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Posted: 19 Dec 2012, 20:38
by barrykas
Hrm...I can come up with four stations sharing the same root for number 9: Barry, Barry Docks, Barry Island and Barry Links. Considerably more than 318 miles between them though, at 463.75!
How about Barrow Haven, Barrow-in-Furness and Barrow upon Soar? Or Bromley Cross, Bromley North and Bromley South? Or Moreton (Dorset), Moreton (Merseyside) and Moreton-in-Marsh? Or Walton (Merseyside), Walton-on-the-Naze and Walton-on-Thames? Or for another four, Hampton, Hampton-in-Arden, Hampton Court and Hampton Wick?
Re: Sort of Railbenders, but not quite. Well, actually ...
Posted: 19 Dec 2012, 20:42
by tubeguru
You're doing very well to get the answer right, but as I said before, the name of the place in all three cases is ONE word, and the town the station serves has the same name in each case.
Re: Sort of Railbenders, but not quite. Well, actually ...
Posted: 22 Dec 2012, 09:28
by tangy
You are EVL, Tubeguru.
The answer to this just sprang into my head when I was underneath a lorry yesterday.
it's Whitchurch (one in the cardiff suburbs, one near Andover and the other between Crewe and Shrewsbury)
Re: Sort of Railbenders, but not quite. Well, actually ...
Posted: 22 Dec 2012, 10:17
by tubeguru
Do you often have moments of clarity when involved in road traffic accidents?
Re: Sort of Railbenders, but not quite. Well, actually ...
Posted: 22 Dec 2012, 10:55
by Nigel
tubeguru wrote:Do you often have moments of clarity when involved in road traffic accidents?
Not sure about effect of an RTA on generating ideas, but the mathematician Henri Poincare had the key concept in the development of automorphic functions just come into his head when stepping on to a bus, while not consciously thinking about it at the time.
Re: Sort of Railbenders, but not quite. Well, actually ...
Posted: 22 Dec 2012, 10:57
by tubeguru
Nigel wrote:tubeguru wrote:Do you often have moments of clarity when involved in road traffic accidents?
Not sure about effect of an RTA on generating ideas, but the mathematician Henri Poincare had the key concept in the development of automorphic functions just come into his head when stepping on to a bus, while not consciously thinking about it at the time.
While I would not recommend that method for finding the answers to these questions, it would appear that it has worked for Tangy, as the correct answer to that question was indeed Whitchurch. There is one in Hampshire, Shropshire and Cardiff.
Re: Sort of Railbenders, but not quite. Well, actually ...
Posted: 22 Dec 2012, 15:34
by tangy
Of course, by underneath a lorry, I mean with relation to my work as a mechanic and with the lorry up high on lifters with me checking the chassis components!!!
Re: Sort of Railbenders, but not quite. Well, actually ...
Posted: 23 Dec 2012, 22:37
by tubeguru
Bonus question:
One railway "region" in the UK possesses no fewer than FOUR junctions all with the same name. What is the shared name of these junctions, and where can they be found?
Note - there may be more than one group of four, but I'd be very surprised if there were.
Re: Sort of Railbenders, but not quite. Well, actually ...
Posted: 24 Dec 2012, 16:08
by tubeguru
Am I to take it that some of you might like a clue or two to some of these?
Re: Sort of Railbenders, but not quite. Well, actually ...
Posted: 24 Dec 2012, 18:58
by perkyperky
3 Lancaster, Liverpool, Leicester, London, Westminster, Oxford.
9 Burnham
Re: Sort of Railbenders, but not quite. Well, actually ...
Posted: 24 Dec 2012, 19:01
by tubeguru
perkyperky wrote:9 Burnham
See several posts up. The correct answer is WHITCHURCH.
Re: Sort of Railbenders, but not quite. Well, actually ...
Posted: 24 Dec 2012, 19:34
by perkyperky
Oops!
Re: Sort of Railbenders, but not quite. Well, actually ...
Posted: 24 Dec 2012, 21:41
by barrykas
tubeguru wrote:
One railway "region" in the UK possesses no fewer than FOUR junctions all with the same name. What is the shared name of these junctions, and where can they be found?
I've found a triplet on the Southern, though it's probably cheating...Latchmere Junctions 1, 2 and 3. Can't find the foursome anywhere obvious.
Re: Sort of Railbenders, but not quite. Well, actually ...
Posted: 24 Dec 2012, 21:45
by Urzzz1871
2 - Slough has 6 platforms
Re: Sort of Railbenders, but not quite. Well, actually ...
Posted: 24 Dec 2012, 23:32
by tubeguru
barrykas wrote:tubeguru wrote:
One railway "region" in the UK possesses no fewer than FOUR junctions all with the same name. What is the shared name of these junctions, and where can they be found?
I've found a triplet on the Southern, though it's probably cheating...Latchmere Junctions 1, 2 and 3. Can't find the foursome anywhere obvious.
Yeah, slightly cheating. Their name is descriptive of a railway feature.