Recent Public Posts - [guest]
| Re: Recycling rubbish - something of a minefield? In "The West - but NOT trains in the West" [367950/30854/31] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 18:19, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
From the BBC:
Cherwell council to introduce kerbside collections for glass recycling

The change will end more than 30 years of residents having to make trips to the bottle bank
Residents in north Oxfordshire will be able to recycle their glass bottles with other waste from next year, after a new kerbside collection was approved.
Cherwell District Council said the change would end more than 30 years of residents taking their glass to bottle banks.
From 1 January next year, householders will instead be able to put it in their blue recycling bin.
The authority said the change would cost between £300,000 and £400,000 due to lost income from bottle banks and higher "gate fees" at waste management facilities.
The change will help the authority comply with the new "Simpler Recycling" law that comes into force in April 2026. It is anticipated the change will improve the district's overall recycling rate by up to 1.5%.
More than 100 bottle banks around the district will be removed, which the council said would help prevent fly-tipping.
Councillor Ian Middleton, portfolio holder for neighbourhood services, said: "The collection of glass from the kerbside is one of the most requested changes to our recycling service, and we have been listening. This change will make it faster and more convenient for residents to recycle whilst reducing the problems associated with bottle banks. The reality is that these have attracted litter and fly-tipping, with the taxpayer having to pick up the costs of the clear-up."
Glass collected in blue bins in Cherwell will be separated from other dry recycling by machines at a sorting centre. Large pieces will be sorted for further processing, while smaller pieces will be used for road aggregate or shot blasting material, which is used to strengthen surfaces.

The change will end more than 30 years of residents having to make trips to the bottle bank
Residents in north Oxfordshire will be able to recycle their glass bottles with other waste from next year, after a new kerbside collection was approved.
Cherwell District Council said the change would end more than 30 years of residents taking their glass to bottle banks.
From 1 January next year, householders will instead be able to put it in their blue recycling bin.
The authority said the change would cost between £300,000 and £400,000 due to lost income from bottle banks and higher "gate fees" at waste management facilities.
The change will help the authority comply with the new "Simpler Recycling" law that comes into force in April 2026. It is anticipated the change will improve the district's overall recycling rate by up to 1.5%.
More than 100 bottle banks around the district will be removed, which the council said would help prevent fly-tipping.
Councillor Ian Middleton, portfolio holder for neighbourhood services, said: "The collection of glass from the kerbside is one of the most requested changes to our recycling service, and we have been listening. This change will make it faster and more convenient for residents to recycle whilst reducing the problems associated with bottle banks. The reality is that these have attracted litter and fly-tipping, with the taxpayer having to pick up the costs of the clear-up."
Glass collected in blue bins in Cherwell will be separated from other dry recycling by machines at a sorting centre. Large pieces will be sorted for further processing, while smaller pieces will be used for road aggregate or shot blasting material, which is used to strengthen surfaces.
| Re: Mystery RAF 1940s aerial photo location In "Railway History and related topics" [367949/31069/55] Posted by bradshaw at 17:33, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
I would agree, RAF Hendon, now Grahame Park
https://municipaldreams.wordpress.com/2024/10/15/grahame-park-barnet-part-i/
| Re: National Trust gets £9m to take over Ironbridge Industrial Revolution museums In "Railway History and related topics" [367948/30928/55] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 17:31, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
A related topic, from the BBC:
Ironbridge volunteers restore replica 1800s Trevithick steam locomotive

Volunteers at Blists Hill Victorian Town in Telford have restored a full-scale working replica of the world's first steam railway locomotive.
The Trevithick was first designed by Richard Trevithick in 1802, with the original built in the Ironbridge Gorge by the Coalbrookdale Company.
After about eight months of repairs, the replica is running again for visitors for the first time in 18 months.
"We're thrilled to bits that we've finally got this engine back on its plateway, it's a pretty unique exhibit," said Trevor Barraclough, steam engineer and volunteer with the Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust.
"We've done quite a lot of work to it, reboring the cylinders… replacing the heat tubes and the boiler, repairing things that have been done to it in the past, and trying to cope with old technology in a new technological environment. It's a very interesting thing to drive, but there's very little on it that's on a steam locomotive you might find on the Severn Valley."
He described it as a "clockwork version" of a steam train. "We believe it's the first steam powered locomotive to work on a track," he told the BBC.
"Trevithick had built many stationary engines, he came here to Coalbrookdale to produce this high pressure engine, in its day it was like nuclear physics - this thing was working at much higher pressure than the Cornish mine engines.
"It was feared, and rightly so, this thing was operating at four, five times the pressure of the contemporary engines and marked the ability to put a lot of energy in a very compact unit that could then be fitted to something reasonably sized on a set of rails."
He said that this engine industrialised the movement of things like coal, iron and clay. "Before this engine was built, if you wanted to move wagons of coal up and down a plateway... you had to do it either by hand… or with horses. People and horses get tired, they need feeding… whereas a steam engine, the idea was it would do the work for you."
The engine is up and running at the Victorian Town and will continue to do so until the first hard frost in December.

Volunteers at Blists Hill Victorian Town in Telford have restored a full-scale working replica of the world's first steam railway locomotive.
The Trevithick was first designed by Richard Trevithick in 1802, with the original built in the Ironbridge Gorge by the Coalbrookdale Company.
After about eight months of repairs, the replica is running again for visitors for the first time in 18 months.
"We're thrilled to bits that we've finally got this engine back on its plateway, it's a pretty unique exhibit," said Trevor Barraclough, steam engineer and volunteer with the Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust.
"We've done quite a lot of work to it, reboring the cylinders… replacing the heat tubes and the boiler, repairing things that have been done to it in the past, and trying to cope with old technology in a new technological environment. It's a very interesting thing to drive, but there's very little on it that's on a steam locomotive you might find on the Severn Valley."
He described it as a "clockwork version" of a steam train. "We believe it's the first steam powered locomotive to work on a track," he told the BBC.
"Trevithick had built many stationary engines, he came here to Coalbrookdale to produce this high pressure engine, in its day it was like nuclear physics - this thing was working at much higher pressure than the Cornish mine engines.
"It was feared, and rightly so, this thing was operating at four, five times the pressure of the contemporary engines and marked the ability to put a lot of energy in a very compact unit that could then be fitted to something reasonably sized on a set of rails."
He said that this engine industrialised the movement of things like coal, iron and clay. "Before this engine was built, if you wanted to move wagons of coal up and down a plateway... you had to do it either by hand… or with horses. People and horses get tired, they need feeding… whereas a steam engine, the idea was it would do the work for you."
The engine is up and running at the Victorian Town and will continue to do so until the first hard frost in December.
Cambridge Live reports
The railway worker who bravely tackled an attacker during the Huntingdon train stabbing last Saturday (November 1) has regained consciousness following his coma.
The staff member was left in a critical condition and fighting for his life after tackling the attacker. Samir, also known as Sam, is now in a stable condition and has been able to speak with his wife for the first time since the incident, reports Birmingham Live.
The hero regained consciousness on Thursday (November 6) and has been making significant progress on his road to recovery. Colleague Gemma Royce shared the update on a GoFundMe page set up following the stabbing incident, reports the Mirror.
On the page, which has raised more than £38,000, she wrote: "Sam's family continue to be deeply grateful for all of your kind messages, generosity, and support. His wife has shared the wonderful news that Sam woke up briefly yesterday, and she was able to speak with him for a short time.
"This is a truly positive step forward, though there is still a long journey ahead in his recovery. Thank you all for continuing to keep Sam and his family in your thoughts and prayers. Your kindness means the world to them."
The staff member was left in a critical condition and fighting for his life after tackling the attacker. Samir, also known as Sam, is now in a stable condition and has been able to speak with his wife for the first time since the incident, reports Birmingham Live.
The hero regained consciousness on Thursday (November 6) and has been making significant progress on his road to recovery. Colleague Gemma Royce shared the update on a GoFundMe page set up following the stabbing incident, reports the Mirror.
On the page, which has raised more than £38,000, she wrote: "Sam's family continue to be deeply grateful for all of your kind messages, generosity, and support. His wife has shared the wonderful news that Sam woke up briefly yesterday, and she was able to speak with him for a short time.
"This is a truly positive step forward, though there is still a long journey ahead in his recovery. Thank you all for continuing to keep Sam and his family in your thoughts and prayers. Your kindness means the world to them."
| Re: Mystery RAF 1940s aerial photo location In "Railway History and related topics" [367946/31069/55] Posted by John D at 14:45, 9th November 2025 Already liked by Mark A | ![]() |
Does anyone recognise where this is?
Mark
https://historicengland.org.uk/images-books/archive/collections/aerial-photos/record/raf_hla_499_v_6006
Mark
https://historicengland.org.uk/images-books/archive/collections/aerial-photos/record/raf_hla_499_v_6006
Hendon
There is similar photo of Hendon in this article
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hendon_Aerodrome
Interesting the trackbed of the Mill Hill East -Edgware line that was being converted to double track and scheduled to become part of the northern line as part of Northern heights, but was abandoned after the war is clearly visible as light colour.
The photo has North at about the 7:30 (on a clock) and the road going off to the left (halfway on the left) is Watford Way (which almost runs due north here)
| Re: Direct trains to Birmingham could return to Stroud, Stonehouse and Swindon In "Campaigns for new and improved services" [367945/31059/28] Posted by grahame at 14:39, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
It was interesting to read the piece on this in the Swindon Advertiser too (I think we have another thread going on that?) and see how public comment was "it's all very well about the midlands - but what about south from here?". And indeed the Swindon MPs might like do well in the popularity stakes to sort out in-county travel to places like Trowbridge and Salisbury - get it reliable and hourly - before they head off on a brand new project of trains to Birmingham.
| Mystery RAF 1940s aerial photo location In "Railway History and related topics" [367944/31069/55] Posted by Mark A at 14:25, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
Does anyone recognise where this is?
Mark
https://historicengland.org.uk/images-books/archive/collections/aerial-photos/record/raf_hla_499_v_6006
| Re: Suggestions from Campaign for Better Transport for the budget In "Looking forward - the next 2, 5, 10 and 20 years" [367943/31049/40] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 13:35, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
| Re: Bath to Cirencester - via Tetbury, Kemble and Stroud - ongoing plans In "Introductions and chat" [367942/30038/1] Posted by Mark A at 13:18, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
Yes, that Stroud building, a very positive step with a tale to it?
https://www.stroudnewsandjournal.co.uk/news/19033111.20-years-since-strouds-hill-paul-saved-demolition/
The Cotswold Canal Trust has recently put a new web site together, good, visually appealing, information-rich too.
Mark
https://www.cotswoldcanals.org/
| Re: Suggestions from Campaign for Better Transport for the budget In "Looking forward - the next 2, 5, 10 and 20 years" [367941/31049/40] Posted by ChrisB at 12:37, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
I meant that you wouldn't have called a male Chancellor of the Exchequer 'Bob from accounts'.....
| Re: IEP seats in 2025 In "Across the West" [367940/29826/26] Posted by ChrisB at 12:31, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
Ahhh....of course. The toilet would need swapping for an(other) accessible one if you were to add a third position on a 5car too.
| Re: IEP seats in 2025 In "Across the West" [367939/29826/26] Posted by IndustryInsider at 12:29, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
I’ll also add a standard class wheelchair space on the 5-car units to the wishlist. Just the one as that would give three in total.
I missed II's request previously. As a wheelchair user, I find the two current spaces on a 5car ample, as I've only met one other wheelchair on a service in over 2 years that I've been in one - & I'm on IETs at least 4 times a week (2 returns at least, across their network) - never mind two others.
Also - these current spaces are both in 1st class, where I'm sure most wheelchair users are quite happy, thank you. THe wheelchair space in the Standard coach A on a 9car is nowhere as nice

[/quote]
Yes indeed...it would be the lowest priority from my wishlist. Though it would give a bit of flexibility should the Universal Access Toilet be out of use in the first class section, and on the rare occasion a station platform is too short to have the doors on the first class carriage avaiable. But it is very useful having the spaces in first class as that's where there are more staff on hand to help board and alight.
| Re: Direct trains to Birmingham could return to Stroud, Stonehouse and Swindon In "Campaigns for new and improved services" [367938/31059/28] Posted by ChrisB at 12:29, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
From the Stroud News and Journal
Direct trains to Birmingham could return to Stroud and Stonehouse
The plans are part of the £1.75 billion Midlands Rail Hub scheme, which aims to boost rail services across the region by adding up to 260 additional weekly services through Stroud and Stonehouse.
Direct trains to Birmingham could return to Stroud and Stonehouse
The plans are part of the £1.75 billion Midlands Rail Hub scheme, which aims to boost rail services across the region by adding up to 260 additional weekly services through Stroud and Stonehouse.
From the Swindon Advertiser
Swindon to Birmingham train line return to bring 12,750 jobs
An extract
Swindon to Birmingham train line return to bring 12,750 jobs
An extract
Swindon North MP Will Stone met with Midlands Connect and rail leaders at Swindon railway station to discuss the scheme’s potential, which could introduce up to 130 extra trains per week between Swindon and Birmingham.
Hmmm.......making it all up again.....we'll see.
| Re: Suggestions from Campaign for Better Transport for the budget In "Looking forward - the next 2, 5, 10 and 20 years" [367937/31049/40] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 12:24, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
Not from me.

I think Rachel Reeves is in an unenviable position, with the press and pressure groups writing her Budget speech for her, before she has a chance to reply.
| Re: IEP seats in 2025 In "Across the West" [367936/29826/26] Posted by ChrisB at 12:19, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
That'll be the refurb date half-way through it's lifespan, if at all. It would likely mean a seat redesign & refit, and they're owned by Hitachi, nota ROSCO or the DfT. Lots of dosh.
I’ll also add a standard class wheelchair space on the 5-car units to the wishlist. Just the one as that would give three in total.
I missed II's request previously. As a wheelchair user, I find the two current spaces on a 5car ample, as I've only met one other wheelchair on a service in over 2 years that I've been in one - & I'm on IETs at least 4 times a week (2 returns at least, across their network) - never mind two others.
Also - these current spaces are both in 1st class, where I'm sure most wheelchair users are quite happy, thank you. THe wheelchair space in the Standard coach A on a 9car is nowhere as nice

| Re: IEP seats in 2025 In "Across the West" [367935/29826/26] Posted by Mark A at 11:54, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
Travelling on three class 80x's yesterday, on 2 out of the 3, many of the seats visibly had the DVT-inducing defect. I'm moved to follow up the enquiry to GWR and see if there's a timescale to address this. On a 20 minute journey this is merely going to be uncomfortable. Paddington to Cornwall, for passengers vulnerable to this, must push it into risk territory
Mark
| Re: Direct trains to Birmingham could return to Stroud, Stonehouse and Swindon In "Campaigns for new and improved services" [367934/31059/28] Posted by ellendune at 11:50, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
From the Swindon Advertiser
Swindon to Birmingham train line return to bring 12,750 jobs
An extract
The £1.75 billion investment aims to improve rail connections across the Midlands, South West, and South Wales.
The first phase of the Midlands Rail Hub is expected to create more than 12,750 jobs and deliver benefits for travellers in the region.
Swindon North MP Will Stone met with Midlands Connect and rail leaders at Swindon railway station to discuss the scheme’s potential, which could introduce up to 130 extra trains per week between Swindon and Birmingham.
The MP said he will be working to ensure Swindon benefits not just from the rail connection but also ensure companies in the town are involved in the supply chain jobs and provide apprenticeships for young people in our town.
Mr Stone said: "It’s fantastic that Swindon could be benefiting from the Midlands Rail hub expansion.
"We’re a town built on connection via the railways, and so it’s great to see Swindon getting an hourly service between a fellow industrial town like Birmingham."
The first phase of the Midlands Rail Hub is expected to create more than 12,750 jobs and deliver benefits for travellers in the region.
Swindon North MP Will Stone met with Midlands Connect and rail leaders at Swindon railway station to discuss the scheme’s potential, which could introduce up to 130 extra trains per week between Swindon and Birmingham.
The MP said he will be working to ensure Swindon benefits not just from the rail connection but also ensure companies in the town are involved in the supply chain jobs and provide apprenticeships for young people in our town.
Mr Stone said: "It’s fantastic that Swindon could be benefiting from the Midlands Rail hub expansion.
"We’re a town built on connection via the railways, and so it’s great to see Swindon getting an hourly service between a fellow industrial town like Birmingham."
| Re: Suggestions from Campaign for Better Transport for the budget In "Looking forward - the next 2, 5, 10 and 20 years" [367933/31049/40] Posted by ChrisB at 11:46, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
Slightly misogynistic?
| Re: Direct trains to Birmingham could return to Stroud, Stonehouse and Swindon In "Campaigns for new and improved services" [367932/31059/28] Posted by ellendune at 11:44, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
Would this West Midlands money be better spent on bringing over heads wires to Bristol temple meads for the Bristol to Manchester services?
This is a false comparison as the electrification is capital investment and a new service is revenue.
Just think how much more pollution would be removed from Birmingham new street train station.
OK but this service would transform journeys from Swindon to the midlands and the north as the change at Cheltenham can be somewhat of a lottery adding up to an hour to the journey time. Think how much pollution this would remove from our roads.
| Swindon to Melksham - a lesson in options for the 25 mile journey In "Buses and other ways to travel" [367931/31068/5] Posted by grahame at 10:46, 9th November 2025 Already liked by Timmer | ![]() |
Swindon to Melksham - 25 miles via the A3102. Google estimates around 45 minutes, with 5 minutes to be saved if I were to go a longer but quicker way via the M4.
Swindon is one of the major employment and business hubs in our area - how good is it to get there by public transport from my home town which has a population of around 25,000 and growing? How easy is it to find out your options?
Home to Swindon
Yesterday morning, I left home at 07:38, walked to the station and caught the 08:02 train which should have arrived in Swindon at 08:28. 50 minutes door to door (my destination was a long distance train). However, the train left Melksham on time but arrived in Swindon 26 mimutes late - long after my connection had gone.
Swindon to Home
Coming home, my return train arrived in Swindon at 16:02, at platform 1. Having been out walking for the day and unsure of my pace and what I would find, that was not a time I had predicted earliers in the day, so I arrived and then had the question "how do I get home"?
* The next train to Melksham was not until 17:35 - so that would have been 18:00 into Melksham, 18:22 at my front door. 140 minutes door to door. From Platform 2, Westbury train
* There was a train at 16:26 as far as Chippenham which would have left a wait at Chippenham for the 17:35 bus (last bus of the day) - 18:02 into Melksham Market Place, 18:07 home. 125 minutes door to door. From Platform 4, Weston-super-mare train
* I walked up to the Fleming Way bus boulevard. I had visited Stop "Y" first to look up Devizes bus times, and as I got to Stop "H" I saw the 55 to Chippenham pulling out (16:10) - probably a good job I missed it as it had a 3 minute connection in Chippenham into the last x34 of the day to Melksham. 125 minutes if lucky, 140 minutes if not (train from Chippenham).
* I visited Stop "E" where the 99 service by Coachstyle also runs to Chippenham, but there was no service until 17:05. Had I waited for that, I would have arrived at Chippenham at 18:36 ... after the last onward bus, after the direct train (option above) leaving me to fall back to the train at about 20:00 which - oops - was cancelled last night to it would have been a rail replacement taxi, estimated time 250 minutes from arriving in Swindon to being home.
* I took the service at 16:30 from Stop "Y" on route 49 to Devizes. Around 15 minutes there to change to the 17:55 from the same stop (at The Pelican) onto the 273 Bath bus as far Spa Road (Cowslip Mews) from where there is a five minute walk home. Home at 18:15 - 133 minutes after my arrival into Swindon.
* Considered the direct National Express coach to Melksham but ruled it out as a ludicrous option as it doesn't leave until 21:25 on a Saturday - from Stop "N1" or "N2" on Fleming Way and would have been 350 minutes from my arrival in Swindon!
* I had also considered taking the 49, on which alternate buses extend to Trowbridge, and which stops at Semington 2 miles from my home. On a nice summer's eveing with it still light (and had I not already been out walking) this would have been an attractive option
Lessons to be learned
1. The train service needs to be hourly
2. Buses on route x34 should run into the eveining
3. Should there be better maps / guidance for passengers arriving into Swindon for destinations such as Melksham and Cirencester (train to Kemble or bus all the way?) and Calne (train to Chippenham and bus, or bus all the way?) . There is no central enquiry point - not even a map showing all the direct routes ... let alone connections
4. Should there be a central smart display at the midpoint of the bus boulevard, perhaps dupicated at the railway station, allowing people to enter destination (town, attracttion, area, postcode) for a real time display of your immediate options and where they start from?
5. Should there be guidance on this lot with regard to fares and ticket interchangability for those of us on return fares?
Starting point

Arrival point in Swindon

Baffling choice of not-brilliant starting points for the return

| The roman empire's road system, mapped In "Railway History and related topics" [367930/31067/55] Posted by Mark A at 10:32, 9th November 2025 Already liked by Oxonhutch, Chris from Nailsea | ![]() |
Article in 'Nature' and a link to the map itself. Turning to the UK, it's curious to think of those engineers and planners addressing the same topography (and some of the same settlements and transport needs) as did the railway pioneers of the nineteenth century.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-03626-z
https://itiner-e.org/
| Re: Exeter to Barnstaple "commute from hell" In "Shorter journeys in Devon - Central, North and South" [367929/31055/24] Posted by John D at 10:21, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
Don't know the lengths of the platforms between Exeter and Barnstaple,
but could a non stop service service be introduced from Exeter to Barntaple?
but could a non stop service service be introduced from Exeter to Barntaple?
Pages 251 - 256
https://sacuksprodnrdigital0001.blob.core.windows.net/sectional-appendix/Sectional%20Appendix%20full%20PDFs%20September%2025/Western%20&%20Wales%20Sectional%20Appendix%20September%202025.pdf
Newton St Cyres 120m
Crediton down 135m, up 155m
Yeoford 136m
Copplestone 87m
Morchard Road 90m
Lapford 81m
Eggesford down 85m, up 92m
Kings Nympton 90m
Portsmouth Arms 74m
Umberleigh 139m
Chapelton 100m
Barnstaple 142m
Class 150 vehicles are 20m long, 158, 165 are 23m long, class 170 are 24m long, class 800,802 are 26m long. So some can take 6car trains, some can't even take 4cars
| Re: Bath to Cirencester - via Tetbury, Kemble and Stroud - ongoing plans In "Introductions and chat" [367928/30038/1] Posted by PrestburyRoad at 09:04, 9th November 2025 Already liked by Mark A | ![]() |
6. Stroud - the Thames & Severn canal at Wallbridge Upper Lock, with the Hill Paul building in the background.
To my mind the building looks much better than it did before it was converted to apartments. The conversion added the extra two-storey 'cap' on top of the original stark rectangular block of a building, which makes it feel more balanced. Ah, happy memories of seeing the improvement from my occasional journeys over the years on the beautiful Golden Valley line.
And wishing future success to the Cotswold Canals Trust for all their work on restoring the Stroudwater and Thames & Severn canals.
| Re: Air traffic control issues in the USA - November 2025 In "The Wider Picture Overseas" [367927/31053/52] Posted by grahame at 08:46, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
Reminded me of this scene


***snip***
No use to me that day as the buses were on diversion due to the work, but a new bus stop by the Racecourse station really would be a major benefit. Anyone know if the council has seen sense, as I seem to recall they weren't originally planning one?
No use to me that day as the buses were on diversion due to the work, but a new bus stop by the Racecourse station really would be a major benefit. Anyone know if the council has seen sense, as I seem to recall they weren't originally planning one?
Not as far as I know. The powers that be were asked but weren't prepared to tweak things to enable buses to stop at the racecourse station, which is disappointing as it's certainly a destination that's in demand (and it wss an opportunity to mitigate the vehicle traffic generated by the station/visitor attraction) - so the buses on the established bus route will continue to sail past having stopped ten minutes walk to either side.
Mark
So much to see ... that we split it in two. Hundreds of pictures taken - 2% to be posted when I get home
First 5 - Coffee Shop specials ...





Second five - as shared on Facebook





| Re: Direct trains to Birmingham could return to Stroud, Stonehouse and Swindon In "Campaigns for new and improved services" [367924/31059/28] Posted by John D at 08:07, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
Would this West Midlands money be better spent on bringing over heads wires to Bristol temple meads for the Bristol to Manchester services?
Just think how much more pollution would be removed from Birmingham new street train station.
Just think how much more pollution would be removed from Birmingham new street train station.
Some of the route is already wired, although only 2 of 4 tracks are done around Kings Norton. I think the Midlands Hub is due to do this anyway.
And the section from near Yate to Filton is also electrified.
There is a short section of electrification at Swindon end of line from Kemble too.
If Filton Bank into Temple Meads is done, then don't need to add very much (makebe short section to accelerate northwards from Yate) to allow Battery EMUs (rather than bimodes) to take over the service.
And as the bridges to Water Orton are being raised for adjacent HS2 tracks that section would be easy to electrify too (which allows BEMUs to reach Central Rivers Depot)
Regarding New Street after the cross city line was electrified air quality was much better, but has become lot worse since voyagers were introduced 24ish years ago, as it was rebuilt with expectation of locos at the end of trains, so the exhausts were in open air section, not in the covered section with concourse and shops above.
| Re: Exeter to Barnstaple "commute from hell" In "Shorter journeys in Devon - Central, North and South" [367923/31055/24] Posted by grahame at 07:32, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
He added that the mix of college students and workers on the service had led to “alpha” groups pushing their way to the front, creating challenges for station staff.
A standard problem right across the train and bus network is that the seats that are available (when limited) tend to be occupied by those who least need them / are most able to stand. Sometimes people are polite and thouthful, sometimes they are not ... and sometimes the services are so packed people with limited balance or mobility can't even get to the seats!
Edit to add ...
Tim said Railfuture is working to speed up the deployment of longer trains on the Barnstaple to Exeter line, warning that the three- and four-carriage trains currently in use are “already proving there is a problem”.
More like "campaigning" rather that "working"? To me, this reads rather as is Railfuture has some sort of direct ability to run longer trains.
| Re: Church Fenton residents fear being stranded if bridge demolished In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [367922/31066/51] Posted by grahame at 07:23, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
The headline and picture reminded me of Pilning.
Except that there they took the bridge away, permanently, and provided no alternative - resulting in a withdrawal of all westbound trains. I note that more recently the car park has been provided with a heavy security gate, and the 8 parking spaces advertised at the time are no longer available.
| Church Fenton residents fear being stranded if bridge demolished In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [367921/31066/51] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 07:04, 9th November 2025 | ![]() |
From the BBC:

Residents in a North Yorkshire village say they will be left stranded if a railway footbridge is removed before a new road bridge is finished.
Network Rail plans to demolish the Church Fenton footbridge as part of the Transpennine Route Upgrade between Manchester, Huddersfield, Leeds and York.
The residents said removing the footbridge before a new road bridge is finished would isolate part of the community and urged Network Rail to halt plans until the road bridge is open.
The village has one other route across the railway line, a staffed level crossing, which can mean long waits at the gates.
Resident Sophie Nabhan-Sandison said she crosses the railway line at least six times a day during the week to take her three-year-old daughter to nursery. She said: "Imagine having conditional access to your property and conditional access to leave. It's not a matter of someone can just come and open the gates. It's highly conditional on what trains are running, how many trains are running. There could be a significant wait."
Network Rail said the bridge needed to be demolished because it was too narrow and too low for the additional track and electrification required for the upgrade. The new road bridge is due to be completed by mid-December, the company said.
Network Rail added the level crossing would stay open during the works for vehicles and pedestrians and be operated by crossing keepers, while delivery and utility vehicles would be guided through the new highway bridge.
(BBC article continues)















