Nice to run a line into the docks amongst the new developments, however the Northern line is not that far off. Also elevated trains amongst buildings creates noise problems.
I assume you want a non-stop, non-change, service. The Northern line could be diverted through Lime St. That is just a routing problems, not a physical one.Yes that would be another way of connecting the airport to the city centre - either will do - but the Northern Line doen't pass through Lime Street, and this would be an advantage.
If the idea is to have a non-stop. non-changer Lime St to airport service then Lime St is fine. However this precludes other Merseyrail stations. Could be links London and have local underground and fast main line stations links too.I don't see what relevance that statement has to my post, but why is it 'best have Merseyrail' do it? It doesn't matter who does it, as long as it is done.
I still don't see this as an insurmountable problem.Yes it did use it in the past of course. But it is highly unlike you would get todays 23 meter coaches around it (The existing Merseyrail units are shorter than this). Speed/stations is not relevant to it - it is the overhang that the coaches cause when going round curves. See bottom of post for more.
Needs a re-think and selling off this stock when a seamless system is implemented.Not sure what you mean. Any new trains for the north west area are to be diesel, apart from surburban manchester - therefore, they can not pass through the tunnels at all if they have stations in them. It is a done deal - no changing it I'm afraid.
Why would other region trains go into Merseyrail underground tunnels?
If the aim is to get a seamless system then the signalling will in time need to be upgraded.Wishful thinking I'm afraid. An isolated network is far cheaper to signal than trying to integrate with the rest of the areas signalling for one.
Look at London's Tube. A brilliant system being the role model for many others around the world. The tube stations at main line stations are separate to the main line. Yu get of the tube and then go on the main line. Ticketing in some cases means you have the same ticket for both.Once again, why? Other than you liking the idea? Why should trains be routed away from Lime Street mainline other than to benefit a handful of commuters?
If it is such a brilliant idea to do this, why don't other cities abandon their mainline interchange stations?
The tube should be copied in signage, maps, ticketing, etc. They got all that very right, despite inheriting differing rail systems and merging them.
Liverpool's metro is Liverpool's Metro and should be independent of others - like the Tube.Any stock (existing or new) for Northern can end up anywhere from Newcastle to Cleethorpes, Barrow to Liverpool. The same units do not operate the same line everyday, apart from in certain circumstances eg electrified units on an electrified route. As far as diesel units go, the same TYPE of unit doesn't necessarily operate on the same ROUTE from day to day.
Why would Liverpool's Metro rolling stock go elsewhere? Merseyrail is a Merseyside centric local rail network. The rolling stock should seamlessly go only on the Merseyrail network and nowhere else. What others do is their business. What do you want? A train to Sunderland from Brunswick? Look at Munich and other new systems.Why would anyone invest in a small unique fleet for Liverpool that had smaller carriages that could not run anywhere else? The government certainly will not. It creates flexibility and maintenance issues.




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All Peel needs is a nod from the council to suggest that a proposal to reuse the Waterloo tunnel would be welcome.
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