The Cotswold Line will not be wired until the
XC▸ route from Birmingham to Bristol and the Birmingham Snow Hill-Worcester services are electrified. Given that the Snow Hill services are about to get a brand-new dmu fleet and XC wiring is some way down the queue of future prospects, don't hold your breath.
Rhydgaled, just send a letter to the
DfT» telling them where they are going wrong and spare us yet another rendition of your theories.
We have seen loco hauled sets with a dvt at the other end .... can we not have a diesel loco at one end and an electric loco that can act as a dvt at the other end so that under the wires its electric and west of england its diesel
They tried that with one of the many previous incarnations of the
IEP▸ design, then had to admit that you simply couldn't get enough traction power out of the diesel end to shift a full-length train.
lots of stops and uphill and down dale so full power is not needed for a lot of the journey
Eh? Lots of stops and full power is not needed for a lot of the journey? What do you think an
HST▸ is using after all those stops to get back up to line speed? And apart from odd short bits of level track the line is a continuous climb from Wolvercot to north of Moreton-in-Marsh for westbound trains and a roller-coaster through the Vale of Evesham for eastbound services before you hit Campden bank. The route is hard work for diesels - illustrated by the ill-starred period of Class 31 operation in the 1970s. They simply weren't up to it - too heavy and not enough power.
Does anyone know why the Inverness and ABerdeen out of Kings Cross are HSTs rather than 91 to Edinburgh and diesel from there
Because
BR▸ realised that constantly coupling and uncoupling locos from sets of coaches led to lots of problems with the time division multiplex connections needed to drive the locos from driving van trailers. Keep locos and rolling stock semi-permanently coupled (also done on the
WCML▸ pre-Pendolinos) and you pretty much eliminate the problem. In any case, I don't think it was ever intended that the Mk4s would work with diesel traction off the core
ECML▸ route. The idea was the 91 could be uncoupled from them and used at night on freight and parcels, hence the blunt-end driving cabs.
Also Virgin used to pull pendelinos to Hollyhead using diesel locos. I went on one once, it was very slow.
It's Holyhead and Pendolinos. And Virgin still do, every Saturday. The speed has as much to do with the prevailing limits on the North Wales coast line as the locos used. It is not a racetrack.
i would think something like a class 70 or probably even a class 66/67 could do the diesel end
Purpose-designed heavy freight locos or a track-bashing Bo-Bo intended for long-distance high-speed parcels work. Just the ticket for stops and starts every eight minutes. Not.