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  • LATEST ON JOBSBOARD: Part time Communications Manager, Pevensey Food and Drink Magazine

  • LATEST ON JOBSBOARD: part time editor, Pevensey Food and Drink Magazine

  • 20/20 vision: Interest in Pevfeast, a food festival for Pevensey sparks series of ideas to bring full flavour of offerings across locality to wider visitor audience

  • ALAN EVERARD: The Art and Nature Column: From JMW Turner and Flatford Mill to the albino squirrel pictured in Beachlands, Pevensey Bay

  • Langney Community Library: Summer book challenge

  • THIS WEEK: The Haven Players, Stone Cross: Summer Panto! - The Pied Piper of Hamelin

  • Pevensey Scarecrow Festival: Elizabeth Beeney: I wish those who choose to spoil this festival by damaging the scarecrows would be more respectful

  • BUSINESS POST OF WEEK: Castle Inn, Pevensey Bay: VLTGE: Mykee-D on the voice last night

  • LATEST ON JOBSBOARD: Part time staff, Royal Oak and Castle Inn, Pevensey

  • WEEKEND FEATURE: Local Pevensey Bay based musician, Peter Barron, review. latest album, 'Retro Activ'

  • SMUGFEST SATURDAY 17 AUGUST: UPDATE: The wonderful Jane is now performing (solo act and also known as one part Two Hep Cats)

  • Bexhill 60s Revolution: Saturday 13 July: Biggest town-wide 1960s event in the UK

  • Step into summer with 1066 Country: Official tourism news for Hastings & 1066 Country

  • New internal wayfinding signage installed at Eastbourne District General Hospital

  • About Bexhill 60s Revolution: Saturday 13 July 2019

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THIS WEEK Langney Shopping Centre £6.5 million extension takes shape


COMMUNITY The Haven Players, Stone Cross: Summer Panto! – The Pied Piper of Hamelin


JOBSBOARD Part time staff, Royal Oak and Castle Inn, Pevensey

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Network Rail’s fleet of snow and ice treatment trains are ready to keep passengers moving this winter and minimise disruption.—Network Rail, 14 January 2019

Govia Thameslink Railway (GTR) has robust plans in place, including running ghost trains overnight to help keep tracks clear, plus its new fleet of Thameslink trains which feature a special snow mode to help braking.

Unlike some other parts of the country, trains on the South East Route, which includes Sussex and south London, draw their power from the conductor rail. But if ice forms on the surface of the rail, it interrupts the flow of electricity and trains can’t draw power to move.

That’s why Network Rail has a fleet of 12 treatment trains which will travel the equivalent of six times around the world – that’s 161,296 miles – scraping ice off the conductor rail using metal brushes and spraying thousands of litres of
anti-icing fluid to prevent the formation of ice.

John Halsall, Network Rail’s managing director in the south east, said: “We’ve been preparing for winter for months and are working 24/7 to keep passengers moving.

“Our snow and ice treatment trains are ready to travel around 160,000 miles laying anti-icing gel to stop ice forming on the third rail, while we’ve also improved our extreme weather forecasting so we can stay one step ahead of Mother Nature.”

As well as freezing the conductor rail, snow and ice can also freeze or jam points so trains cannot switch tracks safely, while couplers which join trains together can freeze, which causes problems joining or separating carriages.

GTR began preparing for wintry weather in the autumn, with de-icing equipment distributed, stocks checked, and staff briefed on procedures. The operator not only runs overnight ghost trains to help keep tracks clear and improved new Thameslink trains, but it has previously made modifications to other classes of train to increase their resilience.

Alex Foulds, Business Improvement Director and Deputy Chief Operating Officer at GTR, said: “We can never guarantee to keep all our services running if the weather takes a very bad turn for the worse, but with Network Rail we are well prepared and will do all we can to keep passenger disruption to a minimum.”

On top of this, Network Rail has:

  • Fitted points which are prone to freezing with heaters and NASA-grade insulation.
  • Installed conductor rail heating in some areas.
  • This year, Network Rail is trialling a more effective anti-icer fluid on the Sheerness line, which contains more of the active ingredient that stops ice forming.
  • Adjusted its extreme weather forecasting processes to better predict ice build-up on the conductor rail. Detailed forecasts from weather experts MetDesk help formulate local action plans during adverse weather, minimising disruption to passengers. The forecasts cover not just the weather but how the conditions will impact on specific railway infrastructure such as the tracks and conductor rails. A network of hundreds of monitoring stations also provides real-time weather data, enabling Network Rail to respond to conditions as they develop in real time.