Trains & Tones at Hatfield Peverel, GEML | 29/08/18
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 3 дек 2024
- This video is property of "Richard Chalklin"
2160p 4K HD!
A busy visit to Hatfield Peverel on the Great Eastern Mainline on a Wednesday morning into afternoon. Loads of tones and unusual activity are featured such as a pair of London Overground 315 & and 317's and some 86's, followed by loads of train horns.
Hatfield Peverel info:
Hatfield Peverel railway station is on the Great Eastern Main Line in the East of England, serving the villages of Hatfield Peverel and Nounsley, Essex. It is 35 miles 74 chains (57.8 km) down-line from London Liverpool Street and is situated between Chelmsford to the west and Witham and to the east. Its three-letter station code is HAP.
The station is currently operated by Greater Anglia, who also operate all trains serving it, as part of the East Anglia franchise.
History:
The original Hatfield Peverel station was opened in late 1844 but was destroyed by fire in early 1849. It was later re-built on the current site and opened in 1878, known as "Hatfield Peveril" until the spelling was amended in 1880. There was a private station just to the west for Boreham House between 1843 and 1877.
An 1897 plan of the station shows two goods sidings on the up-side at the London end and a further siding at the country end also on the up-side. There was a refuge siding added at a later date on the down-side at the London end.
Goods traffic was ended on 27 June 1960.
Services:
The following services typically call at Hatfield Peverel during off-peak hours
Greater Anglia: London Liverpool Street - Stratford - Shenfield - Chelmsford - Hatfield Peverel - Witham - Kelvedon - Marks Tey - Colchester - Manningtree - Ipswich
Rolling Stock: Class 321, Class 360
Frequency: 1x per hour each direction.
Notes: Also calls at Ingatestone on Sundays.
At peak times service frequencies may be increased and calling patterns varied.
In popular culture:
The Internet Movie Database cites Hatfield Peverel railway station as a filming location for the 1976 film Exposé. In the film, the station's name sign can clearly be seen.
Fantastic tones from the drivers Richard and fantastic train spotting too
Awesome video mate! It was a great day yesterday, I enjoyed it! Fantastic station!
It was an incredibly dank day out here in GA land yesterday. Superb video as always nonetheless.
Great video dude especially the London Overground Class 315 and Class 317 operating together on a test run. :)
You're right
Oh yeah the overground
The only reason the class 315 was going 100 mph was cause of that 317.
@@user-do2rj4sf8j it was doing 75 mph but we wish but it would blow the bloody motor off the 315
Allan Sheldrake the class 315 motor was turned off and on neutral. The class 317 was pulling the 315.
Once again a great video
Congrats on 1k Luca!
nice tones from the trains nice video 👍
Fantastic video there :)
Hey Richard, were you at HP yesterday 02/01/20?
Those were my 2 friends you saw, I was at Ipswich yesterday.
@@RichardChalklin ah ok. Could you possibly point me in their accounts direction. Need the video of 4M23 at full power that they got yesterday as a issue developed with the locomotive that I need to see if it was present. Thanks.
@@BryerGaming
The Great Eastern Trainspotter
TrainSpotEast
Does there ever stop a train at this station? Even most local trains ea. 4 car multiple units skip this station. No wonder residents stick to use their cars!!
4:37 absolutely horrible what people do to these trains, ruining one whole side. People yet wonder why the fares are going up, it's because of people that do this and make the operators spend more money cleaning it.
Could you do reading station
Conor Rice I'll try and get there asap
Thank you
4:40 that graffiti is shocking, I’m not sure anyone can get on Coach 5 of 8 of that graffitied train
4:50 is that a foot crossing London bound side
O Richard o vídeo e muito maneiro 👍 e porque os trains aí na England só fica com um farol aceso e estranho um abraço Amilton 🇧🇷
lol what?
Graffiti on a Renatus train?!?! Yuk!!
You know, tripods are not that expensive, mate.