17-09-2014, 21:39 | #21 | |
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Locating in Portlaoise while not good it does deliver advantages to. Last edited by Jamie2k9 : 17-09-2014 at 21:41. |
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17-09-2014, 22:17 | #22 | |
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You certainly couldn't last 48 hours without refuelling/discharging toilets. That's done daily. |
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17-09-2014, 22:47 | #23 | |
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If a new fleet of trains need tlc every 48h then questions need to be asked when average millage would be 700-1000 miles. The fuel tanks are quiet large, its somewhere between 500 to 1000 miles worth of fuel they can take and the toilets are not always emptied daily. Last edited by Jamie2k9 : 17-09-2014 at 22:52. |
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18-09-2014, 04:44 | #24 | |
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Last edited by berneyarms : 18-09-2014 at 05:22. |
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18-09-2014, 08:26 | #25 |
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There is no need to get back to base every 48 hours (that said the 29k's reliability is down to getting home regularly)
There is a basic inspection requirement at 48 hours that can be done locally.
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18-09-2014, 10:53 | #26 |
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The location of the Traincare Depot in Portlaoise may in part be due to local political pressure. But it was spurred on partly by the need to free up some land in Inchicore for Dart Underground access. However in my opinion the real killer was the plan to make vast profits for Irish Rail and/or developers by using the Inchicore site for housing and office development. Also land near the railway in the Dublin area was horrifically expensive, so Portlaoise seemed a comparatively good choice at the time.
The true ongoing costs of running trains to the Portlaoise depot must be far more than the cost just of running the hourly service to Portlaoise station. So we are left with yet another expensive legacy of the Celtic Tiger years and the truly demented property market in the years prior to 2008. |
18-09-2014, 16:09 | #27 |
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well, another reason for portlaoise was that it is central to the entire heuston inter-city network and so can send out replacement trains to various places more efficiently than out of the core. it was also supposedly handy for the clockface every 2 hour/1 hour service every route was to have with the 22k fleet.
as for toilets/fuel, toilets are emptied all the time in heuston between arrivals and departures. maybe fuel is done there too for all i know. |
18-09-2014, 16:38 | #28 |
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Thomas J Stamp: The place that's most central to the Heuston/Intercity network is Heuston itself, or Heuston/Inchicore. Most trainsets either end their day there, or visit on a turn-around, which facilitates swapping with a newly-serviced set. Portlaoise is much less efficient as a location. If, say you want to get a 22k to Limerick after servicing, you have to either run it empty directly from Portlaoise or run it (quite probably empty) into Heuston to form a Limerick service, and then there is the reverse move with the set it has replaced.
Another bad Celtic Tiger legacy. |
18-09-2014, 17:19 | #29 |
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Well there is a dirty great tank with "20,000 litre Diesel Tank" written on it at the end of platform 1 in Connolly so I guess there must be the equivalent in Heuston. It would be too stupid even for Irish Rail to be sending a train on a 60 mile round trip to get enough fuel for 1000 miles.
The situation out of Connolly must be even worse as by my reckoning there must be 4 sets overnighting in Sligo, as the 1505, 1600, 1705 & 1905 all arrive after (or just as) the last up-train leaves. There were a lot of stupid decisions made by Irish Rail (and others) during the Celtic Tiger but there is very little can be done about them. |
18-09-2014, 18:08 | #30 |
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I don't have the same animus towards Portlaoise/Drogheda - storing trains, particularly commuter ones, in the outer edges of a network makes logistical sense. The land was probably a damn sight cheaper and as noted freed up some in Inchicore. If there is insufficient maintenance cover at Heuston/Connolly then that is a point that could be made irrespective of the decision to create the outer depots.
That said, the sight of 29000s dragging DARTs to and from Drogheda does make one wonder whether a bit too much was sent out of town Connolly side. |
18-09-2014, 19:16 | #31 | |
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Nor do I have a problem with Drogheda - it makes perfect sense for the 29k fleet to be maintained there. It was the closure of Connolly valeting plant for servicing ICRs I have the problem with as it makes rostering sets far more difficult and is part of the reason for the sight of ICRs on local services and 29k on Intercity trips. |
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18-09-2014, 19:18 | #32 | |
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18-09-2014, 20:41 | #33 | ||
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If you ask me it was an excuse to allow 22's operate the Commuter routes. ( I know some sets were got for this). Quote:
The number of units in Sligo overnight compares to most terminus stations. |
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18-09-2014, 20:56 | #34 |
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Getting back to the original topic, I think in a situation where a set *was* being sent up to Portlaoise depot, wouldn't it still be worth offering a connecting service to Kildare, where the train would be reversing back down towards Portlaoise anyway? Shouldn't let perfect be the enemy of good.
All that said, if posters here don't have possession of a current IE working timetable, why assume that there are reasons a train is not running in service as a way to shut down discussion? As I said upthread, IE are well capable of their own naysaying without others helping them. |
19-09-2014, 09:39 | #35 |
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Any out of service train within reason should operate in service.
Thankfully there has been a serious reduction in the number of out of service trains in recent years
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19-09-2014, 16:42 | #36 |
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Dowlingn
IE need a push to get things done. One very good reason for the stock transfer not being in service is the journey time often took 3 hours to complete. Todays service was held for 35 minutes waiting for train crossings and that was caused by delay of a couple of minutes. |
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