krazywookie wrote:
make a circular track and a really long train, join it up at the ends, job done.
Why would this succeed where the M25 and M60 failed?
richard woody glerndgay wrote:
This, of course, is exactly correct. I remember watching Britain From Above's bit about trains -- they showed a number of major train lines around the country. There's literally no room on either side of any urban train line to expand, because the line routes were laid down a century or more ago and the cities grew tightly around them like a tree growing around a fence. Coupled with us making decisions about track gauge, bridge clearance, and so forth that seemed like a good idea at the time but bloody well aren't in hindsight and you have a situation where, if you wanted a truly world-class mass transit system in the 21st century, you were far better off waiting until well into the 20th to build it.
Being completely blown to bits in WW2 did Mainland Europe a favour in this regard. I can think of a number of things off the top of my head that the rail industry in the UK has come to regret, including:
-Parliament forcing Brunel to adopt 'standard gauge' over broad gauge
-the late 80s/early 90s obsession with multiple units
-the current obsession with direct services, which means diesel trains running under the wires for the majority of their journeys
-abandoning the APT
-re-privatization
Beeching is obvious, in the same way cities in both the UK and North America are now wishing they hadn't scrapped their tram/streetcar networks in the 50s and 60s in favour of diesel buses.
Quote:
Our cities are simply too densely packed.
And politicians too spineless, and the electorate too aware of this. For fear of angering the electorate and getting the vile press on their back, any new proposals end up so watered down they're often pointless. Europeans love grand projects like huge bridges and fast railways but the British find a reason to complain and scupper or neuter them. While Britain was building the Class 43 (Intercity 125), France was building the TGV, and Japan already had the Shinkansen. 30 years after the TGV is a long time to wait to finally build a domestic high speed rail network.
Britain is unique in being very compact and also comparatively uneven which is why stuff like the APT would have sufficed, but as even political will (often under media pressure) is lost and stuff ends up half finished. I'm quite surprised that simply putting some pretend grass on top of HS2 is one of the only concessions they've made.
As anyone who's played Transport Tycoon knows, bottlenecks jam any rail network up. While much has been spent in recent years improving on this, you can't ignore the fact that in so many areas, quadruple tracks are needed. Tile Hill is near Network Rail's huge training centre, and is on the WCML. The track is double, which means that the schedule has to be timed to accommodate the occasional stopping train calling at the station in between express services which want to go 125mph. The sensible solution, as it is out of London, is to have separate 'fast' tracks that allow the expresses to hammer past the local stoppers. Unfortunately, as per DocG's comments above, widening the railway would now likely upset the nesting pattern of the yellow-bollocked car shitter wrens which are so timid and might become stressed don't you know.