This is a test of GDPR / Cookie Acceptance [about our cookies]
Really irritating test - cookie expires in 24 hour!
Standardisation of Time and the Railway Clearing House
As at 21st November 2024 17:56 GMT
 
Re: Standardisation of Time and the Railway Clearing House
Posted by Electric train at 18:36, 22nd September 2023
 
I have a feeling that somewhere within NR there must be a place where disagreements between the different bits (geographic, functional, etc.) can be settled. Just being part of one organisation does not stop that being needed.

There is, part of the Andrew Haines "Putting Passengers First" devolution of Network Rail means that each Route or Region has a panel with its TOC's n FOCs where any delay attribution that has not be accepted goes to the Route Panel.  For inter Route delay attributions can go to the Regional panel or for Route delay attribution that cannot be resolved at Route level.  For inter Regional delay attribution it can go to the National panel or rarely for Region level that cannot be resolved.

The actual Route / Region structure depends on the Region.

Its a micro industry in its own right

Re: Standardisation of Time and the Railway Clearing House
Posted by stuving at 16:12, 22nd September 2023
 
So - what is the modern day equivalent of the Railway Clearing House?

Some of it is the RSSB, things like BS and EN (TSI's etc) there are also Railway Group Standards most of all these can trace most if not all of their roots to RCH, there are also European Railway standards utilised in the UK

That's on the technical side, but RCH was initially, and mostly, about accounting for fares and goods charges that were shared between companies (hence its name). That is now done by RSP, within RDG which does similar things to the wider commercial and representative functions of RCH.

There were also track access charges, between companies, where RCH settled not only bills but disputes (to a limited degree). That function now happens with and within Network rail, with ORR having powers of enforcement that RCH never had.

I have a feeling that somewhere within NR there must be a place where disagreements between the different bits (geographic, functional, etc.) can be settled. Just being part of one organisation does not stop that being needed.

Re: Standardisation of Time and the Railway Clearing House
Posted by Electric train at 11:16, 22nd September 2023
 
So - what is the modern day equivalent of the Railway Clearing House?

Some of it is the RSSB, things like BS and EN (TSI's etc) there are also Railway Group Standards most of all these can trace most if not all of their roots to RCH, there are also European Railway standards utilised in the UK

Standardisation of Time and the Railway Clearing House
Posted by grahame at 08:22, 22nd September 2023
 
From Wikipedia

On 22 September 1847, the RCH recommended that Greenwich Mean Time be adopted as the standard time for all railways in the United Kingdom.

The RCH went on to set technical standards for various items, such as goods wagons, to promote standardisation across the rail network. If a wagon was described as an RCH wagon, this meant it had been built to comply with RCH standards.

The RCH set technical standards for cable connections between coaches for the remote operation of systems; they were initially used only for control of train lighting. These cables were known as RCH jumpers, and in the 1970s a system for push-pull trains was developed which used the RCH cable, eliminating the need for a separate control cable to be fitted to intermediate coaches.

The RCH produced Railway Junction Diagrams (RJDs), which show the junctions where two or more railway companies met, and the distances between these junctions and nearby stations and junctions, in order to aid the calculation of mileage-based rates. Starting in 1859 it also issued what has been described as the "most superb series of railway maps ever produced in the United Kingdom."

Here are some sample maps:







So - what is the modern day equivalent of the Railway Clearing House?

 
The Coffee Shop forum is provided by customers of Great Western Railway (formerly First Great Western). The views expressed are those of the individual posters concerned. Visit https://www.gwr.com for the official Great Western Railway website. Please contact the administrators of this site if you feel that the content provided by one of our posters contravenes our posting rules ( graham AT sn12.net ).

Although we are planning ahead, we don't know what the future will bring here in the Coffee Shop. We have domains "firstgreatwestern.info" for w-a-y back and also "greatwesternrailway.info"; we can also answer to "greatbritishrailways.info" too. For the future, information about Great Brisish Railways, by customers and for customers.
 
Current Running
GWR trains from JourneyCheck
 
Links in development

Member contributions
Recent new POSTS
Recent new THREADS
Popular Threads
Member Polls
Transport Diary
So far this month
Search for

Also on our site
About the forum
Whitelisted (public) documents
On this travel day
2B added - Individual Station Data

User site admin
Tailor your experience

Externnal Links
JourneyCheck
2B added - Live Station updates
2B added - Booking engine links
BBC news feed

Old site pages - active
About the Coffee Shop
Acronymns and Abbreviations

Old site pages - being replaced
BBC News Feed
Recent New Topics
Popular Threads
Members Polls
On this day
Diary
So far this month
Forum Home Page
 
Code Updated 13th September 2024
From https://greatwesternrailway.info/t27904.html?topic=27904.msg338573 - go insecure