clock-face timetable

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

clock-face timetable (plural clock-face timetables)

  1. (transport) A service pattern where services depart at regular intervals, and thus at the same number of minutes past each hour.
    The new clock-face timetable means services to Cardiff now depart at 10 and 40 minutes past the hour.
    • 1956, Bus & Coach[1], Liffe & Sons., page 174:
      He agreed to the system of working to a clock-face timetable, although there was difficulty in fitting it in with the arrival or departure of trains.
    • 2005, Stuart Cole, “Market Demand”, in Applied Transport Economics: Policy, Management and Decision Making[2], 3rd edition, Part 1: Transport Markey Dynamics, Kogan Page, →ISBN, Case Study 1: Urban Bus Operations, page 16:
      5. Reliability — quality of service/regular clock-face timetabe/staff training as elements of service elasticity.
    • 2008 or 2009, South East Wales Transport Alliance, “Welsh Affairs Committee: Evidence”, in House of Commons: Welsh Affairs Committee, editor, Cross-border Provision of Public Services for Wales: Transport[3], Tenth Report of Session 2008-09, The Stationery Office, published 2009, →ISBN, Memorandum submitted by the South East Wales Transport Alliance, page Ev 213:
      When leaving Wales, there is virtually, a clock-face timetable along the South Wales Main Line, with trains for London running every hour from Swansea and every half-hour from Cardiff and Newport []