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@Hot Water posted:

The narrator explained that the stopped and emptied "Slip Coach", would then be moved to a siding by the "Shunter" (switcher in GB), for subesquent pick up by a returning train. Sounds pretty straight forward to me.

Straight forward? Sounds like a pretty complex system to save stopping and starting time. Evidently, the Brits thought a fast schedule was more important.

Another time saving measure on the British network was the use of tenders equipped with corridors on the London and North Eastern Railway. Effective with the Summer 1928 timetable, the Flying Scotsman was scheduled to run non-stop between London and Edinburgh. With a booked travel time of approximately eight and a quarter hours, a crew change was made at speed near the mid point of the trip as the relief driver and fireman, who had been seated in the first carriage of the train, walked up to the head end via the tender's corridor and assumed operation of the locomotive from the first crew who then repaired to the coach for the balance of the journey.

Bob

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