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Philip Haigh Contributing Writer
rail@baue
3,000 separate data feeds will be wired into ...
Thousands of bus replacements during key element of the Transpennine Route Upgrade
ABOVE: On June 2, 1980, 20066 hauls a coal train from Markam Colliery formed of mineral wagons and hoppers at Barrow Hill, having just come off the line from Hall Lane Junction and Seymour Junction. C
There’s no escaping it. The issue with charter trains, and why they cost so much to run, is the lack of decent, suitable and accessible rolling stock. There is also a definite lack of really nice coac
Is this the train of the future, as imagined by an Applied Futurist for LNER? ANDY COMFORT reports
When we are asked who invented the railways, we can confidently say we did – Britain. But precisely who was involved and how it all developed is a long story. By the end of the 18th century, the Indus