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Rail Express Systems

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rail Express Systems
TypeState owned
IndustryPackage & mail transport
PredecessorParcels sector
Founded1982
Defunct1996
FateIntegrated into English Welsh & Scottish (EWS)
SuccessorEnglish, Welsh & Scottish
Area served
United Kingdom
ServicesMail & package delivery, charter trains
ParentBritish Rail

Rail Express Systems (RES) was a sector of British Rail. This sector was responsible for transport of mail and parcels, including the travelling post office trains, as well as taking over charter operations from InterCity and haulage of the Royal Train.

RES had been created out of a policy of Sectorisation, its functions previously being undertaken as an integral element of British Rail in the 1980s. Initially known simply as the Parcels Sector, it was decided to re-brand it as Rail Express Systems during late 1991. The entity's management team sought to improve the economics of its operations and to better satisfy its customer's needs, the principal one being the Royal Mail. Thus, various initiatives were undertaken, including the procurement of new rolling stock in the form of 16 four-car British Rail Class 325, a series of electric multiple units built exclusively for moving mail.

During the mid-1990s, RES implemented a £150 million strategy that focused on long-distance services that worked in conjunction with a central hub based in London at its heart, known as Railnet. As a consequence, many stations had their mail services permanently withdrawn as they were redirected to a series of hubs across the country; the final mail train services departed King's Cross, Euston, Liverpool Street and Paddington stations on 27 September 1996. As a result of the privatisation of British Rail during the mid-1990s, RES was put up for sale to the private sector. Following a competitive bidding process, the entity was purchased entirely by the recently created railway freight operator English Welsh & Scottish (EWS); shortly thereafter, RES was integrated into the firm and ceased to exist as an independent operation. A few years later, railway-based mail operations ended entirely in Britain due to the increasingly poor economics involved.

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Transcription

[train passing] ♪ pizzicato background music ♪ (Narrator) Britain's rail network transports 3 million passengers and 400,000 tonnes of freight a day. With hundreds of trains using it at any one time. All this traffic presents us with a safety challenge. Trains are guided by rails, so it's impossible for them to swerve or pull over. Trains are heavy, can't stop quickly and frequently operate at speeds which do not enable them to halt within sighting distance of the driver. Under these circumstances, one might assume that trains are prone to collision. In fact, rail is the safest mode of transport in Britain. And that's because trains are carefully controlled. Hence our responsibility at Network Rail to control them. Signalling is the control process Network Rail uses to operate trains safely, over the correct route and to the proper time-table. The two key features of this process are line-side signals and the block system. Trains can't collide if they're not permitted to occupy the same section of track at the same time. So the network is divided into sections known as "blocks". Normally, only one train is permitted in each block at any one time. The British rail network uses line-side signals to advise the driver of the status of the section of track ahead. Most line-side signals are in colour light form, but a significant number of semaphore signals remain on secondary lines. The semaphore consists of a mechanical arm that raises to signify go or lowers into the horizontal to signify stop. The most modern signals have 4 colour aspects. A green light indicates clear. A double yellow indicates that the next signal will be a caution. The yellow signal indicates caution, and that the next signal will be red. And a red means stop, otherwise known as danger. It's prohibited to pass a signal at danger. The British rail network was originally controlled by thousands of manned signal boxes located at regular intervals along the lines. ♪ guitar background music ♪ (Stewart) My name's Stewart Sentence, I'm the signaller at Uttoxeter signal box. This is the most traditional form of system on the railway as it is at the moment. A lot of this, as you see, goes back to when the original railway started. As far as we're concerned the universe begins at Caverswall over to the right and Sudbury there and we're in the middle. This set of blocks tells me where the train is between myself and Caverswall, and this set of blocks tell me where the train is between Sudbury and myself. These levers here will operate the points for the crossings into the loops and sidings. They'll also work the semaphore signals. (Narrator) To prevent a collision caused by human error, the safety system called "interlocking" protects the railway network. Interlocking is a series of mechanical devices that prevents the signaller operating appliances in an unsafe sequence. (Stewart) What you have here is what looks like a simple lever system but is actually, if you looked underneath the box, is quite a complicated interlocking system. The interlocking system prevents me giving a green signal to an approaching train unless I set that route in that interlocking system safely first. It sounds simple and it basically works simple but the action what it does is very good. (Narrator) Level frame signal boxes, while effective, aren't efficient. They only cover a short section of line and manning them with skilled operators is expensive. (Stewart) Now I can pull the signals off No. 2. [loud click] Some of these you'll see me pulling quite 'ard; that's because there's a lot of gape on these. Some people can't actually pull 'em at all. Well a lot of it's fairly hands on. You see the trains, you've got control over the trains and the job itself. It's a good job; a better job as I've ever 'ad. Without a doubt. [clank] [train passes rapidly] (Narrator) The next big leap in rail signalling control came with the electronic age and the advent of Power Signal control Boxes like this one in Derby. ♪ 60s electronic background music ♪ (Signaller) This location opened in 1969, and when it did open it represented a massive step forward to the railways in the way that trains are signalled. Well, these lines represent mainly the Derby to Birmingham main lines. This signal box actually took over 84 mechanical signal boxes, making it a far more efficient way of carrying out signalling. (Narrator) Routes are set by pressing buttons on a large control panel. Each section between buttons represents a stretch of line formerly controlled by a lever framed signal box. (Signaller) It's very easy to work around. The signalling system is very user friendly and very easy to see the layout of the trains and where they're coming from and going to. The presence of a train is indicated by these red lights on the panel. They're activated by the completion of an electrical circuit when the train's wheels pass over the track circuit. The operation of the signalling equipment is carried out by pulling and pushing the actual buttons that are set in the panel. To set a route you press the entrance button, you press the exit button and the signalling system between detects all equipment that's located between the two signals. Once that's in the correct position, the signal will clear for the train to proceed. To take the route out, we simply pull the exit button and the route will drop out. (Narrator) Power Signal Boxes are regulated by a relay room, a little like a giant mechanical computer. (Signaller) This is the interlocking room, underneath the operating floor of the Power Signal Box. And in 'ere are all the banks of relays. And these relays relay all of the information from the touches of the buttons upstairs from the signaller outside to the points and the track circuits and the level crossings. (Narrator) Relays are interlocking electro-mechanical switches. When the signaller sets a route in the upstairs control room, you can hear the switches clicking, working out how to set the signals and switches and crossings and whether the set route is safe. [clicking] (Signaller) These cabinets are where the equipment in Derby PSB reach the modern era. These allow transmission of the train head code, the four-digit running number that we saw on the panels upstairs to be transmitted to adjacent signal boxes to give them advanced notification of that train coming so that train can be routed further down the line. (Narrator) Powered Signal Boxes are effective and safe. But at Network Rail we're now introducing an even more efficient form of signalling control. ♪ rapid piano background music ♪ (Jason) Compared to the oldest lever box signal boxes, this is a world apart. It's like an Air Traffic Control Centre basically, but controlling trains instead of aeroplanes. My name's Jason Jones, I'm a signaller and I work at Ashford IECC in Kent. The IECC stands for "Integrated Electronic Control Centre". All the signalling in this signalling centre is controlled by computers. A timetable is downloaded every day and any alterations etc. are all programmed into the computer. When everything's running on-time and all the trains are in their correct place and there's nothing else going on, the computers are all running the job and I am literally just sitting here monitoring. Hello John, yeah it's sitting on area 83 Ashford, over. At any time there could be an emergency of any description and that's when I will then step in and take over from the computer. I will turn the computer off and then run the trains manually using the keyboard or the tracker-ball system that we've got. On this screen here I can see the exact layout of the stations and the tracks. I can see where the trains are - where the red line is. Each red line indicates the location of the train. I can see where the trains are heading for (what route they're taking) by the white line. That's what the computer has set up for that train to use. We can also see the signals what the driver sees out on the track. The red dots indicate a signal that's red, we've got a single yellow, we've also got a double yellow. And obviously we've got the green signals which means then he can proceed at line speed. ♪ slower piano background music ♪ The computers that Network Rail uses in this type of location are specifically designed for this type of system. They use various safety protocols, various fail-safes. You get three computers working in tandem with one another and before any decisions are made, two of the computers have to agree with one another. Ashford covers a huge area, right from the Kent coast at Folkstone right the way into Central London. That is the equivalent, yeah, of hundreds of the old style lever frame signal boxes. [train horn] We don't just deal with standard trains here. As well as the commuter trains that we run we also run the high-speed trains into St. Pancras and the Eurostar trains that come from Paris and Brussels. The high speed trains are run using a totally different way of signalling trains than the old-style and conventional signals. The high-speed line is signalled using cab-signalling where the driver gets a display in the cab and that tells him when to stop his train, start his train and what speed he must run at. The trains travel up to 186 mph, and that's just too fast for the driver to be able to see signals out on the track. All the systems, whether you're in a lever box or you're in this type of modern technology it's all designed to fail safe and that is any failures, the signals go back to red. This job carries a lot of responsibility. You are responsible for people's lives on the trains, the public, drivers, track workers. You do have a fair bit of responsibility. No matter how much the technology changes, the one thing that remains the same is the safety and the security of the trains out on the track.

History

Rail Express Systems livery as carried by Propelling Control Vehicle no. 94335 stabled at Plymouth on 29 August 2003

During the 1980s, British Rail's senior management endeavoured to rejuvenate numerous aspects of its operations and to better fulfil customer demands.[1] Under the policy of Sectorisation, BR's entire rail-based mail operations were consolidated into their own business unit, Rail Express Systems (RES). This reorganisation under its own management team led to a new focus of its operations on the specific needs of its primary customer, the Royal Mail (RM).[1]

During October 1991, RES was officially launched at Crewe Diesel TMD.[2] For this event, examples of Class 08, 47, 86 and 90 locomotives were painted into a new livery of red, with a grey upper band, and light blue and grey flashes. The light blue and grey flashes represent a set of stylised eagle's wings.[3]

The sector had maintenance depots at Crewe, Bristol Barton Hill, Cambridge and Euston Downside. Rolling stock was also maintained by other sectors at Heaton and Liverpool Edge Hill. Amongst the more unusual duties that fell under RES' umbrella, was its responsibility for the haulage of the Royal Train whenever required.[4][5]

Seeking to rejuvenate rail mail, RES devised a £150 million strategy that focused on long-distance services that worked in conjunction with a central hub based in London at its heart, known as Railnet.[1] During late 1993, RES and RM had signed a 13-year deal with RES to operate the trains from this new hub, also referred to as the London Distribution Centre or the Princess Royal Distribution Centre, at Stonebridge Park, near Wembley. Furthermore, RM commissioned ABB to manufacture 16 four-car British Rail Class 325 electric multiple units, which were designed exclusively for the transport of mail.[1]

During RES's existence, there were numerous operational changes made in the use of Britain's railways in regards to the delivery of both mail and parcels. Throughout the 1990s, many smaller services were cut back, and mail services were removed from most passenger stations. Following the opening of the new London hub on 30 September 1996, British rail mail operations were drastically restructured, only dedicated mail trains were operated after this date and thus were no longer based at any main line stations, as it had been decided to centrally base all London mail trains at the hub instead. Accordingly, the final mail train services departed King's Cross, Euston, Liverpool Street and Paddington stations on 27 September 1996.[1] In place of passenger stations, these services were directly to a number of mail hubs at strategic locations; these were: Shieldmuir (Motherwell), Low Fell (Gateshead), Warrington, Doncaster, Bristol Parkway, Tonbridge and Wembley PRDC (London) as well as dedicated platforms at Stafford.[citation needed]

The restructuring of services, intended to enable the faster delivery of mail to distant destinations, necessitated the streamlining of both mail pick-ups and drop-offs, a policy which resulted in many intermediate locations seeing the permanently withdrawn of coverage by RES services.[1] Instead, mail was to be transported by road to the 45 stations that would be served by the remaining mail trains. Despite this, the increasing efficiency of mechanical sorting in comparison to the hand sorting methods used onboard RES' fleet of travelling post offices (TPOs) meant that the latter was becoming increasingly uneconomic regardless of the structural changes being made.[1]

British Rail TPO vehicle NSA 80390 on display at Doncaster Works open day on 27 July 2003. This type of vehicle, based on the British Rail Mark 1 coach, was the final design of TPO vehicle used in the United Kingdom.

As part of the privatisation of British Rail, RES was the first freight company put up for sale, with bids lodged by Freightliner, a management buyout, Serco and a Wisconsin Central led a consortium known as North and South railways.[6] The latter's bid was successful, the sale taking effect on 9 December 1995 with 164 locomotives and 677 wagons included.[7][8][9] In 1996, the business was integrated into English Welsh & Scottish (EWS), ceasing to exist as a separate entity.[10]

Rail-based mail traffic continued to decline following the integration. A further factor that negatively impacted such operations was the Hatfield rail crash during October 2000, which led to numerous restrictions being imposed upon TPOs, including new speed limitations and numerous cancellations across many routes.[1][11] There were also rising concerns over the safety of staff, as there was little consideration towards the crashworthiness or the wellbeing of the TPO's occupants in the event of a major accident.[1] Furthermore, the Royal Mail had increasingly decided to make use of other means of transporting mail, including aircraft and road vehicles.[1] Amid these various factors, during 2003, it was announced that Royal Mail had decided to suspend all transportation of mail by rail.[12]

Mid 1990s routes

Travelling post office routes
  • London-Glasgow
  • London-Carlisle
  • London-Newcastle
  • London-Dover
  • London-Norwich
  • Penzance-Bristol
  • Plymouth-Newcastle
  • Cardiff-Glasgow
Other mail trains
  • London-Bristol
  • London-Glasgow
  • London-Newcastle
  • London-Norwich
  • London-Plymouth
  • London-Swansea
  • Plymouth-Glasgow
  • Plymouth-Newcastle
  • York-Shrewsbury (ECS worked from Newcastle and reversed into p1 at York)

Parcels Sector rolling stock

The late 1980s and early 1990s saw many changes to the Rail Express Systems fleet, with the cessation of the usage of Class 105s by 1987, Class 114s by 1990, Class 120s by 1987, Class 127s by 1989, Class 128s by 1990, Class 302s by 1996 and Class 308s by 1989.

In the same period, Class 325 EMUs were introduced and the entire parcels and mails fleet (except the travelling post office stock) was refurbished or withdrawn.

Class Image Number Power
Class 08
Diesel Shunter
Class 31
Diesel Locomotive
Class 47
Class 86
AC Electric Locomotive
Class 90
5
Class 105
9 DMU
Class 114
10
Class 120
10
Class 127
23
Class 128
5
Class 302
6 EMU
Class 308
3
Class 325
16
Coach Type Image Number Notes
NAA - Propelling control vehicle
24
NBA - Brake Gangwayed (High-security)
NDX - Brake Gangwayed (90 mph)
NEX - Brake Gangwayed (100 mph)
NHA - Brake Gangwayed (110 mph)
NIA - Brake Gangwayed (high-security) (110 mph)
NJX - General utility van (90 mph)
NKA - General utility van (High-security) (100 mph)
NLX - Newspaper van
NNX - Courier vehicle
NPX - General utility van (TPO use)
NOA - General utility van (100 mph)
NRA - Container van
NSA - Post Office sorting van
10+
NTA - Post Office stowage van
NUA - Brake Post Office stowage van

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Foster, Stefanie (5 February 2014). "Mail by rail - still". Rail.
  2. ^ "New BR division hopes for whole train loads". Commercial Motor. 17 October 1991.
  3. ^ "Launched with a burning resolve". The Railway Magazine. No. 1088. December 1991. p. 902.
  4. ^ "Princes charming". Rail. No. 253. 24 May 1995. p. 4.
  5. ^ "Class 47s emerge as Royal Princes". The Railway Magazine. No. 1131. July 1995. p. 7.
  6. ^ "Wisconsin bid favourite for Res". Rail. No. 267. 6 December 1995. p. 7.
  7. ^ "RES sold to North & South Railways". Rail Privatisation News. No. 20. 14 December 1995. p. 1.
  8. ^ "Confirmed - Wisconsin Central buys Rail express systems". Rail. No. 268. 20 December 1995. p. 9.
  9. ^ "Royal Mail and Royal Train operator is sold to American railroad". The Railway Magazine. No. 1138. February 1996. p. 6.
  10. ^ "Wisconsin unveils its new-look livery". Rail. No. 268. 8 May 1996. p. 7.
  11. ^ Andrew Murray (2001). Off the rails: Britain's great rail crisis : cause, consequences and cure. Verso. "Companies in trouble", pp. 124–129. ISBN 9781859846407.
  12. ^ Written statement by Royal Mail Archived 29 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine (Document FOR 105), House of Commons Transport Select Committee, September 2003.

General references

  • Rail Magazine Issue 159
  • Motive Power Pocket books pub. Platform 5
  • British Multiple Units Volume 1 and Volume 3
This page was last edited on 17 September 2023, at 12:52
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