Richard Gilmore
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once the train passes east hills it would be a clear corridor through campbelltown and then off to canberra. i dunno a thing about melbourne.
Then there's also the issue of waiting time which is significantly increased, because to be able to get the HSR from Campeltown, you may have to take a suburban train to Campeltown that gets there 15 - 20 mins early and then wait around at the platform, (which I might add is less comfortable than an airport and does not have wi-fi).If it ran CBD to CBD it'd have to go along suburban lines hence the 45 minutes in Sydney and similar (but a bit less) in melbourne.
Gilmore: How do you figure it would be a clear corridor to Campbelltown from east hills? other trains would be in the way and also it would have a similar limit to current trains on those lines anyway (~120) since the corners are too sharp to go any faster.
No way, you're just pulling figures out of ur assAt least 45 minutes to get out of Sydney, 1 hour to canberra, 2 hours to melbourne, 30 minutes through melbourne.
So if the trains run from central, won't the track have to be altered making it unusable to other trains.No way, you're just pulling figures out of ur ass
The Goulburn to Sydney train does Campbelltown to Central in 42mins already, with no dedicated line
The true HSL would start just after East Hills (look on a map and you'll see why)... so thats 24km from Central.
At 80km/h, that'd only take 18mins.
Then its 790km to Tullamarine = 2:28 @ 320kph
And then another 20ks into Melbourne = 15mins @ 80kph
So that's 3:01 total
Obviously this is only for the express services
This is getting way too specific... but there's clearly sufficient land once you get to Holsworthy Army Base on the existing line to build a dedicated HSLLooking at a map, you think a HSL can go straight over the hills near Woronora damn or are we running 300 km/h trains through the normal trains via glenfield?
No, that's average 320kph over the length of the dedicated HSL - include the Syd/Melb bits and its down to 278km.A time of 3:01 very optimistically assumes not a single stop, the ability to build a very short route, and an average speed of 320kmph which would make it the fastest service in the world!
see here:High-speed rail - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The best average speed is the Shanghai Maglev at 313km/h, but for comparable distances, the fastest is 272km/h.
There's a tonne of space out there to build a new line once you pass East Hills. Even if some houses needed to be occupied macquarie fields land isn't exactly expensive. The hardest part would be blowing another line through the sandstone near Holsworthy but that doesn't take a whole lot of effort.Gilmore: How do you figure it would be a clear corridor to Campbelltown from east hills? other trains would be in the way and also it would have a similar limit to current trains on those lines anyway (~120) since the corners are too sharp to go any faster.
only between east hills/wolli creek (a fair distance, tbh), and redfernish to central. like aussieboy said, there's space to run a fairly quickish service between redfern and wolli creek and from east hills and onward there's a lot of room (only problem is the bend from holsworthy to glenfield)Edit: yes you could build a dedicated line parallel to the normal one there but it wouldn't be capable of 300 km/h trains as the corners are too sharp, and then it'd be in traffic.
Yeh it is absolutely a real problem... and I don't know the solutionDude look at the current timetable during busy times of day there are trains on that express line constantly, they would be able to run at the same speed as the express trains at best.
Edit: yes you could build a dedicated line parallel to the normal one there but it wouldn't be capable of 300 km/h trains as the corners are too sharp, and then it'd be in traffic. Like you said the current Goulburn train takes 42 minutes to Campbelltown (which isn't really the end of Sydney btw), like I said originally, ~45 minutes.
what? south coast/illawarra lines have their own line. bankstown and east hills have dedicated lines im quite sure. and if you'd travelled through there you'd know there's enough space on the western side there for another two lines (As was the plan since there's a few abandoned railway platforms at redfern, erskenville and st peters)bankstown and southern lines run from sydenham to central through Erskineville though.Fact of the matter is without a tunnel which would be unbelievable expensive it is going to take a while to get through Sydney.
But Green Square and Mascot are slated to become massively dense residential suburbsalternatively, and much more sensibly imo, the fast train could run through the airport and the existing line could run where i just said the fast train could run (the dotted green line on cityrail maps).