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On this day
5th Apr (1969)
First passenger train - South Devon Railway (*)

Train RunningCancelled
21:40 Barnstaple to Exeter St Davids
06/04/25 09:00 London Paddington to Weston-Super-Mare
06/04/25 09:08 Bristol Temple Meads to Weymouth
06/04/25 09:22 Bristol Temple Meads to Fareham
06/04/25 09:46 Bristol Temple Meads to Severn Beach
06/04/25 11:31 Weston-Super-Mare to London Paddington
06/04/25 12:20 Reading to Gatwick Airport
06/04/25 12:30 Bristol Temple Meads to London Paddington
06/04/25 12:50 Reading to Gatwick Airport
06/04/25 13:55 Gatwick Airport to Reading
06/04/25 14:05 Weymouth to Bristol Temple Meads
06/04/25 14:26 Gatwick Airport to Reading
06/04/25 14:30 Fareham to Cardiff Central
06/04/25 14:36 London Paddington to Exeter St Davids
06/04/25 15:03 London Paddington to Plymouth
06/04/25 15:15 Plymouth to London Paddington
06/04/25 16:39 Bristol Temple Meads to Gloucester
06/04/25 17:16 Bristol Temple Meads to Severn Beach
06/04/25 17:30 Swindon to Cheltenham Spa
06/04/25 17:32 Exeter St Davids to London Paddington
06/04/25 17:41 Gloucester to Bristol Temple Meads
06/04/25 18:01 Severn Beach to Bristol Temple Meads
06/04/25 18:11 Castle Cary to Swindon
06/04/25 19:20 Reading to Gatwick Airport
06/04/25 19:30 London Paddington to Bristol Temple Meads
06/04/25 19:43 Swindon to Westbury
06/04/25 20:30 London Paddington to Weston-Super-Mare
06/04/25 20:38 Westbury to Swindon
06/04/25 20:39 Bristol Temple Meads to Gloucester
06/04/25 20:55 Gatwick Airport to Reading
06/04/25 21:34 Swindon to Westbury
06/04/25 21:39 Bristol Temple Meads to Gloucester
06/04/25 21:41 Gloucester to Bristol Temple Meads
06/04/25 22:30 Cardiff Central to Bristol Temple Meads
06/04/25 22:43 Reading to Newbury
06/04/25 23:12 Bristol Temple Meads to Weston-Super-Mare
06/04/25 23:49 Weston-Super-Mare to Bristol Temple Meads
07/04/25 00:36 London Paddington to Reading
07/04/25 02:24 Reading to London Paddington
07/04/25 03:35 London Paddington to Reading
07/04/25 04:35 Reading to London Paddington
Short Run
06/04/25 08:15 Worcester Foregate Street to London Paddington
06/04/25 08:46 Oxford to Great Malvern
06/04/25 08:58 Great Malvern to London Paddington
06/04/25 09:57 Worcester Shrub Hill to Bristol Temple Meads
06/04/25 10:35 Severn Beach to Weston-Super-Mare
06/04/25 10:55 Cardiff Central to Penzance
06/04/25 11:50 Penzance to Cardiff Central
06/04/25 13:30 Fareham to Cardiff Central
06/04/25 16:00 Cheltenham Spa to Swindon
06/04/25 16:47 Bristol Temple Meads to Castle Cary
06/04/25 17:25 Cardiff Central to Fareham
06/04/25 17:48 Bristol Temple Meads to Weymouth
06/04/25 18:30 Fareham to Cardiff Central
06/04/25 18:50 Swindon to London Paddington
06/04/25 19:00 Cheltenham Spa to Swindon
06/04/25 19:50 London Paddington to Great Malvern
06/04/25 20:11 Weymouth to Bristol Temple Meads
06/04/25 21:57 Worcester Shrub Hill to Bristol Temple Meads
07/04/25 00:35 Didcot Parkway to London Paddington
07/04/25 06:23 London Paddington to Didcot Parkway
Delayed
21:10 Exeter Central to Bristol Temple Meads
21:52 London Paddington to Worcester Shrub Hill
06/04/25 11:25 Cardiff Central to Fareham
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Author Topic: HS2 -the railway that blew billions - Panorama 16 September  (Read 2162 times)
TaplowGreen
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« on: September 11, 2024, 11:38:23 »

Worth a watch I would imagine...........
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TaplowGreen
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« Reply #1 on: September 16, 2024, 18:10:29 »

Worth a watch I would imagine...........

Just a reminder-8pm tonight on BBC1
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ChrisB
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« Reply #2 on: September 16, 2024, 21:28:16 »

Any good, or sensationalist?
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TaplowGreen
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« Reply #3 on: September 17, 2024, 07:09:29 »

Any good, or sensationalist?

I thought it was pretty good and didn't spare anyone's blushes. HS2 (The next High Speed line(s)) managers being told to keep quiet and sacked for highlighting cost increases. Minister's misleading Parliament on the same issue. The absurdity of appointing Oakervee to lead a review, and his deputy who was appointed to give some balance describing HS2 Ltd as "a complete shower".

Compulsory purchase system unfair and leaving many much worse off.

The effect the obsession with speed had on increasing cost, and a point I hadn't really considered made by Andrew Gilligan that given the relatively short distances between our major cities, such speed isn't necessary.......oh if only the emphasis/spin had been more on capacity rather than speed, cost and opposition could have been so much lower.

Adonis came out of it OK-ish and I must admit I hadn't realised that Cameron had been so keen.

There was also a good point that without the extension to Euston, the trek out to Old Oak from Central London removes any time saving to Birmingham

The last word went to Boris (as so often!) however, when talking to a schoolboy who was interviewing him on the subject - "when you're in a hole that deep, you have to keep digging".
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ChrisB
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« Reply #4 on: September 21, 2024, 21:42:57 »

So no railwaymen were involved in the making of this programme then? Says it all, frankly, as does Andrew Gilligan's involvement (always was an anti)
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Red Squirrel
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« Reply #5 on: September 22, 2024, 09:02:22 »

I was expecting this to be more of a hatchet-job than it turned out to be. A lot of the criticisms of HS2 (The next High Speed line(s)) Ltd seem fair. One point that stood out for me was the line speed: having just travelled across France by train at 320km/h, I wonder whether a design speed of 400km/h was really necessary. Or have I missed something?

My take was that the programme didn’t dispute that the line was necessary; it just felt that it could have been done a lot better. Which, of course, like anything, it could.
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Things take longer to happen than you think they will, and then they happen faster than you thought they could.
TaplowGreen
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« Reply #6 on: September 22, 2024, 15:57:11 »

I was expecting this to be more of a hatchet-job than it turned out to be. A lot of the criticisms of HS2 (The next High Speed line(s)) Ltd seem fair. One point that stood out for me was the line speed: having just travelled across France by train at 320km/h, I wonder whether a design speed of 400km/h was really necessary. Or have I missed something?

My take was that the programme didn’t dispute that the line was necessary; it just felt that it could have been done a lot better. Which, of course, like anything, it could.

I think that's a very fair assessment.

The point about speed is very interesting and it was telling that the programme discussed routes available which had been identified and which went around, rather than cutting straight through the Chilterns (albeit sacrificing some speed) which would have saved an awful lot of money and avoided a lot of protests.
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