Z
zag
Guest
Re: ..
I would doubt (but it could be true) the story that it is due to the tightness of a curve somewhere on the line.
If there is going to be such a capacity constraining element then surely this would change the economics of the entire project - making trains shorter means it costs more to operate them over a given distance since at peak loadings you are only getting (say) 750 fares per train instead of 1,000.
If there was a constraint that meant that *for ever* you would be carrying a lower number of people than otherwise possible then the logical thing would be to spend more money removing the constraint - either by re-routing or modifying the existing path.
z
I would doubt (but it could be true) the story that it is due to the tightness of a curve somewhere on the line.
If there is going to be such a capacity constraining element then surely this would change the economics of the entire project - making trains shorter means it costs more to operate them over a given distance since at peak loadings you are only getting (say) 750 fares per train instead of 1,000.
If there was a constraint that meant that *for ever* you would be carrying a lower number of people than otherwise possible then the logical thing would be to spend more money removing the constraint - either by re-routing or modifying the existing path.
z