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Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/TGV/archive1

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This is a self-nomination, although other people, notably Willkm, deserve much more credit than me for the great work they have done on this article. The article went through a peer review already (archive), and I think all the comments have been taken into account. The article is comprehensive, well-referenced, and has plenty of nice, free, images. The only unanswered question I know of may be the size of the article: at 47 Kb, it may be slightly too long. It is a complete guide, and it looks good as it is now; some sections could, however, be moved elsewhere and summarized if necessary. Schutz 00:33, 11 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]

The Eurostar main page link is a bit vague - perhaps specify that this is only about the actual train, rather than the whole Eurostar operation? Willkm 00:11, 16 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
  • Looks very complete, good work. Some minor comments from someone who knows very little about rail transport:
  • Could have explained what LGV meant earlier (preferably when the term is first used)
  • The fourth paragraph under "Tracks" is confusing - I suppose it was made from a bullet-point list, but from what I think it means it should be rephrased to something like: "Track alignment is more precise than on normal railway lines, and ballast is built into the stronger profile. [really not sure what the last sentence means]". Link sleepers, too, maybe?
  • Why is the current of the Italian high-speed line mentioned? Does it run TGV as well? After all, high-speed rail is a different article.
  • Don't know. The protests seem to be about the Lyon-Turin line, that is, an extension of the TGV. However, the "tracks" section include information about the Rome–Florence and other sections, as well as information about Austria, all places where the TGV does not go, which makes me question the relevance, just like Sam Vimes. Schutz 23:46, 12 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
  • It's true, it does sound a bit odd. I've rewritten it a bit - if you think it makes more sense now, great, but if it still sounds out of place in this article then definitely scrap it. It is probably a minor detail which isn't actually necessary here. I think the connection is that the new lines will join it up direcly with the France-centred "European" LGV network and TGVs will run straight through. I've also cut Austria, but added Switzerland, where TGVs do go. Willkm 00:20, 13 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
  • Yes, but... in Switzerland, TGVs do not use LGVs, so it does not really fit under All LGVs connected directly to the French network .... Too late for me to make the change now, but will look at that tomorrow if still needed. Schutz 00:51, 13 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
  • "Avignon TGV station, opened in 2001, has won particular praise as one of the most remarkable stations on the network" - who praised it? Inline citation, maybe?