| Are you a railway engineer or in some other related field? Some of these suggestions sound a bit bizarre to a layman, especially considering your idea that the only thing standing in our way is 4G signal and reshuffling some staff. > Get the typical journey speed up from 12 mph up to 45 mph. So instead of 30 minutes from Walthamstow to Brixton it'll be 8 minutes? How is that possible? There are 16 stations, or 14 stops excluding the terminii. If you stop for 30secs at each, that's 7 minutes in itself. > Make one direction of all tracks an express route that only stops at one station in 10 and drives 60 mph through all the others So we would have an express lane in one direction and a stopping lane in the other? Why is that a good thing? To me an express service seems /slower/ than the status quo, because I would have to wait longer for the train that stops where I want it to. |
> There are 16 stations, or 14 stops excluding the terminii. If you stop for 30secs at each, that's 7 minutes in itself.
Or... you could stop at only 6 of the stops (express service). You could stop for 15 seconds door-open-time (as long as the crowd waiting for the train entirely fits on the train, thats very achievable - and crowd control can be managed by controlling platform ingress). Busses often achieve 3 seconds of door open time for comparison.
At a top speed of 60 mph, max acceleration of 0.2g, max jerk of 3 m/s^3 and travel distance of 2 miles per stop, the whole travel time becomes 13 minutes. Plus the 1.5 minutes for stops. =14.5 mins = 49 mph.
Lets schedule in one 30 second slowdown (ie. drunk guy holds door for mate for 30 seconds), and the average speed hits the 45 mph target.
I suspect the victoria line, being more modern in its track alignment, could easily be made to go 100 mph too...