Devon railway line reopens after points failure

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Devon railway line reopens after points failure

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GWR Train
GWR Train // Credit: Great Western Railway (GWR)

UPDATE: Trains are now running normally again


A points failure at Exeter St Davids has blocked all lines, and is causing major disruption across the Western Region.

are being affected between Plymouth and Leeds / and Edinburgh.

Meanwhile, Great Western Railway services between Penzance and Plymouth / Cardiff Central / Paignton and London Paddington.

Their Paignton and services and trains on the Okehampton line are also affected.

services between Exeter St Davids and London Waterloo are also affected.

Major disruption is expected until 4pm. Ticket acceptance is in place with CrossCountry and Great Western Railway via any reasonable route.

GWR passengers can use South Western services between Exeter St Davids and Waterloo and then use services to London Paddington.

Please check National Rail for the latest details.

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  1. This happens much too often at and around Exeter St Davids station. When are they going to do some preventative maintenance to stop if from happening again?

  2. I was on a train Thursday the 11.3 from Paddington to Newton abbot got stuck 5 minutes from Exeter St david sat there for 90 minutes not very happy but the staff were fabulous bringing round bottles of water well done STAFF

  3. The manual methods aren’t an option on today’s busy main lines. They’re trying to keep men (and women) off the tracks as much as possible nowadays for safety reasons too. Part of the problem is the overall reduced number of lines and points, meaning that a single failure leads to immediate disruption as no alternative route is available.

  4. No disruption like this in Manuel Signalling days just nip out and clip the points signal fitter Cliose at hand to fix the problem They call it progress 😂😇😎

  5. It does seem that there is some sort of trackwork issue that blocks all lines of a railway somewhere occurring every other week. Is Network rail not keeping up with maintenance and is instead just reacting to failures?
    I recall that in years gone by, railways employed linesmen who every day walked “their” section of track looking for potential trouble (loose fishplates, loose rail clips, incipient rail cracking etc). That way repairs could be done before a complete failure took place. I can understand that this type of arrangement may not be feasible in modern times, but what has Network Rail put in place instead of it?

    1. When I worked on BR S&T had lots of points failures, BR were installing points that use a hydraulic system to operate, they were always going wrong, I tried to get them abolished.

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