Grvrdvicdr
Member
Suppose to be picky Hastings sign Cannon StreetThanks, have updated. If that's all that's wrong I'll take that as a win but it's probably too good to be true!
Suppose to be picky Hastings sign Cannon StreetThanks, have updated. If that's all that's wrong I'll take that as a win but it's probably too good to be true!
It's a pretty big omission to be fair. I'll get it fixed.Suppose to be picky Hastings sign Cannon Street
Slade green (link dependent), gillingham and faversham plus the highspeed depots sign Gravesend-Strood. Then strood-Rochester (except slade green)It's a pretty big omission to be fair. I'll get it
Quite predictably, this decision has been partially reversed, and Ilford, Gidea Park and Shenfield depots are having Hayes to West Drayton putting back onto licenses for contingency purposes. Should mostly be complete in the next week or so.Little update from MTR EL.
Ilford, Gidea Park and Shenfield no longer have Hayes to West Drayton for contingency.
Maidenhead no longer have Liverpool Street High Level for contingency.
I believe they're route conducted; hence the (operational, unadvertised) stops at Doncaster.How do Hull Trains’ drivers keep up competency via the MML, I guess they jump in with EMR? Thanks
Do Slade Green still sign as far as Strood since they lost their Medway Valley line work?Slade green (link dependent), gillingham and faversham plus the highspeed depots sign Gravesend-Strood. Then strood-Rochester (except slade green)
Quite predictably, this decision has been partially reversed, and Ilford, Gidea Park and Shenfield depots are having Hayes to West Drayton putting back onto licenses for contingency purposes. Should mostly be complete in the next week or so.
Thanks, duly updated.Merseyrail needs an update as it still says 508 and they are now (sadly) gone
They do yes, they do peak services down there. But only the higher linksDo Slade Green still sign as far as Strood since they lost their Medway Valley line work?
Thanks, duly updated.
Thanks. I'm especially grateful for the help I get with Southeastern since it's so far off my own patch and rather complicated.They do yes, they do peak services down there. But only the higher links
Uddingston - Law Junction via HolytownGot a quick question regarding Avanti West Coast for drivers that sign to Glasgow. On this thread it lists Glasgow including various diversions around Glasgow. Does anyone have a list of which routes these diversions include for Avanti drivers?
That's great, thanks.Uddingston - Law Junction via Holytown
Motherwell - Holytown
Motherwell - Bellshill
Polmadie and Waverley also sign
Central - Newton via Mount Florida
Holytown - Midcalder Junction via the Benhar
When 221s finished up there Edinburgh - Motherwell via Grangemouth/Cumbernauld, the Edinburgh Suburban line and the R&C line via Carmyle have all come off route cards (along with Dumfries of course)
I'm assuming you mean guards if you're talking about TMs?Not sure if this has been said but Penzance GWR has been merged with HSS, all are now TMs. Not sure about any route card changes. Would assume the TMs will remain and the CNDR will hold old and TM stuff until the old stuff lapses.
Thanks for this, I'll try get this updated as soon as I can.Uddingston - Law Junction via Holytown
Motherwell - Holytown
Motherwell - Bellshill
Polmadie and Waverley also sign
Central - Newton via Mount Florida
Holytown - Midcalder Junction via the Benhar
When 221s finished up there Edinburgh - Motherwell via Grahamston/Cumbernauld, the Edinburgh Suburban line and the R&C line via Carmyle have all come off route cards (along with Dumfries of course)
Thanks, have put that in now. I've done a little tidy up of Avanti, but if you or anyone else has the full details of which West Midlands diversions are signed and by which depot, I'd be very grateful. I assume everyone who signs New Street signs Wolves to New Street via Bescot and Soho at the very least, and I would expect Birmingham/Stechford - Aston - Perry Barr as well? I know Wolves used to sign Birmingham to Nuneaton but I wonder if that is still the case and if so, if anyone else signs it?Uddingston - Law Junction via Holytown
Motherwell - Holytown
Motherwell - Bellshill
Polmadie and Waverley also sign
Central - Newton via Mount Florida
Holytown - Midcalder Junction via the Benhar
When 221s finished up there Edinburgh - Motherwell via Grahamston/Cumbernauld, the Edinburgh Suburban line and the R&C line via Carmyle have all come off route cards (along with Dumfries of course)
Thanks, I take it the turf war between Blackpool and Blackburn over that work has been resolved then?Northern: Blackpool North
No longer sign Clitheroe to Hellifield.
Northern: Blackburn
Will shortly begin route-learning Clitheroe to Blea Moor.
I believe so, yes! Just to clarify, Blackpool North do still sign as far as Clitheroe.Thanks, I take it the turf war between Blackpool and Blackburn over that work has been resolved then?
Interesting - do they work occasional Manchester - Clitheroe trips north from Blackburn?I believe so, yes! Just to clarify, Blackpool North do still sign as far as Clitheroe.
That is my current understanding, yes.Interesting - do they work occasional Manchester - Clitheroe trips north from Blackburn?
No worries, I've got it put back in.That is my current understanding, yes.
As I understand, after years of being told their depot work was daft, Hornsey Outer Link is now also signing 717s (and do inner work again), and they also sign for Three Bridges and Peterborough...
For essentially variants of the same traction, it would all be part of the same course. So you would do an 80x course which includes 800 and 801. The manual is also just one 80x manual.I don’t even claim to have an ounce of knowledge but I were just reading through and living along the EC I took an interest in what my ‘local’ TOCs signed and where from. Something which just caught my eye is that for LNER it just has 80x however hull has specifically 802. My question is that does each type of 80x have a separate training course? To clarify I am meaning LNER drivers have to do a separate course for the 800 and 801 and hull drivers for the 802 or do they overlap meaning that an LNER driver could just do training on an 800 but drive both 800 and 801. Sorry if I have confused things or if this isn’t the right place but it just caught my eye and were bugging me a bit!
Thanks in advance.
Thanks you for your reply, that does make sense then, I suppose there just isn’t point in doing a different course for things which are so similar.For essentially variants of the same traction, it would all be part of the same course. So you would do an 80x course which includes 800 and 801. The manual is also just one 80x manual.
If you transfer to a different company such as LNER to Hull trains, even if it’s the same traction, you may potentially have to do the full course again (traction courses aren’t that long anyway in context of overall training ~ 1-3 weeks depending on traction). Or you may be able to do a Training Needs Analysis (TNA) and do a quicker version of the course plus assessment will always need to be done again.
No problem, thanks.Thanks you for your reply, that does make sense then, I suppose there just isn’t point in doing a different course for things which are so similar.
I were going to ask whether this still applied as the 801 is electric and the 800 bimode, before remembering the 801s had the emergency diesel thing and so the 800 and 801 are even more similar than I thought!
Like I say thanks mate, have a good day!
Edit: sorry another question popped into my head! Would it be down as 80x on a tractions card ( I understand that’s the correct lingo) or would 801 and 800 be separate there?
Sorry for the bombardment and if you don’t know, no sweat but it’s worth asking!