Reading to Hungerford - Hastings DEMU cab ride - 24 March 2018

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  • čas přidán 27. 06. 2024
  • The Sixty Marches charter, Part 1:
    Cab view from Reading to Hungerford. Filmed from Hastings Diesels Limited’s preserved Hastings DEMU on Saturday 24 March 2018, during the outward leg of The Sixty Marches private charter.
    .
    In this video we travel the 26 miles and 55 chains from Reading to Hungerford. We depart from Reading platform 8 and proceed onto the Westbury Lines, through Reading West, and turning right at Southcote Junction following the Reading - Taunton Line through Newbury to Hungerford. The Reading - Hungerford and Reading - Basingstoke routes were built in 1847/8 by the “Berks & Hants Railway”; the Reading - Hungerford - Westbury route is still known colloquially as the “Berks & Hants” although it does not go into Hampshire at all! Some of the running, particularly near Theale, is a bit slow as we are following a stopping train (a Network Turbo which we see leaving Reading just as we also depart, and which we catch up with again at Newbury and will see again turning back at Bedwyn). There is a bit of rain in the Kintbury / Hungerford section but we hope it won’t spoil your enjoyment of the journey.
    .
    Overhead Line Electrification works were taking place on the GWR network, with work visibly in progress during the Reading - Newbury section; and over the weekend when this was filmed the Didcot route was completely closed for electrification work, with many diverted services vying for pathways over the Berks & Hants.
    .
    This outing began at Hastings and ran via Tonbridge, Redhill and Guildford to Reading, then via Hungerford (this video) to the Westbury area where we turned right at Heywood Road Junction, through Bradford-on-Avon and Bath to Filton, through the Severn Tunnel into Wales, to Maindee Junction (Newport) for the line through Abergavenny to Hereford; the return journey was via the same route. We intend to produce video footage of the entirety of the rest of this journey to Hereford.
    .
    Video footage is from an unattended unmonitored forward-facing cab-camera in motor coach 60116 Mountfield. The soundtrack mostly comes from the camera in the leading cab; however, on a few occasions there was radio usage or (at Newbury) chatter via the cab window which we are not permitted to publish, in these cases the soundtrack you hear on this video is instead an accurately synchronised audio recording made in the rear cab.
    .
    0:00 - READING station
    2:03 - Westbury Line Junction
    5:20 - Oxford Road Junction
    5:33 - Reading West station
    7:13 - Southcote Junction
    13:21 - Theale station
    17:11 - Down Towney Loop
    18:26 - Aldermaston station
    20:10 - Midgham station
    22:58 - Thatcham station
    26:16 - Newbury Racecourse station
    27:17 - site of Newbury East Junction
    28:36 - Newbury station
    34:20 - site of Enborne Junction
    39:19 - Kintbury station
    44:20 - HUNGERFORD station
    .
    Video, soundtrack and captions © Copyright 2018-2019 Hastings Diesels Limited.
    www.hastingsdiesels.co.uk/
    .
    Travel on our train! See our Railtours webpage at:
    www.hastingsdiesels.co.uk/rai...
    .
    Equipment: video by GoPro Hero3+ camera with focus modification, suction-mount and extra batteries; back-cab audio by Tascam DR-44WL courtesy of / moretojack ; video production by Da Vinci Resolve (free).
    .
    Here are the actual timings for the day’s outing:
    www.hastingsdiesels.co.uk/dia...
    .
    Here are annotated extracts from the Network Rail Section Appendix:
    Outward: www.dropbox.com/s/nexbk2jdnmp...
    Our return journey’s route was changed just a day or two before the trip because of a bridge strike - from Hereford to Filton Abbey Wood we were supposed to have been routed via Worcester and the Gloucester area to Yate and Bristol Parkway, but as things turned out we had to retrace our steps via the Severn Tunnel. The following shows our original route.
    Return: www.dropbox.com/s/kana0042y09...
    .
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 110

  • @steadyeddy69uk
    @steadyeddy69uk Před 5 lety +11

    When passing Colthrop Crossing Signal Box if you pause the video you can see someone taking what looks like to be a photo. Well I was that person on duty in the Signal Box and I took a video of this train passing. Here is the link to my video.
    czcams.com/video/OTzllRnfG4g/video.html

  • @Rog5446
    @Rog5446 Před 5 lety +5

    Trivia: Approaching Midgham Station, you would have noticed 'Woolhampton' popping up on the screen just before the station.
    The station is actually in the village of Woolhapton and Midgham is about two miles away, not even on the line.
    This is because the GWR decided to call the station by the next nearest village, because they did not want passengers confusing it with Wolverhampton, that was also served by the GWR.
    Tip: If you like a nice walk, get the train from Midgham to Newbury and walk back along the Kennet and Avon canal.
    It's about two hours worth and when you get back to Midgham, pop into the Rowbarge for lunch, which is on the canal.

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety

      Yes indeed, I put Woolhampton up as a caption precisely to highlight the fact that they deliberately mis-named Midgham station :-) Good idea for the walk, beware though of the swing bridge by which the canal towpath changes sides - I wanted to get along there once but a single-crewed narrowboat had had no way of shutting the bridge so the towpath was effectively temporarily severed.

  • @jonathangreenwood793
    @jonathangreenwood793 Před 23 dny

    As a local lad who has commuted this route to Slough for work (20+ years), popped to Hungerford with the family for days out etc I can only say how wonderful this video is. Great to see the route from the track.

  • @K1W1fly
    @K1W1fly Před 5 lety +5

    Wheel lathe visit soon I hope!

  • @richardwestwell4902
    @richardwestwell4902 Před 5 lety +1

    Always a good day when one of your videos pops up on youtube. The canals of Britain worked towards their own demise, transporting material for the "new fangled railways" which once opened led to the canals almost complete abandonment for long haul freight traffic.

  • @michael3972
    @michael3972 Před 5 lety +2

    Yet another superb video from Hastings, really looking forward to seeing the rest in this series, well done guys.

  • @Chris64EX4
    @Chris64EX4 Před 5 lety +1

    As someone who drives the route frequently on slightly later forms of Diesel Electric Train with four times as many cylinders I found this very good viewing!

  • @rowanlidbury
    @rowanlidbury Před 5 lety +2

    This is better with back cab audio. At least you don't have to listen to that flat!!
    Great video as ever. Love the research you guys do into the local areas, a real education ;)

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety +1

      Thank you! I provide leading cab audio where possible, flats or no! I suppose I could add the rear cab soundtrack as an alternative soundtrack, if YT supports that?!

  • @bobwood856
    @bobwood856 Před 5 lety +4

    Great video, as usual. Am I the only one who thinks it all looks so much better without the uglification wires.....sorry electrification! "Progress", I know, but at what cost to the countryside.
    Mr. Grumpy has left the building!

    • @davidgandar7339
      @davidgandar7339 Před 5 lety +1

      Bob, you are not alone in your comment about the cateniary wire fittings. They should have used the system as on the GNER.

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety +1

      I'd tend to agree, it does look a bit... chunky.

    • @davidgandar7339
      @davidgandar7339 Před 5 lety +1

      Chunky! More like a battleship builders yard!....(Watching your excellent videos in NZ)

    • @bobwood856
      @bobwood856 Před 5 lety

      @@davidgandar7339 Reading is just unrecognisable from when I knew it, admittedly a few years ago now. Just a metal tunnel. I just hope this doesn't happen to my local station, Taunton. No sign of the dreaded wires there yet!

    • @Graham_Langley
      @Graham_Langley Před 5 lety

      @@hastingsdiesels I'd go with unbelievably ugly.

  • @formidable38
    @formidable38 Před 5 lety +1

    Brillant as usual, thanks for uploading!

  • @plymptonpleb
    @plymptonpleb Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks for the ride and all the useful info...I'm looking forward to viewing more of your cab rides.

  • @antonydicesare4632
    @antonydicesare4632 Před 5 lety +2

    Yet another awesome video

  • @mrsulzer66
    @mrsulzer66 Před 3 měsíci

    Great video, (hope you get that wheel flat sorted).😉🙏

  • @nutsnproud6932
    @nutsnproud6932 Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks for the video.

  • @RichardWells1
    @RichardWells1 Před 5 lety +1

    Always appreciated.

  • @ianthompson9201
    @ianthompson9201 Před 5 lety

    Have used the line many times---though never in a DEMU!---but never knew the names of the level crossings, so a double thank you.

  • @johnbarham7718
    @johnbarham7718 Před 5 lety +1

    Excellent film. Well documented. Looking forward to the remainder of the journey. ( I don't mind the flat)

  • @morrislouiseeagle7161
    @morrislouiseeagle7161 Před 5 lety

    👏👏😁Thank you for this - brilliant 😁

  • @HenrysAdventures
    @HenrysAdventures Před 5 lety +2

    Another enjoyable trip!

  • @Rog5446
    @Rog5446 Před rokem

    TRIVIA: When approaching Midgham station, Woolhampton was displayed with the Woolhampton crossing. Midgham is about two miles away, but the GWR called the station at Woolhapton Midgham, because they did not want passengers at Paddington getting on the wrong train for Wolverhampton.

  • @geoffhurrell6659
    @geoffhurrell6659 Před 5 lety

    Thank you for posting this excellent video. As someone who travelled it behind Kings, Castles and Warships, it has always had a special place in my heart. It's a pity about the disfiguring OLE - but we must accept progress (I suppose).

  • @mrbluesky2050
    @mrbluesky2050 Před 5 lety +1

    another excellent video, waiting for the next...

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety

      Patience :-) My aim (and I've managed to stick to it for some months now) is a video every Saturday.

  • @hoofie2002
    @hoofie2002 Před 5 lety

    Another great vid 👍

  • @SMILEVIDEOTRAINS
    @SMILEVIDEOTRAINS Před 5 lety

    Very nice ride thankyou

  • @jasongoulden2938
    @jasongoulden2938 Před 5 lety +2

    Great video and interestingly this is the same route the class 210 Demu used to service as far as bedwyn back in the 80s

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety

      Ah, the thing with a 317 bodyshell?

    • @markcf83
      @markcf83 Před 4 lety

      @@hastingsdiesels that's the one. There were two units-one a three car and the other a four car.

  • @robertcoleman4861
    @robertcoleman4861 Před 5 lety +1

    Another fine vid thanks richard pity it was a bit gloomy kind regards bob.

  • @peckelhaze6934
    @peckelhaze6934 Před 5 lety

    A very nice run.

  • @markcf83
    @markcf83 Před 4 lety

    Looking forward to hearing the section between Hungerford and Westbury. That will be a test for the engine...

  • @stevewyman2822
    @stevewyman2822 Před 5 lety

    ...Unusual overhead wiring rigs...different to the usual ones elsewhere..!!!

  • @2112pk
    @2112pk Před 5 lety +1

    27:17 to the left I BELIEVE there was (recently as the mid 2000s) another buffer-stop for the DNS past the one still next to the mainline, hidden away in the weeds next to the building with the red stripe.
    Still a few slightly lower brick arch bridges past Newbury it seems, kind of don't want to think about what they'll do to them once they reach them with the electrification work.

    • @peterdavy6110
      @peterdavy6110 Před 5 lety +1

      I remember that set of buffers. Always wondered why they were there. They went when the industrial site was expanded. Can't recall the date, but I think it was mid-1990s.

    • @2112pk
      @2112pk Před 5 lety

      @@peterdavy6110 I'm no expert (having not been born at the time) but from the photo's I've seen there were several at different times. as far as i can tell there was a set right next to the buildings in question until the mid 2000s (there's a photo as part of a "current" DNS photo album on flikr) perhaps even 2012, now a substation, for the overhead lines i'd asume. but i can see that it used to go right up to the old brick overbridge, obviously long gone, mid 80s according do the nice little plaque on the last remaining stone of it (with a lovely etching of an LSWR T9). somewhat entertaining to try to figure out which buildings were there before they closed the line, but there's a sense of bitterness when what was once the junction of a very useful (and dare i say, more so today were it still existent) public transport route is now a shady looking furniture shop and a papa johns. that's... progress??

  • @RichardFelstead1949
    @RichardFelstead1949 Před 5 lety

    Nice video.

  • @Martin_Adams184
    @Martin_Adams184 Před 4 lety

    Thank you. An excellent video, as usual. One of the best aspects of your videos is the printed commentary about junctions (present or former) and other details about the tracks taken. For example, I wasn't aware of the Reading Feeder Lines at that point, until you pointed them out. Then I found the track plans. It's quite an arrangement!

  • @AndreiTupolev
    @AndreiTupolev Před 5 lety

    Network rail's Yellow Sprinter on shed at Reading. That's one place that they've made a great improvement, before all trains off the Reading West line for the old platforms 8/9 (the relief line platforms) had to cross all four tracks, and they would usually have to wait for up to 10 minutes if there was an HST anywhere between Reading and Didcot for it to cross in front.

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety

      Good spot with the yellow sprinter, do you know what that does? I did see it but didn't know.
      Yes, the Reading Feeder Lines which pass beneath the new viaduct giving a grade-separated junction must be a huge help.

    • @AndreiTupolev
      @AndreiTupolev Před 5 lety

      @@hastingsdiesels I think it's used for track testing isn't it, ultrasonic track testing or something like that

  • @peterdavy6110
    @peterdavy6110 Před 5 lety

    At 23.16 on the right of the track hidden in the trees, you can just see the white discs with red centres on the gates that closed the branch line into the Thatcham Army Ordnance Depot (opened 1940; closed 1999) which is now a housing estate. The points, branch line and the lines in the depot were all taken up. The Ordnance Depot ran all the way to the end of the green fencing at 23.43.

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety

      Great spot, thank you for this. My research had shown that such a facility once existed, but I'd not looked carefully enough to spot this physical evidence still there for all to see. Thank you!

    • @2112pk
      @2112pk Před 5 lety

      i know for a fact that as recently as 2010, the sidings were still there, only severed a few feet from the mainline, visible from the station. from looking at the footage 23:14 it seems there's still some left under the bushes nearer the gate.

  • @delta.australia
    @delta.australia Před 4 lety

    Between Towney and Aldermaston was the Ufton Nervet bridge!

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 4 lety

      No, it isn't. Ufton bridge is before Towney, as described in the on-screen commentary.

  • @nfarnell1
    @nfarnell1 Před 5 lety +1

    sounds like a flat spotted wheel around 26 to 37

  • @johnwhitehouse5244
    @johnwhitehouse5244 Před 5 lety

    Great video Enjoyed Thanks. ( John Whitehouse )

  • @tango6nf477
    @tango6nf477 Před 4 lety +1

    Although electrification is a definite upgrade it is so very ugly, non-electrified lines can be almost invisible in the landscape only becoming noticeable when a train actually passes by. As electrification advances I suppose we will get used to it

  • @pjaygeorge8016
    @pjaygeorge8016 Před 4 lety

    Always impressed by the number of enthusiasts w/cameras along the way. How are your runs publicized in advance? Am watching this from Philadelphia as a regular traveler in the 40s -50s from Reading to my great-aunts in West Lavington, Wilts (station long Beecham-ized). (Next video Hungrford to Westbury covers this)

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 4 lety

      Thank you. Our outings are advertised on our website and on twitter, and do seem to attract a lineside following, yes. :)

  • @nickrobson9636
    @nickrobson9636 Před 5 lety +1

    Another great video. A quick question: what is the top speed and typical fuel consumption for these units?

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety +2

      Our DEMU's maximum permitted speed is currently 75 mph. Its fuel consumption will depend very much upon the type of working, but for a long day out we probably run at something like 2 miles per gallon. Many further details here: www.hastingsdiesels.co.uk/1001/

  • @paulcaswell2813
    @paulcaswell2813 Před 4 lety

    I hate seeing the virgin GW skyline being wrecked by electrification. I remember the same on the ECML years ago. The last time I travelled on an unelectrified East Coast was behind a 47 - not even an HST LOL!

  • @TrainJJ
    @TrainJJ Před 5 lety

    Nice! I subbed. Greetz from the Netherlands. Joachim - TrainJJ

  • @Locomattive8572
    @Locomattive8572 Před 5 lety

    Love your videos. One question, I see you recorded Cromer to Holt along the NNR. Have you got any videos coming from the East Anglian area? I only ask because your cab view videos are the best, and there is little to nill cab view videos of East Anglia, except the Rail125 series filmed in 1998, which funnily enough shows the Hastings unit at Great Yarmouth on the Burney Arms Branch.

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety

      It's all down to where we've been. The next outing after The Sixty Marches was the West Norfolk Wanderer, so expect footage from Hitchin to King's Lynn plus the Middleton Towers branch. And you'll see that we're intending to run a railtour to Lowestoft and Norwich in May, so that'll get videoed - come on it if you like! www.hastingsdiesels.co.uk/railtours/

  • @pjaygeorge8016
    @pjaygeorge8016 Před 4 lety

    Btw, your captions ( Holy Brook, Newbury Race Course) add a deal of interest to the journey. Please also think about an annotised map of the journey - I have to keep dragging out my old Shell South-East England Road Map which also shows rail routes.

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 4 lety

      Thank you. Some of our more recent videos do indeed have a mapping feature!

    • @nxskok
      @nxskok Před 3 lety

      @@hastingsdiesels openrailwaymap.org is very good. I've been following these with the video in one tab and the map in another.

  • @delta.australia
    @delta.australia Před 4 lety

    17:05 I see! I'm doing extensive research on that story!

  • @anmolmehta7116
    @anmolmehta7116 Před 5 lety

    Great ride. When will the rail route reopen from Reading to Didcot? How long will the trains be rerouted through Newbury?

  • @jpgsterbenz
    @jpgsterbenz Před 5 lety

    I've ridden (normal) PAD-RDG-DID many times, and never gotten good shots of lightweight Unipart-Dorman LED signals. Your videos are excellent for signal visibility, and this one has got a nice set of feathers lit and transitions given you are following another train. Your captions annotations are also outstanding. Why doesn't Compton signal T2871 have a feather?
    I need to plow more carefully through the rest of your videos looking for green banner repeaters, PRIs, and splitting distants.

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety +1

      Thank you, glad you like! You evidently know (far) more about actual types of signal heads than I do (personally I drive on LU not NR and ours are mostly not nearly as visible as these). You ask about Compton signal T2871 - you mean Newbury, surely? The bay platform to the right of the one we pulled up at was the 'Compton bay', for the Didcot shuttle trains when the dear old DN&SR was still working (I explored a lot of its remains in my youth, hence particular interest!). Anyway ref signal T2871 it is basically a "wrong-road starter" (in LU parlance anyway), there is only one route available and that's back across onto the Down Westbury. You'll only need a feather where there's more than one route available, e.g. if the Up Westbury were bidirectionally signalled. And yes, you will find a green banner repeater near Bath in an old video that's on here (hmm, yes it's near Keynsham in fact, but I just checked the footage that'll get published in about part 4 of THIS outing and it's not green as the signal in question is yellow). You'll find a PRI at Shortlands on the Tonbridge to Clapham video, and a splitting distant on the GWML near West Ealing on the West Ruislip to Willesden video. :-)

    • @AndreiTupolev
      @AndreiTupolev Před 5 lety

      I like those signals. The junction feathers look rather like Mickey Mouse's ears.

  • @stevewyman2822
    @stevewyman2822 Před 5 lety

    ..One thing I must say is :- that I always have to turn the volume right down on my Sound Pack...as the engine noise tends to cause me to " Doze - off "...with its repetetive sound...and I end up missing parts of the ride..!!!.

    • @andypreston1524
      @andypreston1524 Před 5 lety

      I think the throb of a 4SRKT is a great therapeutic "White Noise" to relax to !
      Beautiful sound.

  • @hoofie2002
    @hoofie2002 Před 5 lety

    Don't think I've seen a signal aspect before where the lens changes colour rather than lighting a different lens - 1st signal 3:30 or so

    • @mrbluesky2050
      @mrbluesky2050 Před 5 lety +1

      modern LED signals, spreading rapidly, less power use, easier maintainence, only need max of two 'heads' to show four aspects,

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety +2

      That's how modern LED signal heads are arranged. The LED can show different colours depending on which wires are energised, so a separate head for each aspect is not required.

    • @hoofie2002
      @hoofie2002 Před 5 lety

      Cheers - obvious enough with LEDs but first time I've seen it.

  • @70humdinger94
    @70humdinger94 Před 5 lety +1

    Noticed that the train has both the two-tone horn and a whistle. Under what condition does the driver use the whistle instead of the horn?

    • @kentthrashlover6756
      @kentthrashlover6756 Před 5 lety

      Horn is used for Whistle Boards and Whistle is used for Depot and Trainspotters

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety +1

      Sort of! There's actually no official distinction between one and t'other, each are an audible warning device. Different drivers will do different things, some only use the whistle (BTW the units were fitted with chime whistles when new, but the horns soon replaced them; we retro-re-fitted ours with whistles sourced from LU). Personally I like a mixture as this driver does: horn for official purposes, whistle for acknowledging linesiders.

    • @kentthrashlover6756
      @kentthrashlover6756 Před 5 lety

      Hastings Diesels Ltd Wow I didn’t actually know this. Thanks for letting us know :)

  • @gordonbruce2416
    @gordonbruce2416 Před 5 lety +1

    What is the unit’s speed limit please?

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety +1

      Hi, it's 75mph. More info here: www.hastingsdiesels.co.uk/1001/#technical

  • @tonyday7233
    @tonyday7233 Před 5 lety

    Another great trip, shame about the wheel flats.

  • @70humdinger94
    @70humdinger94 Před 5 lety

    When will electrification be completed on the line the train was running on?

    • @formidable38
      @formidable38 Před 5 lety

      Newbury to Reading has now been energised!

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety +1

      Thank you for this, I wouldn't have known that. I knew though that the video would form an historical record of work in progress. :)

    • @peterdavy6110
      @peterdavy6110 Před 5 lety

      @@hastingsdiesels Probably the last shot of the old Newbury station footbridge before it was demolished.

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety

      @@peterdavy6110 Crikey, you're right. We went through again on 16 June on our way to Paignton, and it had gone. I've uploaded a soundtrack-less version of our June footage, from Newbury Racecourse (platform 3 this time) and so onward into the Down Newbury Loop, for comparison: czcams.com/video/uocfkHDN8O8/video.html

  • @Graham_Langley
    @Graham_Langley Před 5 lety

    So what happened to the Ascot to Reading leg?

    • @Graham_Langley
      @Graham_Langley Před 5 lety

      Ah, I assumed it was part of the Alpine Sunset series. Sorry.

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety

      The Sixty Marches didn't come through Ascot, it came from Guildford direct to Reading via Sandhurst; and I didn't board until Reading so there's no footage from that bit.

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety

      Ah yes. Look at the 'Show more' info on part 6 of the Alpine Sunset, you'll see my explanation there. No worries.

  • @AndreiTupolev
    @AndreiTupolev Před 5 lety

    Southcote Junction's still a flat junction, though

  • @sandrobahry2558
    @sandrobahry2558 Před 5 lety

    New bogie bearings needed after this ride because of flat wheels.

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety

      Not really. The bearings will be just fine unless they were not correctly assembled. The tyres have a much tougher job to do.

  • @stevies.1975
    @stevies.1975 Před 5 lety

    Not quite sure why you called the loop at Hungerford ‘up passenger loop’ when it’s generally referred to as the ‘Hungerford Loop’ and mostly used by the aggregates trains...

    • @hastingsdiesels
      @hastingsdiesels  Před 5 lety

      I'm not intimately familiar with this line, so I'd never heard it referred to at all. So I could only go by what it says in the Sectional Appendix, which is Up Passenger Loop. 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @12crepello
      @12crepello Před 2 lety

      It means that the loop is passed for handling passenger trains should the need be. The down loop at Towney is now upgraded to a "passenger loop" since electrification.

    • @stevies.1975
      @stevies.1975 Před 2 lety

      @@hastingsdiesels I’m sorry. I never saw your reply to this until today from an additional reply.
      I’ve checked with a couple of friends who have also heard it referred to as the Hungerford Loop in recent years. There was until not so long ago a down loop at Hungerford too which led to some sidings and was used even less. Hence its (and the sidings) removal. Although the sidings were removed quite some years ago to be fair.
      In terms of passenger use for Hungerford Loop, one of my friends could find no evidence of passenger train use in recent times (only aggregates). Most trains tend to stop at the Theale loop. Even then, mostly aggregates and the occasional charter for timings. I’m guessing the appendix name hasn’t been changed.

  • @gazzab3224
    @gazzab3224 Před 5 lety +1

    The electrification of railways does spoil the look of them.

    • @Graham_Langley
      @Graham_Langley Před 5 lety +1

      Agreed. It's almost as if there's a brief to make the whole thing as ugly as possible, starting with the pylon design. The number of pylon designs used amazes me.