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British Rail tube trains

A Metropolitan line train (left) passes a Piccadilly line train (right). The Metropolitan Line train is equivalent to a full-sized train on the national network, while the Piccadilly Line trains shows the size of a "deep-tube" type

Although the railway network in Great Britain has some of the smallest loading gauges in the world, the vast bulk of it is still capable of operating full sized vehicles.[1] However, British Rail, together with its predecessors and successors have, on occasion, been required to operate passenger trains to an even smaller loading gauge and have, as a consequence, obtained rolling stock identical to that of the "deep tube" lines of London Underground; these are lines built using the tunneling shield method, that were, by necessity, smaller than those lines built using the cut-and-cover method.[2] In 1892, a Parliamentary Committee headed by James Stansfeld recommended that such lines be in tunnels with a minimum diameter of 11 ft 6in.[3] Two routes operated by British Rail required the use of such deep-tube rolling stock, the Waterloo & City Line in London, and the Island Line on the Isle of Wight.

  1. ^ "Gauging" (PDF). Rail Safety and Standards Board (RSSB). January 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 October 2015. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  2. ^ Croome & Jackson (1993), Preface.
  3. ^ Robbins, Michael (February 1959). "The Size of the Tube". Railway Magazine. 105 (694): 94–96.

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