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Dublin-Cork to take just two hours on 200kmh train

  • 20-03-2006 8:36am
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 1,065 ✭✭✭


    Dublin-Cork to take just two hours on 200kmh train
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    Treacy Hogan

    Environment

    Correspondent

    HIGH-SPEED trains travelling at 200kmh will cut the Dublin-Cork journey to just two hours.

    Passengers can look forward to at least 30 minutes being slashed from the trip.

    CIE chairman, John Lynch, last week ordered Iarnrod Eireann chiefs to activate the radical plan.

    A €117m fleet of new trains will come into service on the Dublin-Cork route in coming weeks, clearing the way for an hourly service in each direction by the end of the year.

    Replaced

    Some 100 miles of track is being replaced for the project.

    The current maximum speeds on the route are 160kmh with a best journey time of two hours 30 minutes.

    The plan involves significant changes to the infrastructure and to the powering of trains on the route.

    Under the scheme, traditional locomotive-hauling, which will operate the new fleet this year, would be upgraded to twin lightweight power cars, operating at either end of the train.

    This technology has recently been adopted by some rail operators in the UK and elsewhere, with notable success.

    Not only would twin power cars deliver a boost to speed and journey time, but reliability would also improve dramatically.

    To facilitate the increased speeds envisaged, a number of infrastructure initiatives are involved.

    Iarnrod Eireann proposes to make a number of improvements to the line, including:

    * Track renewal of 100 miles of track.

    * Elimination of a number of level crossings.

    * Realignment of certain sections of curved track.

    * Renewal of signalling and train protection systems.

    Currently, 160kph operation covers approximately 25pc of the Dublin-Cork route.

    The infrastructure plans would see 200kmh adopted in the link between Clondalkin, Co Dublin and Limerick Junction, over 62pc of the route distance.

    Barry Kenny, Iarnrod Eireann spokesperson, said yesterday: "The Cork-Dublin route is our flagship Intercity route, with almost 4,000,000 passenger journeys annually today."

    Target

    He added: "Improving speeds is the next target, to extend still further our speed advantage over road transport."

    Mr Kenny told the Irish Independent that no other mode of transport would rival the new project.

    "A two-hour city centre to city centre journey time would simply be impossible for any other transport mode in this country to even come close to matching," he said.

    Detailed feasibility work is to be undertaken this year to establish likely costs and timescales for the plan.
    http://www.unison.ie/irish_independent/stories.php3?ca=9&si=1583608&issue_id=13822
    This is outstanding !! :) Great news


«134

Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 7,327 ✭✭✭Trampas


    How much will the fare go up by though??


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,133 ✭✭✭Slice


    I'm not sure if this a reflection on IE or Translink but I remember reading a report on the then planned introduction of the Dublin-Belfast intercity Enterprise service that projected journey times between the two cities to be 1hr 40 minutes - but this never transpired and travel times between the two cities on Enterprise still take well over two hours.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,331 ✭✭✭MarkoP11


    Dublin Belfast got down to 1:51 for a while (its now 1:55/2:05) the non stop 100mph timing was never realised as they never spent the money to allow the increase from 90mph to 100mph to make it happen (more NIR than IE at fault as they still have a fair bit of 70mph), its a bit like the 2:15 Dublin Cork promise of 1986. Translink are now talking about going 125mph as well

    Fares will go up 3-5% per year as before as the DoT control them not IE, off peak fares are going to fall next year if you book in advance, well so they say.

    Its about time, the first 200km/h coaches entered service in May 1984, and where tested in Ireland at 200km/h


  • Registered Users Posts: 19,015 ✭✭✭✭murphaph


    I have never believed anything more than 125mph would be required here (TGV is 186mph in service IIRC) as our land mass (and the centre island nature of the principal destination-Dublin) would never see the advantages of 186mph style trains given the relatively short distance journeys that IC trains make here.

    125mph is perfect IMO. My only quandry is why stop at Limerick Junction? Take it on to Cork and why start at Clondalkin? Surely if the bar has been set for the route then the Kildare Route Project should ensure 125mph from the start gate at Heuston, not a few miles out the road at Clondalkin!

    These two measures would further slash the journey time to well under 2 hrs, the road alternative would never be able to compete, regardless of motorways and that's what we need.

    If this is the new way forward, then I'm pleased. I'd hope any works on the upgrade would be carried out in such a way to make later electrification straightforward. In fairness to IE they have always done this in the past.

    If they could get complete 125mph running Dublin-Cork and Dublin-Belfast it would pave the way for Cork-Belfast direct via the Phoenix Park Tunnel. It might be possible to do it in 4.5 hrs, which might suit many business travellers as they can work onboard and it's city centre to city centre travel. A long long way off no doubt, but a possibility perhaps. Would probably require quading the northern line out beyond Howth Junction at least to make it viable.

    How come Dr. Lynch gets to make all these grand plans? Where are IE management in all this?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,065 ✭✭✭Maskhadov


    i said on previous threads that IE should buy new locos as it would really increase the speed of services on the Cork Dublin line. Someone flamed the rear end off me. I knew I was correct. Those old minging 201's (or whatever they are called) are passed it and we need new ones.

    Some people were laughing their heads off at a 200kmph service or a TGV/ICE but we could actually do with it and it would be very pratical.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,772 ✭✭✭Lennoxschips


    i believe you were suggesting that we should build a new dedicated TGV line from scratch

    i suggested that the current alignment be upgraded for higher speeds

    what does the article say?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,082 ✭✭✭Chris_533976


    Perhaps the train will now ACTUALLY BE ON TIME, rather than arriving in Cork half an hour late each time.
    with a current best journey time of two hours 30 minutes.

    2 1/2 hours to get to Cork on the train? Takes at least 3.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,075 ✭✭✭BendiBus


    Maskhadov wrote:
    i said on previous threads that IE should buy new locos as it would really increase the speed of services on the Cork Dublin line. Someone flamed the rear end off me. I knew I was correct. Those old minging 201's (or whatever they are called) are passed it and we need new ones.

    Some people were laughing their heads off at a 200kmph service or a TGV/ICE but we could actually do with it and it would be very pratical.

    I believe the argument was that there was no point in faster locos as the speed restrictions on the line was the limiting factor. This is still the case and you'll notice that this proposal greatly reduces the number of speed restrictions. I'm sure the mathematics was explained.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,065 ✭✭✭Maskhadov


    well i was backing both TGV/ICE or upgrading the existing rail service to 200Kmph. TGV/ICE would be completely seperate guage and thus could be built to European standards..

    The service to Belfast should get a similar 200kmph overhaul.


  • Registered Users Posts: 19,015 ✭✭✭✭murphaph


    Maskhadov wrote:
    The service to Belfast should get a similar 200kmph overhaul.
    Agreed, wonder would it qualify for TEN funding. Most of the bad bendy bits are up north though, so unless the EU is willing to stump up some cash, it might not be a runner. 125mph Dublin-Belfast would be very good though.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 4,107 ✭✭✭John R


    The most telling part of that article is this line:
    Detailed feasibility work is to be undertaken this year to establish likely costs and timescales for the plan.

    No fear of any improvements in the near future then, 10 years minimum I'd say.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 696 ✭✭✭Transport21 Fan


    Can you only imagine the "stress" the unions will have over that.

    What's the story with the new Dublin-Cork half pointy coaches then? Seem to be taken really long to enter service.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,230 ✭✭✭Solair


    Well the new coaches are 200km/h capable so it's just a case of ordering several sets of new pointy ends complete with light-weight high speed engines inside. The coaches will happily run at 125mph (200km/h).

    You'll prob. see a new fleet of power cars that look almost identical to the current DVTs. There would be very little logic in changing the design, it's quite well styled. One will go at either end of the train. It'll look a lot nicer to have a point at either end rather than a boxy general purpose locomotive at one end and a pointy driving van at the other.

    There's nothing particularly new about this sort of technology. In fact, it's just a modern version of the Intercity 125s that have operated in Britain since the 1970s. The existing Cork-Dublin fleet (The orange mark 3 coaches) are derived from this design.


    It's a very successful sollution and has worked extremely well in the UK. Two light engines, one at each end, gives you excellent accelleration and spreads the weight over more axels thus reducing track wear. It also improves reliability as if one engine should fail, you can still continue on, albeit with poor accelleration.

    IE's Intercity 200 will benefit from more modern computer controls, a wider variety of engines and 30 years of technologicial progress. There are many more high powered DMU trains on the rails around Europe thesedays which means that there are many efficient, fast, light engines out there to pick from.

    If it works, CAF may end up with a nice off-the-shelf design suitable for 200km/h+ intercity use across europe.


    The existing DVTs will be kinda wasted, however it's possible that they could be adapted to work with MK3 coaches to produce a nice intercity push-pull capable of 90mph that could be used to suplement the enterprise.
    Worst case scenario, IE end up with a few useless DVTs sitting at inchicore.

    I donno what they'll do with the pool of 201 locos that's going to be left as within 10 years almost no passenger trains, apart from the enteprise, will require them!

    It's a *VERY* cost-effective way of upgrading the country's busiest and most profitable rail route and will give air a major run for its money. I suspect that IE had this planned all along somehow and simply wern't given the appropriate funding. It seemed a bit odd to buy high-spec 200km/h coaches to have them hauled by existing engines.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,309 ✭✭✭dowlingm


    more likely the DVTs will end up on Enterprise I'd say.


  • Registered Users Posts: 78,218 ✭✭✭✭Victor


    Can you only imagine the "stress" the unions will have over that.
    Hmmmm, it would require fewer trains ....
    What's the story with the new Dublin-Cork half pointy coaches then?
    It's OK, photos of ministers will only ever be taken at the pointy end. :rolleyes:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 696 ✭✭✭Transport21 Fan


    As a former rail lobbist, I simply could no longer defend a semi-state company which brings in projects "on time and under budget" and then after the initial launch with Dr John Lynch and some Minister waving to the media, they fail to fullfill their promise. New gear and kit is not enough.

    The Enterprise is a classic example of this. We were told it would be a world class service and indeed Barry Kenny still uses the term to highlight the magnificent status of the Enterprise. The reality is the Enterprise is mediocre at best and has carried surprisingly few passengers in the years it has been around because it is too slow and unreliable. The new gear and kit failed to deliver.

    No doubt this latest announcement, will on a superfical level seem great and will of course come in "on time and under budget", but in terms of providing the service, will like all of Irish Rail's other products fail miserably. Naturally there will be expensive TV ads showing trains pointy on both ends (when they are are not) and Craig Doyle walking into a station which does not exsist in this country (let alone on the IE network).

    The Interconnector likewise will fail to deliver it promise, just like the Passenger Information Systems on trains and stations which get installed at great expense and are either switched off or not connected up after three years. Just like the "inter-City" 2900 on the Sligo route...just like all the new gear and kit which CIE engineers love to order and CIE management place into service with great fanfare before the unions operate when then feel like it.

    For too long CIE railways has used this "on time and under budget" clause to distract from the real truth that they run a terrible service. After the money has been spent on the flashy new kit and gear it all falls apart in the most shoddy and badly managed way.

    Unless that changes - the RPA and privatisation is the answer.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,082 ✭✭✭Chris_533976


    Best post in the thread so far. Words of wisdom.


    Take another example of stupid incompetance.

    On the Cork-Cobh train there were a group of Americans last summer. They were looking at one of the ads in huge letters on paper on the wall of the train.

    "TAKE THIS TRAIN TO THE AIRPORT!!!! DART TO DUBLIN AIRPORT JUST €5!" or something like that with a different price.

    Yes those American tourists did geniunly think that the Cork-Cobh train did go to the airport.

    Usually I'd say this is American dumbass, but this case I reckon its more CIE being a bunch of morons to put a sign advertising the Dart to Dublin Airport on a small suburban rail link in Cork.


  • Registered Users Posts: 10,148 ✭✭✭✭Raskolnikov


    Perhaps the train will now ACTUALLY BE ON TIME, rather than arriving in Cork half an hour late each time.



    2 1/2 hours to get to Cork on the train? Takes at least 3.
    Three hours ten minutes yesterday. 20 minutes late.

    In fairness, the express 2hr 30 mins service is usually on time.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,858 ✭✭✭paulm17781


    Usually I'd say this is American dumbass, but this case I reckon its more CIE being a bunch of morons to put a sign advertising the Dart to Dublin Airport on a small suburban rail link in Cork.

    To top it off the DART doesn't even go to the airport, you could get a bus from one or two stations. False advertising me thinks.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,055 ✭✭✭probe


    About time they electrified the third world Dublin-Cork line while they are at it. The country’s transportation infrastructure is more open to oil risks than any other in Europe.

    km of rail network electrified:

    Ireland 55
    Luxembourg 262
    Norway 2,518
    Switzerland 3,140
    Sweden 7,644
    Skovakia 2,059
    Latvia 258
    Denmark 613
    Austria 3,545
    Slovenia 504

    http://www.uic.asso.fr/download.php/stats/synth2004.xls

    Electric is faster, quieter, accellerates faster out of a station, is smog-free, and can run on wind, wave, tidal, photovoltaic, hydro, gas, oil, coal, etc

    probe


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,858 ✭✭✭paulm17781


    probe wrote:
    Electric is faster, quieter, accellerates faster out of a station, is smog-free, and can run on wind, wave, tidal, photovoltaic, hydro, gas, oil, coal, etc

    What do they use to generate electricity in this country?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,075 ✭✭✭BendiBus


    paulm17781 wrote:
    What do they use to generate electricity in this country?

    According to Duncan on the RTE environment programme this evening we get 3% of our electricity from wind! DART is gas powered by Energia(Viridian). But Airtricity could bid when the next contract comes up.

    http://www.rte.ie/business/2005/0218/energia.html


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,628 ✭✭✭SeanW


    probe wrote:
    km of rail network electrified:

    Ireland 55
    Luxembourg 262
    Holy crap !! :eek: Luxemburg is so small it could probably fit into half an average Irish county ...
    According to Duncan on the RTE environment programme this evening we get 3% of our electricity from wind! DART is gas powered by Energia(Viridian). But Airtricity could bid when the next contract comes up.
    I'd say there's a good bit coming from Hydro-electric stations as well.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,075 ✭✭✭BendiBus


    SeanW wrote:
    I'd say there's a good bit coming from Hydro-electric stations as well.

    I think we're about 95% fossil-fuelled (according to the Airtricity website) so no more than 2% hydro in that case.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,331 ✭✭✭MarkoP11


    Modern diesel powered units can match electric units in acceleration, a voyager diesel unit does 0-60 mph in 60 seconds, its electric cousin the Pendelino has the same stats. Just to rub it in the fastest (non international) station to station timing in the UK is a diesel powered train running on a line which is electrified.

    Unless you have a serious high frequency service electrification is not justifiable, the service frequency Port Laois Cork is at most 2 trains per hour from next year, you could get away with single track beyond Limerick Junc. It gets worse the bulk of trains on the Dublin Cork are not going to Cork there going to Tralee, Limerick. Galway, Westport, Waterford thus few could operate electrically making the investment rather inefficient.

    What people don't realise that in energy used there is little to choose between electric and diesel, power stations are at best 40% efficient so while an electric train in terms of energy consumed is more efficient the amount of actual energy used to create the electricity is roughly the same as a diesel powered train.

    Unless we come up with a way of generating electricity without relying on fossil fuels at a cost lower than fossil fuels diesel will rule

    The game plan in Irish Rail is to watch what the UK do as the UK operators are in the final throws of specifying a 125 mph non titling diesel powered train, it effectively a HST

    They have no plan its just the usual pr rubbish to make it sound like they are doing something, a basic bit of focused track work at handful of locations would chop times for little cost


  • Registered Users Posts: 78,218 ✭✭✭✭Victor


    MarkoP11 wrote:
    Unless you have a serious high frequency service electrification is not justifiable, the service frequency Port Laois Cork is at most 2 trains per hour from next year, you could get away with single track beyond Limerick Junc. It gets worse the bulk of trains on the Dublin Cork are not going to Cork there going to Tralee, Limerick. Galway, Westport, Waterford thus few could operate electrically making the investment rather inefficient.
    When DART was being electrified, the economics were 30 trains per day. I don't know if that was one- or two-way.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,259 ✭✭✭positron


    probe wrote:
    About time they electrified the third world Dublin-Cork line while they are at it.

    km of rail network electrified:

    Ireland 55
    Luxembourg 262
    Norway 2,518
    Switzerland 3,140
    Sweden 7,644
    Skovakia 2,059
    Latvia 258
    Denmark 613
    Austria 3,545
    Slovenia 504
    ...

    India 16,000 (of the total 63,028 km). ( source)

    Just thought I would point that out!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,042 ✭✭✭Metrobest


    probe wrote:
    About time they electrified the third world Dublin-Cork line while they are at it. The country’s transportation infrastructure is more open to oil risks than any other in Europe.

    km of rail network electrified:

    Ireland 55
    Luxembourg 262
    Norway 2,518
    Switzerland 3,140
    Sweden 7,644
    Skovakia 2,059
    Latvia 258
    Denmark 613
    Austria 3,545
    Slovenia 504

    http://www.uic.asso.fr/download.php/stats/synth2004.xls

    Electric is faster, quieter, accellerates faster out of a station, is smog-free, and can run on wind, wave, tidal, photovoltaic, hydro, gas, oil, coal, etc

    probe

    That's a truly shocking statistic.

    We should really electrify the Cork-Dublin and Dublin-Galway lines as a national priority. When the motorways to Dublin are fully built shedloads of train passengers will switch to cars and buses. A juddery diesel train making cups of coffee rattle and carriages vibrate is not desirable in one of the world's most successful economies.

    We do not need a HST - that is only needed for super-long distances where the train must compete with the train. The island is too small to justify the expense. And the population dispersion and scale would make it uneconomic.

    But there is definately a case for electrifying the existing lines so that journey times can be more reliable and passengers more comfortable. Electric trains are far more pleasant to travel on than diesel. In terms of passenger comfort the DART shames its cousin, the Arrow. And in an era where perception is all-important, passengers view an electrified line as significantly more reliable than a diesel one.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 169 ✭✭Bill McH


    probe wrote:
    km of rail network electrified:

    Ireland 55
    55 km seems like rather a high figure for Greystones to Howth/Malahide. I wonder is the real figure 27.5 km and then it gets doubled because there's two tracks.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,055 ✭✭✭probe


    paulm17781 wrote:
    What do they use to generate electricity in this country?
    The world doesn't stand still. We have a 12% EU renewable energy requirement for 2010. And that is only a starting point. Neither you nor the government nor anyone else can escape the fact that oil is running out. Those supplies that remain come increasingly from unstable parts of the world. Bush's ill-fated power/oil grab in Iraq shows how helpless they are at "fixing" things.

    Norway, which has large hydro-electric power generating facilities, is building electricity interconnecters to mainland Europe (eg Netherlands) so that it can import electricity during periods of low rainfall.

    No doubt in time, Ireland will wake up to the fact that it will have to build interconnectors to France over which it can export offshore wind (and other renewably) generated power and import French electricity during periods of low wind. (90% of France's electricity supply is either hydro or nuclear).

    Electrification is not a project that can be done overnight. But if it isn't in the plan, new roads will continue to be built over railway lines with insufficient clearance for electrification, just like they did in the 18th century.

    Energy prices will be rising at ever increasing rates as hydrocarbons dry up, exacerbated by growth in demand in China, India and other developing countries as oil resources shrink. Ireland is the most exposed country in Europe on the energy front. Which is laughable given the renewable energy potential of the island, if it were not so serious. Given the length of time everything infrastructural takes to achieve in the country, it is probably already too late

    Probe


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