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Notwork Rail

Looks like my rail replacement bus nightmare is going to last a lot longer than I'd originally hoped. As reported on the North Wales Railway notice board, things are going from bad to worse.

As already rumoured in some quarters, reliable reports indicate that the Cheadle Hulme - Crewe line, which has been closed to all traffic since December 2005, will not be opening in June 2006 (already delayed from March for 'software testing' as has been publicly promised. It seems that some sort of temporary service might now be in place by August, with a full timetable not restored until December 2006.

This shambolic situation has been brought about by the attempt to re-signal this line with Ansaldo equipment from Italy, intended to be controlled from the existing signal centre at Stockport which has already proved unequal to the task of dealing with the Stockport station area and has so far been confined to a small area around Cheadle Hulme.

The Cheadle Hulme - Crewe line has been controlled from power signalboxes at Wilmslow and Sandbach, built about fifty years ago and featuring large numbers of electro-mechanical relays (suffering from metal migration in their contacts) and miles of wiring whose insulation had deteriorated to such an extent that anyone disturbing it for maintenance was in danger of causing a short-circuit with potentially fatal results. We imagine that it was decided that the re-signalling project had to go ahead with the only design available, even though engineers were sceptical about the results. The two signalboxes contained asbestos, and both were dismantled and taken away at the beginning of the current project.

Any further comments we could make here would not be suitable for a family audience

This is getting more and more like a 'heads need to roll' situation. An unnamed source within the rail industry has told me there were a lot of screwups in the early stages, such as severing the track despite needing access for engineering trains on other parts of the line. I wondered why they took out the old pointwork at Alderley Edge and replaced it with plan line, and spliced in the new pointwork a few weeks later. I hadn't heard of the contractors putting a crane jib through the overhead catenery (ouch!). But the real problem seems to the fundamental incompatability of the software interlocking with the existing signalling at each end of the line. As Chadders has said, quoting The Daily WTF, it's not sufficiently Enterprise

It's difficult not to come to the conclusion that this fiasco is ultimately a consequence of the fragementation of the railway resulting from botched privatisation pursuded by the lamentably clueless administration of John Major. I can't imagine a fiasco on this scale happening in the days of British Rail.

When the trains will finally return is anyone's guess. It wouldn't surprise me in the least if they never do return to the smaller stations on the rural southern end of the line. The slow and meandering rail replacement bus usually runs empty south of Alderley Edge, the 90+ minute journey time (compared with the 25 minutes of the train) mean that most passengers have found other ways to travel.

Posted by TimHall at May 03, 2006 08:23 PM | TrackBack
Comments

I'm not sure what choice Notwork rail have here.

Evidently the power boxes built 50 years ago are comming to the end of their lives and once again there has been no provision made for the repalcement of the capital asset. The same problem which killed the trams - the councils were happy to take the fares, but made no provions for wear and tear.

Posted by: Michael Orton on May 10, 2006 09:26 PM

Like thousands of other severely disadvantaged ex-users of the Crewe-Stockport line, I have been desperate for both a rational explanation of the fiasco, and a credible forecast of how the practical outcome will evolve. Tim's Notwork Rail posting is the best I have chanced upon yet - thanks Tim. As a Project Manager from the oil and Gas industry, used to dealing with complex billion pound projects, I empathise very much with Tim's analysis, and can see that Notwork Rail has fallen very short of the necessary experience to manage a project of this nature. It would surprise me a lot if most of the competence, experience and knowledge needed to plan this revamp project properly hasn't long since been replaced with bright lower-cost young-uns somewhat lacking the practical nouse. Hence the ability to understand what's there and how to upgrade it will have gone. This was a clear issue to be managed at the time of the insane fragmentation of the service. What amazes me is how passively the disadvantaged masses accept the endemic gross incompetence - and indeed why the operators of the trains trying to use the neglected track are not vocally backing the interests of their would-be clients. This point was well-made in a letter by Ian Turnbull to last weeks Wilmslow Express (June 15th). I fully endorse the need for senior heads to be assessed for readiness to roll in cases like this - for allowing this serious disconnect in their "organisation" to arise, and then for keeping the struggling rail users in the dark for so long. Without effective follow-through of accountability, nothing is going to improve. But then again - what forum are us few folks with any spark supposed to use to get any real action? It seems that the Rail Regulator is about as much use as the Water Regulator, so we have to find another way. Any (practical!) ideas out there?

Posted by: Ian Ball on June 23, 2006 07:43 AM
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