Talk:East Hill Cliff Railway

Latest comment: 6 months ago by JA 1961 in topic Clarification of gradient of the line

Still closed?

edit

The article says:

The East Hill Lift is currently closed owing to a "control panel fault"[3] in June 2007.

Can anybody confirm that it is indeed still closed. -- chris_j_wood (talk) 16:29, 12 May 2009 (UTC)Reply

This was on my ToDo list anyway, so here goes...
...which should keep you busy for a while. :o)
EdJogg (talk) 23:29, 12 May 2009 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for that, and for sorting out the external links. I've added some clarification, and a cite of the Hastings Observer article. -- Starbois (talk) 10:51, 13 May 2009 (UTC)Reply
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Clarification of gradient of the line

edit

The article currently states it to be the steepest funicular in the UK but also states: "Gradient: 38%", which would not be particularly steep for a funicular. As an example, the Lynton and Lynmouth Cliff Railway is described in its own Wikipedia article as having a gradient of 58%, casting more doubt on the 38% for East Hill. Although the length of East Hill is given, the height difference is not stated, so it is not possible from information in the article as drafted to check the gradient. The linked articles from 'The Heritage Trail' and 'Funicular Railways of the UK' both give different values for the gradient (both considerably steeper than 38%); the former states that it is "1:1.28", whereas the latter says "1:1.128". It seems likely given the similarlity in the digits that one of these values contains a typo of either a missing or superfluous digit "1". The "1:1.28" value however corresponds to a gradient of 78% or expressed as an angle, 38 degrees. This in turn suggests to me that the value stated in the Wikipedia article may be incorrectly shown as 38% when perhaps it should be 38 degrees (78%). [The 78% figure is also the once stated at the website https://railtracks.uk/hastings-east-hill-cliff-railway , although that website appears to duplicate the text in this Wikipedia article, so I have no idea whether one has simply been copied from the other.]

I can't find a dedicated website for the line and don't have any other suitable source of information to hand - can anyone else find an authorative source for the gradient? JA 1961 (talk) 20:57, 13 May 2024 (UTC)Reply