform reoccupation time varies between stations. The platform re-occupation on the Central Line's busier stations is approx. 60 secs. Add a typical peak dwell time of 35 seconds, and that leaves 25 seconds operating margin for the timetabled 120 secs headway. However, when bunching occurs trains can often be observed running at 85 seconds headways. I don't know the exact platform reoccupation times for the Victoria Line and Jubilee Line, but would expect the Victoria Line to have platform reoccupation times around the 50-60 secs range, and the Jubilee to be in the 40-50 secs range. By the way, Moscow Metro can operate longer 155m trains at 95sec timetabled headways, and Metro de Santiago will soon operate 120m trains at 100sec timetabled headways. Both operate with only around 15 secs operating margin. By the way, both do occasionally experience trains catching up with the trains in front and stopping between stations - it's a fact of life if you want to operate metros at high frequency!
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Post by Deleted on Apr 11, 2012 9:57:38 GMT
I don't know the exact platform reoccupation times for the Victoria Line and Jubilee Line, but would expect the Victoria Line to have platform reoccupation times around the 50-60 secs range, and the Jubilee to be in the 40-50 secs range. Vic Line reoccupation times are around 46 seconds for a few stations in and around Victoria ranging upto 60-65 in the north end of the line.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 12, 2012 9:27:43 GMT
I don't know the exact platform reoccupation times for the Victoria Line and Jubilee Line, but would expect the Victoria Line to have platform reoccupation times around the 50-60 secs range, and the Jubilee to be in the 40-50 secs range. Vic Line reoccupation times are around 46 seconds for a few stations in and around Victoria ranging up to 60-65 in the north end of the line. Thanks for the info. 46 secs is pretty impressive for a fixed block/DTG system. The traditional (and long removed) speed controlled/multiple home setups were designed for approx. 52 secs. I would be interested to know the platform reoccupation times on the Jubilee using Seltrac.
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mrfs42
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Post by mrfs42 on Apr 12, 2012 18:00:20 GMT
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Post by jardine01 on Apr 12, 2012 21:23:33 GMT
If they did it then why cant it happen now? Apparently the circle line ran 40TPH is this true?
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rincew1nd
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Post by rincew1nd on Apr 12, 2012 22:06:28 GMT
according to the 1916 Hampstead line WTT that dropped onto my doormat this morning.... You're lucky, all that my letter-box had to yield this evening was a Council Tax bill addressed to "Mr M Mwengwe".
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Post by Deleted on Apr 13, 2012 9:02:31 GMT
Slightly O/T, but according to the 1916 Hampstead line WTT that dropped onto my doormat this morning.... Morning and evening busy, 1½ minutes apart. 7.46 - 9.55½ in the morning (although thinning to every fourth at 2 min after 9) 5.29 - 7.55½ in evening busy, thinning to alternates (roughly) at 2 min from 6.45. The terminus loop probably helped, and short train consists. If they did it then why cant it happen now? Apparently the circle line ran 40TPH is this true? For starters, there was higher capacity signalling than most current lines (except Victoria and Jubilee). More aggressive driving strategies (i.e the odd SPAD was not really an issue). It could be questioned as to what effects the frequency had on reliability, journey times, and stock requirements. A few people on this board may be able to fill us in here.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 13, 2012 15:30:48 GMT
jardine01 - Please stop commenting on things you either know nothing about, or cannot justify. +1 --- Apart from passengers getting worked up, swinging their heads around and occasionally trying to break out , is there a problem having trains effectively stopping in non station sections (during the peak), if it means that frequencies can be increased?
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Post by tubeprune on Apr 14, 2012 7:47:17 GMT
Slightly O/T, but according to the 1916 Hampstead line WTT that dropped onto my doormat this morning.... Morning and evening busy, 1½ minutes apart. 7.46 - 9.55½ in the morning (although thinning to every fourth at 2 min after 9) 5.29 - 7.55½ in evening busy, thinning to alternates (roughly) at 2 min from 6.45. The terminus loop probably helped, and short train consists. If they did it then why cant it happen now? Apparently the circle line ran 40TPH is this true? For starters, there was higher capacity signalling than most current lines (except Victoria and Jubilee). More aggressive driving strategies (i.e the odd SPAD was not really an issue). It could be questioned as to what effects the frequency had on reliability, journey times, and stock requirements. A few people on this board may be able to fill us in here. Driving techniques were variable. There were some drivers who got very good at balancing speed and braking techniques to get the best performance out of the system but they were more the exception than the rule. The odd SPAD was accepted as the system doing the job it was supposed to do. Under the old signalling with anything over 32 tph, you would generally lose 10 minutes or so at the end of every peak. They would reform us on the Circle by dropping back train numbers so train 171 became 172 or 173 etc. When speed control was introduced in the 1950s, it was said to save an additional 10 seconds per train and allow an increase of 5 tph through the District Line at peak times to give 44tph. This was based on lower speeds, a smaller margin and a short starter overlap. Articles on speed control signalling have appeared in Underground News – “Speed Control Signalling” written by me for UN 414, June 1996 and “33TPH Service Headways and Train Working” by Robert Hammond, which was published in UN 488, August 2002. At the risk of repeating myself, the old idea that we should get 40+ tph on the Underground today surfaces regularly. It won't happen. We have longer trains, higher speeds and very restrictive signalling design rules. We are also running most lines with some excessive dwell times at central stations and we have terminal protection just to further restrict throughput. In my opinion, pushing for any more than 30tph under London conditions is not sustainable. The main advantage of the new DTG-R and TBTC signalling is faster recovery from delays.
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Post by alfie on Apr 14, 2012 8:05:11 GMT
So if you had a few termini (and some insanely good timetabling) could you squeeze more tph out?
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Post by tubeprune on Apr 14, 2012 10:30:24 GMT
So if you had a few termini (and some insanely good timetabling) could you squeeze more tph out? The terminus is just one problem. If you look at Brixton, it's not the turnround time of trains that restricts the capacity, it's the time taken to clear the high speed crossovers and reset the route. I believe that the completion of the asset replacement programme should help to increase throughput. If that was to allow say, 33tph, then the extended dwells mentioned by racka earlier, would be the restricting factor. Timetabling generally has nothing to do with it. Actually, squeezing a few more tph isn't necessarily the objective. The objective is to carry the people who want to travel. In London, there are just too many people for the existing lines to carry. More lines are needed. Crossrail will help but at least another SW-NE line is needed now.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 14, 2012 23:21:34 GMT
What is the TPH on DLR these days, if you include that as a 'line' ! Now its trains are 6-car length mainly, it makes it a bit more comparable than it used to be.
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