Showing posts with label Hovercraft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hovercraft. Show all posts

Saturday, 4 May 2024

Saturday Variety

 P5 P.S. : The Other P5

Above is the Surrey Commercial Docks area of London. Look very carefully and you can see a "Dock" bottom right. There won't be much docking there today!
The area is trendy residential with a shopping centre at the Overground station now renamed Surrey Quays. Some time way back then (late sixties) fbb and chum Northampton Alan paid a visit to Surrey Docks.

The attraction was a bus route, P2 from Rotherhithe.
The bus was flat fare ...
... and, fbb remembers, very uncomfortable! The loop round the docks was fascinating. Much of the warehouse clutter was still there ...
... as viewed above from the east with today's remaining non-dock lower left.  But fbb was emulating Horatio Nelson with his famous (and probably fictitious) phrase, "I see no ships". The docks area was desolate and almost dead.

fbb does, however, remember musing over which area of the docks inspired London Transport to use the letter P! 

Plus ca change!

Sometime later the P2 was amended and extended and brcame, tada, the P5, the other P5.
Because the area is now all residential, todays passengers have the privilege of the C10 and the 381.
The C10 runs from Victoria round the loop to Rotherhithe ...
... and the 381 runs from Waterloo to Peckham. 
Ah, yes, P for Peckham. 

Just creeping in to the shopping centre is a P route, viz the P12 ...
... which also runs to Peckham.

The first happening (early 1800s) in the Surrey Docks arey was the Grand Surrey Canal which eventually ran to Camberwell and had a branch to Peckham.
The docks soon followed.
A line of parkland now sits along the route of the long-closed canal.

A Bit Late Perhaps?
We young lads were told that slot-car racing would replace model railways - which it didn't. But it does seem that, unlike fbb's bodging and fudging, Scalextric (and others) have now become the toy of the W.O.M. brigade.

fbb was intrigued to receive this offer from a company that has supplied him with railway models.
The RRP is £44.

It is unlikely that the model will perform quite as well as the original!
W.O.M. = Wealthy Old Men.

Did You Love the LEV?
Certainly most folk seemed to hate the Pacer which developed from it. Many bus enthusiasts also hated the Leyland National which produced the LEV and, somewhat kit bashed, some of the Pacers.

LEV1 is being returned to the National Railway Museum after extended loan. 
The forerunner of all those nasty railbuses was the Leyland Experimental Vehicle, a joint venture between Leyland and BR  to combine the worst features of rail and bus. Here are some pictures of the various early railbuses with links.

The railbuses were powered by 200bhp 6-cylinder Leyland TL11 diesel engines, with fully automatic SCG  gearboxes and a Gmeinder final drive unit driving one axle. They were 12.3m long and consisted of a standard Leyland modular bus body on a chassis having suspension based on the HSFV series of experimental designs for freight vehicles but with flexicoil springing. This allowed for a double-ended body mounted at four resilient points on the underframe.

There were five single car railbuses built for trials on BR, including one built by Wickhams for export to USA. Amazingly, they have all survived.

From Stagecoach To First
Hovertravel ...
.. have been operating across the Solent since the late 1950s when a youthful fbb strolled along the beach to watch an arrival and departure from Appley, near Ryde. Probably in 1958 or 1959.

The service became permanent and the SRN6 craft were a familiar sight and familiar noise (very loud) as they plied their trade from Ryde to Southsea.
Stagecoach have held the contract to run a linking bus service from Portsmouth centre to terminal at Southsea. There has been a variety of liveries, some plain awful ...
... some with only a few windows obscured ...
... and most recently where the passengers have the privilege of seeing out of all the windows!
The newest version was launched by the great and good from both operations,
But a recent press release shows a small set of great and good, this time with a representative from First Bus, winners of the contract.
For the passenger it is a non-event as nothing changes. The route and timetables are exactly the same as before the change. So probably no one will notice.

First's livery is decidedly average ...
... on a bus which once zipped speedily along the busway between Fareham and Gosport.
Now it would be much more fun if it were a real Hoverbus!
Then there would be no need to change modes at Southsea!

It's Election Time!
Whilst he Conservative Party reels under the onslaught of "very sad" election results, we can now expect every political debate to be turned into an attempt to prise a few extra vites out of the truly fired up uo electorate. (Really?)

One "up" for re-election is Mt Khan, big cheese of London's Transport and, in his spare time, Mayor of London.

He has come up with another Superloop consisting of even more routes that appear not to be very Super and most certainly do not loop!

The map is (helpfully!) not a PDF so the place names are either too small to read or, when enlarged, too fuzzy to read.
At a very cursory glance, fbb thinks most of the new services are simply a re-jig of existing London Buses routes - as before. There appears to be nothing in any way revolutionary.

For example, one route is from Thamesmead to North Greenwich.

Here, from Mike Harris' chef d'oeuvre, is the 472 at Thamesmead ...
... and at North Woolwich.
But the even Super Super Loop map is very pretty if impossible for the casual observer to understand.

 Next Bank Holiday Quiz blog : Sunday 5 May 

Tuesday, 14 June 2022

Island Line : A Problem At Portsmouth

It Used To Be Very Simple

You caught a Southern Railway train from London Waterloo to Portsmouth Harbour. There your Southern Railway ferry was waiting for you.
On arrival at Ryde Pier Head your Southern Railway train was waiting to chug you happily to Sandown, Shanklin or Ventnor .,..
... to enjoy your week's holiday. It usually worked perfectly! It continued to work perfectly well into British Railways era. Then someone (a politician, of course) had the idea of selling off the vast British Railways Shipping division.

For the Island this became Wightlink. Then came the privatisation of the railways and Island Line became a separate and independent company from South West Trains which was sold to Stagecoach. The two railway operations are now back together again under the dynamic (???) franchisee, First Rail.

Wightlink has had several owners but makes most (all?) its profits from car ferries. The passenger service between Portsmouth and Ryde Pier Head struggles. But, credit where credit is due, Wightlink have just embarked on a major refurbishment of the Portsmouth Harbour Terminal.

This, combined with the upgrade of Island Line would suggest that both parties do see some sort of commercial (or maybe political) future in the classic foot passenger service. The railway is, of course,  very heavily subsidised.

But, as with the Island's little railway, upgrade equals disruption.
So this is how it works. A temporary waiting "tent" has been installed on the circulating area at the harbour end of the train platforms.
Inside the tabernacle you will find a few seats ...
... and a booking "window".
Under normal circumstances, the standard way to the ferries is down a ramp (below, right) to where all the terminal's facilities are situated.
Note the gate, centre left.

The ramp access is now closed - although, miraculously, it will re-open to cope with the crowds wending their way to the forthcoming Isle of Wight Festival 

Now, at the given time, passengers are escorted from tented waiting area through said gate ...
... across the roof of the terminal building ...
... round a little wiggle ...
... and down a narrow staircase to the gangplank for the boat.
The end of the walk route can be seen from the ferry as it departs.
The problem occurs when the catamaran sailing is busy. It can leave late - and, according to Vectensian "commuters", often does.

When the ferry docks at Ryde Pier head, passengers "in the know" set off at olympic sprint speed (a la Usain Bolt!), only to see the hourly train disappear down the pier bereft of connecting passengers. 

So it's a taxi, a walk down the pier to Ryde or to catch a bus southbound (on which your through ticket is not valid) or nearly an hour to wait for the next train. (Actually it is the same train which has trundled to Shanklin and back.)

Of course, at peak times, when there IS a roughly 30 minute frequency on the trains, you would only have about 30 minutes to wait - BONUS!

Except that the peak extras don't run up the pier, they terminate at Ryde Esplanade. - NO BONUS!

When fbb rode to Pier Head he could espy the ferry docking ...
... and the potential passengers hurried on to the platform just as the guard (right in picture below) and driver were exchanging ends.
Made it!

According to the local mafia, one Island Line employee worked a four day shift with approx 20 trips to the Pier Head. On only four of them did the ferry arrive in time to connect with the train.

And, no, the train cannot wait as the new technology prevents the units from exceeding their "limit" of 40mph; so they can't "make up" even a few precious lost minutes. The connecting train would, potentially miss all of its outbound connections as well.

Again, under the combined ownership of old, the work at Portsmouth Harbour would have taken place when the Island Line was closed for upgrade. Ditto, of course, for the extra work about to start soon at Ryde Pier Head station when nothing will be there to connect with the boats.

Hey ho! More passengers angry, more passengers lost; more revenue lost; more fares increased and the cycle of decline continues.

Is there ANY chance of getting back to a co-ordinated through service? 

Possibly, but it may simply be too late!

Hovertravel As Well
Just for the record, and on the day fbb did his round trip to Ryde, one of the two Hovercraft was parked, very dead, well short of its slipway.
According to the conductor guard, the vessel had been wallowing there most of the afternoon. As fbb returned to Esplanade, he espied two of "the lads in overalls" striding towards the stricken craft.
Fear not for the incoming tide - the hover monsters do float!

New Flags For Old!
fbb noticed what looked like a new design of bus stop flag as he arrived in the Island last Thursday. And, indeed, these newcomers are appearing variously round the Island's roads. Here is the old ...
... and here is the new ...
... in a darker green, smaller, and thus less easy to read.

But that's progress; moving on from the bad old legible days.
The old-style light green "flags" are being donated to the Isle of Wight Bus Museum for sale to raise funds.

Go Ahead Takeover - More News
The board of GoAhead is recommending acceptance of the offer from Gerrard Investment Bidco Limited; which looks like it was set up by Mr Gerrard to manage this particular bid. 

The details of the bid are, as ever, complex and mysterious but, in simple terms, the shareholders of GoAhead will get a good price for their shares - which is all that matters.

Gerrard etc is a "consortium" of two companies/groups. Kinetic Tco Pty Ltd is based in Australia and does actually run buses ...
... although much of its business appears to be in contracted work or specialist services.
Note that the owners of Kinetic are Canadian! But the company is very "up" with the environmental craze.

The other "half" of the consortium is Globalvia Inversiones SAU, a Spanish company that seems to specialise in transport infrastructure.
So now you know. 

But they too have lovely policies ...
... and they do have an "essence".
So we can look forward, assuming the sale does Go Ahead (!), to some truly wonderful things. 

Or perhaps there will be sell-offs of capital assets and drastic reduction in services so that GoAhead's new owners can make enough profit to cover the cost of the buy-out.

Passengers? 

In the corporate world they will be well to the bottom of the list.

And as one Australian bus company (KINETIC - don't forget that the letters "I" are blue and italic!!) buys GoAhead, another Australian bus company ( TOWER TRANSIT  operates in London) has sold itself to Stagecoach for £20 million.

 Next Bits and Bobs blog : Wednesday 15th June