Omega Owners Forum

Chat Area => General Discussion Area => Topic started by: feeutfo on 07 January 2012, 17:54:31

Title: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: feeutfo on 07 January 2012, 17:54:31
When Hs2 is built?  :-X

 How the hell can we afford this? Job creation, improved service, but we're skint
, and straight through the Chlterns ...  :o
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: omega3000 on 07 January 2012, 18:46:03
 :( Just what i thought ...they can find the money when they want to  :-\
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: the alarming man on 07 January 2012, 19:02:18
and it is going to take from 2014 to 2026........ :D :D
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: Shackeng on 07 January 2012, 19:41:20
Better spent on a new London airport IMHO, which will HAVE to be built eventually, and for which much private investment awaits. :y
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: tidla on 07 January 2012, 20:19:21
about time they created some work for the private sector. we are years behind other countries when it comes to rail travel.

the trouble is that with rail fair prices constantly increasing,  no bugger will be able to afford to travel on it by the time its built.

so much for green public transport.
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: feeutfo on 07 January 2012, 22:26:59
Reading station getting massive makeover, again. Two major traffic bottle necks removed with two new higher wider bridges. More platforms, another smaller station, blah blah. North Reading town centre re developed, access to the river. Yah.

Been in planning for ages I guess. :-\

Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: Terbs on 08 January 2012, 01:18:21
This was signed, sealed and delivered before the public knew anything about it >:(
Probably lots of pockets lined, as is the norm. >:(
And we can do nothing about it >:( and don't give me the crap about the ballot box......there are them and us...simples >:(
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: feeutfo on 08 January 2012, 01:52:09
Consultation is bolbox. Yes we'll consult, give everyone the idea they have a say or that they can make a difference... Then plough ahead anyway. Works council style. ;D

But then, job creation etc....
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: adey2 on 08 January 2012, 01:59:52
by the time its built branson will be doing his space trips and may be cheaper too to go on one
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: albitz on 08 January 2012, 02:37:49
Iirc the cost has been put at £32 billion.Will be interesting to see what the total is at the end of the job. Usually, these things end up costing many times more than the original figure,due to ending up as a gravy train driven by govt. types who have no clue about how to be businesslike.
Hence the end cost of the Olympics,the big tent in Greenwich etc.
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: blackviper90210 on 08 January 2012, 08:42:14
£32billion for a new train service that'll take longer to build than it will take to sort the middle east out......mmmmm.  Could we not use that money to pay off our debts or invest in better services that we already have and are in desperate need of bringing out of the Victorian Age?

No no no, that would be too bloody sensible and I do believe they missed a "1" off the front of the 32 ::)    More like £132billion at the end >:(
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: Dishevelled Den on 08 January 2012, 08:57:54
This was signed, sealed and delivered before the public knew anything about it >:(
Probably lots of pockets lined, as is the norm. >:(
And we can do nothing about it >:( and don't give me the crap about the ballot box......there are them and us...simples >:(


I certainly agree with that one Terb. :y
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: feeutfo on 08 January 2012, 09:00:39
Lets hope the recession has turned round by then aye....
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: Dishevelled Den on 08 January 2012, 09:33:08
£32billion for a new train service that'll take longer to build than it will take to sort the middle east out......mmmmm.  Could we not use that money to pay off our debts or invest in better services that we already have and are in desperate need of bringing out of the Victorian Age?

No no no, that would be too bloody sensible and I do believe they missed a "1" off the front of the 32 ::)    More like £132billion at the end >:(


You're a heartless sod 'Viper :( :(

That kind of radical opinion will only disappoint those lobbyists, politicians and self-interest groups who toiled for so long behind the scenes in the expectation of some financial advantage filtering down from such a project.

Think of their human rights and potential psychological damage should they suddenly realize that all their work was expected to have ultimately been of benefit to the country and those travellers using such a service rather than their own bank accounts. :o :o

As for the inevitable ballooning cost of the project? - we are in the age of plenty (if current spending is anything to go by) and any overspend can be accommodated by the government of the day simply making more money available to take care of it then recouping the costs from the souls who will have to use the service and, invariably, from the motorists who will face yet more costs in the name of 'environmental' concerns while being lectured of how they are bringing the country to its knees while cruelly raping the environment in the process.
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: Dishevelled Den on 08 January 2012, 09:56:46
about time they created some work for the private sector. we are years behind other countries when it comes to rail travel.

the trouble is that with rail fair prices constantly increasing,  no bugger will be able to afford to travel on it by the time its built.

so much for green public transport.


Yes, I would also agree with that one Tid. :y


with rail fair prices constantly increasing

Therein lurks the problem - mass transport should be safe, dependable and, above anything else, affordable.

Those who operate public transport services in this country have a tendency to put overall profit before much else and the way recent governments have dealt with this - and other aspects of critical infrastructure - (in terms of national security and overall strategy) one would have though that it didn't matter too much.
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: Varche on 08 January 2012, 11:28:30
HS2 is a white elephant.

It is going to cost more than 32 billion for sure. When it does no one will get sacked.

What to do with the cost. Borrow more and blame it on the last government?

Hand it over at a knock down price to private company to complete and then charge exhorbitant rates to users who as a result desert the service and use............cars

sadly the time for High Speed networks in NIMBY Britain has gone.

Spain got theirs just in time and excellent it is too. second largest network of high speed track in the world after China of course.

London Airport.  Years ago my solution to this was to build an airport out in the sea East of London with a high speed links. Boris Johnson is right. There is a small problem with a sunken WW2 ship loaded with unexploded bombs. No problem. Controlled mother and father of an explosion to mark the start of the Olympics. 
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: tunnie on 08 January 2012, 12:32:14
Chiltern will remain & be more popular I think due to lower fares. HS1 withdrew high speed services due to extra cost of fares, people were not prepared to pay the extra, HS2 is also non-stop to London.
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: TheBoy on 08 January 2012, 14:47:46
I had no particular views on HS2 before I went to the consultation. Its going to be about 0.75m from here, as the crow flies, and in a slight cutting, so unlikely it'll affect me, beyond construction work.

However, having been to the consultation, I am now very anti it. Even there own business case figures don't add up.  So that £32b is barely touching the surface for Phase 1.  And remember, until Phase 2 is built (it never will be), its a rather pointless exercise, except to get that "less than an hour" Birmingham to London moniker. As opposed to the 1hr17 it used to be before the consultation started (I note that Birmingham to Euston times are increasing, despite the rail bypasses they have built around many statsions such as Milton Keynes - cynical??).

The business case makes out this will be cost neutral, due to 'easier' travel between Birmingham and London. Without explaining where the financial benefits come from.


With face to face meetings slowly becoming a thing of the past, technology allowing office workers to be based anywhere, is there going to be a need for such a link in 15yrs time when its built (if on time)?

The only people who physically need to travel - shop workers, factory workers, cleaning services etc - are the ones who will not be able to afford to use it.  They will be forced to use East Coast mainline or Slug line. Although I suspect Network Rail, to hide their blushes, will force those operators not to do non stop Birmingham to London services.  These services that actually stop at stations on route can only be run with approx 40% subsidies (that the governament already imply is unsustainable), so what chance does HS2 have of being able to be anything other than a moneypit. Unless they offer a premium 1st class service, Concord style, purely for the rich...
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: TheBoy on 08 January 2012, 14:49:38
Chiltern will remain & be more popular I think due to lower fares. HS1 withdrew high speed services due to extra cost of fares, people were not prepared to pay the extra, HS2 is also non-stop to London.
Added to that, unless you want to be in the wrong end of London, nobody in their right mind would choose the Slug from Birmingham to London, when there is a faster, same priced service into the right part of London (Euston is universally more useful than Marylebone)
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: Rods2 on 08 January 2012, 19:58:56
Good to see the government is so keen to waste invest such large sums of money in Victorian technology. Conventional railways are expensive to maintain and this is reflected in the cost of fares.

This should have been built using magnetic levitation trains. They can go much faster where there is no physical contact with the ground. They are much quieter as you don't get the low frequency ground rumble that travels long distances. If you are going to try to compete with aircraft then you need to be approaching aircraft speeds! But I think all high speed travel will be a thing of the past by the time this opens due to CO2 emission levies. The faster something goes the energy used goes up by a square law. It will be too expensive to go anywhere at more than 10mph.  ::)

In the 1950's we were in the forefront is so many ground breaking technologies. Now the all the Governments seem to want to be in the forefront for, is useless green technologies, PC correctness and many other socially worthless projects.  >:( >:( >:(

Ten years ago I had to regularly fly to Paris for work meetings, so I used to aim to get a flight for about 7am arrive Paris with the time difference at about 9pm and be at the company for about 9:30. That was the theory. Now Paris and Charles deGaulle airport suffer fog problems in the spring and autumn. This would cause flight delays, but where Heathrow airport runways run at near to 100% capacity, it was quite normal to be stuck sitting on the aircraft for up to 4 hours, just waiting for takeoff slot. I have also had similar delay experiences at Gatwick.  >:( >:( >:( >:(

I must admit if I was looking to setup a business which involved much flying to be successful, I wouldn't set it up in the UK. Ireland or the Netherlands would make more sense to me.

A white elephant railway line does not solve these problems.

The reason train journeys now take much longer than they used to is due to late train penalties, levied by the Government. The train companies have massively extended journey times, so if a train is running late, it can catch up, so at journeys end there is a much bigger chance it is within the no late penalty timing. I saw a newspaper article on this in The Daily Telegraph about 5 years ago. Where they compared many current journey times over the years and proved many were much faster during Victorian times, got faster as train technology improved and have now gone backwards. Typical Government law of unintended consequences.  >:( >:( >:(
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: Terbs on 08 January 2012, 21:17:22
Once, we had a thing called Concorde....necessary for businessmen to get across the pond in double quick time......billions of pounds.
Now there is no Concorde, and no plans for the same speed to cross. Business continues....
So why the hell do we need a train to get to Birmingham 17mins quicker. Remember, you still have to get to London to catch it, so where is the time saving ??? ??? ??? ???
What is the point of going to London from Wycombe , about an hour, when you could get a train at Wycombe to Birmingham in the first place ??? ???
Regards,
Baffled ???
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: Kevin Wood on 08 January 2012, 21:31:29
So why the hell do we need a train to get to Birmingham 17mins quicker. Remember, you still have to get to London to catch it, so where is the time saving ??? ??? ??? ???


.. and this is why all investment in rail links is pointless. You can't get to where you need to be to get on the rather train unless you happen to live in London. Beeching might as well have gone the whole hog back in the 60's and scrapped the lot once he'd ensured that there won't be a rail link within easy reach of most settlements in the UK. If I have to get in my car to get to the station I might as well just drive it to Birmingham, thanks. ;)
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: henryd on 09 January 2012, 09:50:51
HS2 is a white elephant.

It is going to cost more than 32 billion for sure. When it does no one will get sacked.

What to do with the cost. Borrow more and blame it on the last government?

Hand it over at a knock down price to private company to complete and then charge exhorbitant rates to users who as a result desert the service and use............cars

sadly the time for High Speed networks in NIMBY Britain has gone.

Spain got theirs just in time and excellent it is too. second largest network of high speed track in the world after China of course.

London Airport.  Years ago my solution to this was to build an airport out in the sea East of London with a high speed links. Boris Johnson is right. There is a small problem with a sunken WW2 ship loaded with unexploded bombs. No problem. Controlled mother and father of an explosion to mark the start of the Olympics.

That must be the one off sheppey,they seem very reluctant to do anything about that one ???
Title: Re: So, Chltern slug no more...?
Post by: Dishevelled Den on 09 January 2012, 11:41:36
Once, we had a thing called Concorde....necessary for businessmen to get across the pond in double quick time......billions of pounds.
Now there is no Concorde, and no plans for the same speed to cross. Business continues....
So why the hell do we need a train to get to Birmingham 17mins quicker. Remember, you still have to get to London to catch it, so where is the time saving ??? ??? ??? ???
What is the point of going to London from Wycombe , about an hour, when you could get a train at Wycombe to Birmingham in the first place ??? ???
Regards,
Baffled ???


Dear Baffled,

Please don't be as the answer is quite simple.

Stupidity, a lack of any degree of 'horse-sense', a complete disconnect from practical reality, acute political awareness (in terms of looking after their own arses) and an uncanny ability to be led by the snouts by unelected 'experts' who are able to bamboozle these doe-eyed legislators with slick presentation, bright colours, massaged financial projections and the promise of adulation from a fawning, ever-so-grateful public for yet another prestige project conceived and implemented with their welfare and convenience uppermost in mind.

Best regards,

Cynical (and mad as hell that these Muppets are drawing a generous salary for what amounts to having opps-all ability to think of anything outside the confines of Westminster) :-* :-*


Eyethangyew!