After a long overland journey I made it to Porto yesterday.
Today the plan was a few runs along the Douro Valley. But....
A slight farce. Class 20 clone and 3 coaches going along the Douro Valley. Defect with the middle coach, not to go any further. The UK▸ way, cancel and punters to board the Regua stopper adjacent which leaves in 45 minutes.
The Portuguese way. Uncouple the loco and run round whilst transferring the passengers. Split off the first coach then reverse back beyond the points then propel the defective vehicle and the one with passengers on board into a siding. Detach defective vehicle and secure it. Take the good coach out of the siding and then propel onto the other good coach, passengers still on board both vehicles. Couple up the coaches then run round the loco and depart. From station stop to departure took around 40 minutes.
Please do not show this post to the following company on medical grounds, you don't want to strain the NHS with multiple heart attacks.
The ORR» .
DaFT» .
Notwork Fail.
The Operation Standards of the majority of UK passenger TOCs▸ .
Train on the move an hour late. The next southbound around 20 late due to crossing at an unplanned station loop. Also the back working will be at least 40 late.
The experience in Portugal is very familiar to what would have happened on
BR▸ back in the 1970s, with the possible difference that the passengers would all have been tipped out onto the platform whilst the shunting movements were going on. That would have depended on whether any points which became facing during any movement were properly secured by a facing point lock