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16-02-2012, 22:23 | #61 |
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It's impossible to hide in the siding in Nenagh, as you would have to wait for the other train to either reach Roscrea or Birdhill, before the signaling system would release the staff. The bodged signaling solution allows for a train to split only (and only if it originated in Birdhill). So looking at a very long wait. Siding is off limits to in service passenger trains as well
The second platform is Roscrea is still registered as a available and has been used for passengers in recent years.
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16-02-2012, 22:54 | #62 |
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17-02-2012, 01:12 | #63 | |
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You are unlikely to have change out of €500,000.
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17-02-2012, 05:44 | #64 |
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They could take them ugly old footbridges from Thurles and Templemore and reuse them. Modern stations but footbridges from the 1840s still remain.
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17-02-2012, 05:53 | #65 |
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I've only passed through Birdhill once on a Limerick-Ballybrophy service and that was more years than I care to remember so I don't know if this would even work - is it legal to open a second entrance to a station to a remote platform, stick a TVM on it, and deem that platform legal without a bridge or tunnel to the other platform?
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17-02-2012, 09:22 | #66 |
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Any footbridge installed has to be accessible under the regulations in force
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17-02-2012, 09:57 | #67 |
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Well the truth is Irish Rail have made NO request as this time to apply for a timetable change
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17-02-2012, 13:29 | #68 | |
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This arrangement applied for years at Newry, whereby a gate was opened by station staff and passengers with luggage or those unable to negotiate the footbridge were conducted across the line when safe to do so. Such an arrangement at Roscrea and Birdhill would probably be safer than a footbridge given that the risk of being hit by a train is probably much less than that of tripping on the steps of a footbridge. |
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17-02-2012, 14:07 | #69 |
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New arrangements like this are not allowed under relevant safety legislation. Existing arrangements are grandfathered.
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17-02-2012, 14:41 | #70 |
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Right, but what if you had two platforms with two separate entrances, i.e. no bridge? Are IE required to connect both platforms together? I realise it is a ridiculous way to run a railroad where you essentially have two halts across the track from each other but the alternative is spending a six figure sum...
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17-02-2012, 15:03 | #71 |
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A separate entrance is acceptable provided it is accessible.
When we drew up a plan for the line years ago, we managed to get away without needing a second platform at any station, the Kilmastulla headhunt could be cheaply turned into a loop thus avoiding the hassle The UK solution is for a long platform with the loop half way down so two trains use the same platform
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17-02-2012, 17:36 | #72 | |
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17-02-2012, 18:34 | #73 | |
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In any event neither Birdhill or Roscrea could be described as new ! This type of rubbish costs a lot of money. Access the risk, take appropriate mitigation and bobs your uncle, job done. If the RSC has a problem, then maybe the RSC is the problem. |
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17-02-2012, 19:02 | #74 |
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17-02-2012, 21:20 | #75 |
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Both platforms at Roscrea and Birdhill are entirely intact. The second platform at Nenagh is also intact although the track serving it is long gone.
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17-02-2012, 21:41 | #76 |
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17-02-2012, 21:45 | #77 | |
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roscrea platform is useable ...but there is no means to acess it without walking across the line! and trains are scheuled to cross at roscrea at18.40pm when the service comes in ! roscrea the birr platform ,has not been used since the 1980s for passenger transactions , passenger trains have pulled in but you are not let out of the train ! Last edited by doherty jack : 17-02-2012 at 21:49. |
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17-02-2012, 22:41 | #78 |
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YOU CANNOT put a passenger train with passengers onboard in the siding in Nenagh, its not allowed under the signaling rules.
YOU HAVE to wait until the other train reaches Roscrea or Birdhill before the train can be unlocked out of the siding, so unless you fancy a 40 minute layover its not a workable solution
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17-02-2012, 22:43 | #79 |
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Different rules for light and heavy railways. Luas crossings are fully flat and there is a speed limit of I think 30km/h going through, plus all Luas trams are all-stops.
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17-02-2012, 23:53 | #80 | |
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FYI -
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Am I to infer from this that existing commuter times are to be preserved? 'Extra' being the operative word? Last edited by Colm Moore : 18-02-2012 at 02:12. Reason: [color] changed to [quote] |
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