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Driver H. Potter's Wombledon Park Picture PageText & Images (unless otherwise stated) © S. Upton 2005 - 2008. All images remain the property of their respective owners. No images are to be used commercially or otherwise without the written permission of the owners.
July 01 Spin Spin SugarOK. Now, concentrate folks. This is going to be difficult for some of you, so I'll drop in certain words and phrases during this post to keep your attention focused. The first person to spot them all will win a small prize courtesy of Potters Excess Railway Junk Ltd. We're going to talk about railways. This will come as no surprise to some of you, and others will as I write this, be frantically clicking the "Back" button on their browser. Whitehall has been talking about electrifying the UK Rail Network. Sounds a good idea, doesn't it? All those lovely sparks on the mainline, none of this costly running diesel trains on electrified tracks and best of all keeping the precious fuel in reserve so that railway anoraks and hooligan drivers can use it to make bloody great clouds of smoke at railway diesel galas. I know the last category isn't perhaps valid on a national scale, but some of the hooligan drivers know where I live and having all the windows intact gives such a finished look to a house, don't you think? But I digress. Could this be the beginning of the new Age of the Train? Better yet, could this be the new age of the train but without Jimmy Saville? Well, probably not. After all, we wouldn't want a pretty document to get in the way of unpleasant hard facts. Hard facts like EU emissions directives that will mean closing down polluting coal-fired power stations. Hard facts like even if we start now, sufficient nuclear power generation (it's the future, folks - despite what the likes of Friends of the Earth seem to think) wouldn't be online until 2030. So where would all this electricity come from exactly? Clearly Whitehall has been in intensive negotiation with the electricity fairies: that or this is all simply schmaltz to disguise the fact that the DafT (thank you, Railway Eye) really has not got a sodding clue how to run a railway. It's a worrying thought that after we managed to leave the Tory "railway in decline" years firmly behind us, none in charge seems to have any idea of how to further expand a growing business. Thinks: Perhaps that's the difference between business and government - business goes about getting results, whilst governments merely talk about getting them... Thinks again: Time for an attention-getting phrase...
Large Pert Boobies... There. That seems to cover that.
Anyhow, why the hell are electrification and capacity not being considered together? Surely logic would dictate an incremental approach of identify which routes would benefit from the wires or juice rail, then apply those along with work to enhance track capacity so that civil engineering costs aren't incurred twice? For those of you who are knowledgeable, I'm thinking of the Salisbury to Exeter route in this instance. Why in God’s name would anyone think that marrying two schemes into one wouldn't be cost effective? The High Speed Rail Link from St Pancras to the Channel Tunnel is proof that major engineering can be achieved on time and on budget. By the way, anyone sat at their computer screens yelling "Rugby! Liverpool Street! Shields Junction!" and pulling their hair out might have a point - Network Rail seems to have trouble organising the proverbial drinking session within the ale-producing facility at the moment. So back to capacity and enhancement. The network is creaking. Rather loudly. In deference to Network Rail, they have the unenviable task of running a railway, repairing the railway and pandering to TOCs and government know-nothings all at the same time. One wonders how Iain Coucher, NRs head honcho and public Hate Figure in Chief, sleeps at night? If I thought I had to repair a knackered system, run said system harder than it's been run since the 1940s with less than half of the capacity it had in the 1940s, keep the government quiet and try to achieve economies year-on-year but cutting down repair work I'd have to hang myself: quickly. That said I probably still manage to garner a large bonus of some sort; in this case possibly for reducing wear and tear on the office carpet or perhaps I might gain a knighthood for services to the Rope Industry...
Oiled lithe bodies performing certain naughty acts... (Cunning eh? Suggestive and yet completely "My Mum" friendly.)
So, on the large scale, the Railway is going to hell on a handcart.* On the micro scale, of course, minor miracles are performed on a daily basis. Staff work their buttocks off, trains run, goods move, passengers are carted from place to place in reasonable time and comfort - Things Work. I was greatly heartened to see that Virgin West Coast have been running trains along diversionary routes rather than simply sticking their passengers on buses this weekend. What a novel idea: if one route isn’t available, then find another route that is and use it. Gosh. Perhaps Network Rail isn’t such a bad old stick after all? It would be nice to think that we are moving forwards, though: allowing our passengers to travel on the trains they paid through-the-nose to ride on would be a good start don’t you think? It’s a sad thought to entertain, but Virgins efforts seem to be an isolated spark of common sense. Judging by the bilge and spin spouting from the Department of Transport, it seems that the railway industry is forever doomed to tread water.
Oh well - at least we'll soon have some Real Trains back on the mainline. And perhaps sooner than everyone thinks...
* - As long as the handcart isn't made by Alstom, I don't mind. There's nothing worse than having to journey to eternal damnation and having to stop en route to reboot the onboard computer. Perhaps a travelling fitter would be in order. June 21 Not All The Time, But Sometimes...Remember how good life is. Remember you are lucky to have a pulse. After all, a lot of people don't - Napoleon, Leonardo da Vinci, Beethoven, Jimi Hendrix, Kurt Cobain. Look at a sunrise and remember that you are the only person who will ever see what you are seeing, who will ever stand where you stand and think your thoughts.
I only offer these thoughts having just seen a spoken word performance by Henry Rollins on Youtube (YouTube being what 01.10 on a sleepless Saturday morning was invented for). The performance was, well, powerful. I have a lot of time for Mr Rollins and his thoughts: make 20 minutes in your life, watch both videos.
Henry isn't a hippy. I am. But on this we both agree - life is for living. Enjoy it. June 16 A South Western Slammer Back From The DeadIt's for real folks - I've just been emailed the press release:
News Release
Classic Slam Door Electric Train To Return to the Mainline 16th June 2008
Bruce Knights, Managing Director of Knights Rail Services Ltd has today announced his agreement to purchase the remaining 63 stock EMU vehicles in store at MOD Shoeburyness, with the express intention of returning a Southern Region slam door electric train to the mainline.
The ex Fratton Depot 4 car CIG unit 1881 is considered to be in excellent condition and will be reinstated for occasional mainline use by the technical teams at Eastleigh Works, where the slam door trains were overhauled and maintained throughout their lives. The former Southern Railway Works at Eastleigh, shut by Alstom in 2006, was reopened by Knights Rail last year and has a healthy and growing rail business once again. The site retains its electrified third rail system in active use and has the heavy engineering workshops necessary to maintain the trains.
The vehicles will be renovated as a commercial venture designed to showcase the capabilities and expertise of KRS and Eastleigh Works. They will also be used to provide training for engineers and technicians learning about electric traction systems.
Bruce Knights commented
“I’ve wanted to get one of these trains back running again for many years and seeing the immaculate blue VEP 3417 at Swanage in May tipped me over the edge. I would have dearly loved to acquire that one but it’s already spoken for, so 1881 it is. The other vehicles we have purchased would need extensive work to bring them back into service and it may make sense to look around for another sound 4 car unit to join 1881. Electric trains parked off the power are a bit like Concorde in a museum, in that you really need to see them in action to appreciate them properly. We are uniquely placed to run these classic electric trains, having all the facilities, resources and expertise to do it. Whilst I will be quite happy to lend our units to preserved lines from time to time, the real purpose is to run them back over their old routes under power, whilst giving hands on training to the next generation of engineers. Of course, when the day comes that we run a classic 8 car slam door EMU into a London Terminus you can expect me to be grinning from ear to ear”
The purchased units 1881 and 1304, along with a hybrid made from vehicles from 3536 and 1884 will be moved to the Knights Rail’s Eastleigh Works in July for assessment. Unit 1881 will be re-commissioned into mainline running status over the next 6 months, initially for use in multiple with class 73s but later for use on its own. The issues concerning fitment of OTMR and secondary door locking are under investigation. It is hoped that some or all of the vehicles will feature in a celebration of Eastleigh Works centenary in 2009.
Notes to Editors
Knights Rail Services Ltd is a £2M turnover privately owned railway services business formed in 2001. It operates its train decontamination and asbestos removal business from Shoeburyness in Essex and leases Eastleigh Works in Hampshire for railway rolling stock activities. 1963 Stock is the group name for the famous slam door electric trains that operated on the South London lines until 2005. Apart from 6 coaches operated by Southwest Trains on the short Lymington branch, no units remain in active service.
NB: Fat Potter is now going to go and have a lie-down in a darkened room until his heart rate drops below 200 bpm.... Bruce - you don't need a qualified driver for 1881, do you?
June 12 OK - A Slight Guff-Up...I have this day been sent an email by one Bruce Knights, of Knights Rail Services.
I thought I'd let you know, folks, because in it he was kind enough to correct something that I had been told and had passed on in good faith. Sadly everyone makes mistakes, and my mistake on this occasion was to trust information which I had no way to verify. Well, not until today at least. So, for anyone who is still reading, I have to tell you that I was wrong. 3417, Wimbledon Parks baby, is not going to be returning to the mainline any time soon. She will be going to the Bluebell Railway, to be cared for by that august and well respected company, and will fly the flag for them as they progress in their bid to extend their running line to East Grinstead.
Naturally, that isn't the news I wanted to give you all: but economics and Real Life have to get in the way of pipe-dreams every once in a while.
To anyone involved in the Bluebell Railway, my sincere and unreserved apologies. I think I've created work for you where work wasn't needed. Sorry, chaps.
But ("in itallics", thought the attentive reader, "something important must be coming up") it turns out I wasn't wide of the mark concerning a 400-series slammer coming back to the mainline. I just got the number wrong. It's not going to be 3417 that makes a glorious come-back, it's going to be 1881. Not a VEP, but a CIG. Below is the edited message Bruce sent me today, detailing what he's doing - nice to be given the news first. Thanks, Bruce! - and what will be moving to Eastliegh in the next few months. For those of you who have even a passing interest in railway preservation, I'm certain you'll agree that this is a big deal. Hot on the heels of the amazing work of the AC Loco Group, it looks like the Southern Electric is going to be the next port of call for electric preservation.
"I’ve just looked over the units at Shoebury and 1881 has blown me away by being in really good nick. It doesn’t even smell damp and was clearly in good order before being retired. The interior is better than I could have possibly hoped for with virtually new cushions. This unit won’t take very much to get back up and running at all. It even had traces of air still in it from a move 2 weeks ago.
The VEP TS and MBS from 423536 are less good but fully complete. They have the usual upholstery rot under the windows and the red cushions are faded and dirty but the fact that there is an MBS left out of the unit and not a DT as I had been led to believe is another good result. Nothing appears to have been removed. The 2 DTS from 1884 are not too bad with a bit of water ingress but nothing major. Apart from the speedo they are also complete AFAIK. All these 8 vehicles will be straightforward to move out by rail. Poor old 1304 is less good. It’s had its brake chests, MBS doors and dash panels removed and is also pretty damp throughout. It’ll have to move by road and is realistically only useful for spares. Having said that, it’ll yield enough bits to keep 1881 on the line for years to come. So 1881 it is. I’ll buy all of 12 of the Shoebury vehicles and either strip the others for spares." So there we are. At last, the real prospect of seeing classic Southern Electric traction back where it belongs - on the mainline.
The whole of the Southern network suddenly becomes available - yes, that could mean having a locomotive to pilot the units, but frankly that is good enough. And that piloting loco doesn't have to stay on the Southern, either. The first slammer to Plymouth, anyone? Or the first slammer over the Settle - Carlisle?!
It doesn't even end there - with the addition of the obligatory black box and of course central door locking there is the chance of seeing one of these fine workhorses back out on the mainline, at mainline speeds, on their own.
For myself, things are bittersweet. 3417 will still be going to her rest at East Grinstead, and after the work Wimbledon has put into her that counts as a loss. The Bluebell will do their damndest to keep her looking good, I have no doubt, and good luck to them.
But the reality of Bruces plan is that at least one mainline slam door unit will be seen out there flying the flag: and for that we must be more than grateful!
Now - I wonder how I persuade SWT to let me keep that little "400-series" box on my driving licence...? June 11 It's Getting Closer....Anyone remember this...?
"... a gleaming 8-car slam door train galloping along the South Western mainline in BR blue and grey, two-tone horn blaring as it charges past Wimbledon Park depot on the Down Fast at 75mph towards Weymouth. Depot staff stand outside the shed watching 'their' eight-car pass, passengers at the windows, photographers at the line side. 1304 and 1396 blast through, the last of the South Western Greyhounds, with motors howling, barrelling over the crossings before diving under Durnsford Road bridge... pick-up shoes arcing as they cross the gaps in the juice with the power handle never leaving Notch Four. Haring into the curve at Wimbledon, the driver sounds the horn and leaves it open as he passes the platform - the cameras click as a waved hand appears briefly at the the windscreen."
Well, it might be getting a little closer.
Stay tuned folks. Things are happening...
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