• Our booking engine at tickets.railforums.co.uk (powered by TrainSplit) helps support the running of the forum with every ticket purchase! Find out more and ask any questions/give us feedback in this thread!

What is up with Virgin Trains' disabled toilets?

Status
Not open for further replies.

ryan125hst

Established Member
Joined
2 Jun 2011
Messages
1,230
Location
Retford
I've been looking at the journey check pages of all the operators that have them and one thing I've noticed is that Virgin Trains' disabled toilets seem to be having a few issues.

http://www.journeycheck.com/virgintrains said:
20:03 London Euston to Wolverhampton due 21:56
Disabled toilets are reduced in the centre.
Additional Facilities Information:
The disabled accessible toilet in coach D standard is locked out of use, an alternate disabled accessible toilet is located in coach B, also in standard.

This isn't the worst I've seen it however as a day or two ago three trains had this problem and two toilets we mentioned (the one in first class was OOU as well). I think a forth train had one disabled toilet OOU. The questions is, what is going on with them? It's not unusual for train toilets to be locked out of use, particularly on trains with retention tanks, but this issue only seems to be effecting the disabled toilets on the Pendolino's judging by the coach numbers. I've not seen any mention of standard toilets.

Does anyone know what's going on?


It's going off topic a bit, but I might as well post a couple more as they are interesting:

It always amuses me when journey check tells passengers that the train will be longer than it should, particularly when it means the train is over double the length it should be. I'm guessing in this case they do it because of seat reservations (note that the train is also in reverse formation), but it's even more amusing when they say that, for example, a Northern Rail service is formed of 3 coaches instead of 2. :lol:
http://www.journeycheck.com/virgintrains said:
20:23 London Euston to Wolverhampton due 22:12 Will be formed of 11 coaches instead of 5 from London Euston. This train will run in reverse formation throughout. First class located at front.

It's interesting in the case below that they have listed the unit numbers. Would many passengers understand this or even know where to look?
http://www.journeycheck.com/virgintrains said:
16:43 London Euston to Edinburgh due 22:22 This train will run in reverse formation throughout. First class located at both ends.
Additional Facilities Information:
Additionally, there is no coach lettering and there are no working seat reservations in the front Voyager set (221113). Rear set (221103) has working seat reservations.
 
Sponsor Post - registered members do not see these adverts; click here to register, or click here to log in
R

RailUK Forums

dk1

Veteran Member
Joined
2 Oct 2009
Messages
15,821
Location
East Anglia
This isn't the worst I've seen it however as a day or two ago three trains had this problem and two toilets we mentioned (the one in first class was OOU as well). I think a forth train had one disabled toilet OOU. The questions is, what is going on with them? It's not unusual for train toilets to be locked out of use, particularly on trains with retention tanks, but this issue only seems to be effecting the disabled toilets on the Pendolino's judging by the coach numbers. I've not seen any mention of standard toilets.

Does anyone know what's going on?

Automatic toilet doors? Another pain in the neck thing to go wrong unlike good old fashioned & reliable hinged doors with a basic lock.
 

Bletchleyite

Veteran Member
Joined
20 Oct 2014
Messages
97,524
Location
"Marston Vale mafia"
It always amuses me when journey check tells passengers that the train will be longer than it should, particularly when it means the train is over double the length it should be. I'm guessing in this case they do it because of seat reservations (note that the train is also in reverse formation), but it's even more amusing when they say that, for example, a Northern Rail service is formed of 3 coaches instead of 2. :lol:

It can be useful to those who were planning on taking a different service, which is perhaps short-formed, to know which to switch to. Or if one is cancelled, it's useful to know the next one is longer so won't leave people behind.
 

CC 72100

Established Member
Joined
23 Jan 2012
Messages
3,777
I wonder if the latter notice (the one with the unit numbers) is a message that has been lifted straight from internal communications without removing some of the details before it goes on Journeycheck? I've seen it reported on here in the past, although that time with EC (as it was).
 

theageofthetra

On Moderation
Joined
27 May 2012
Messages
3,504
Why do we have those ridiculous electric doors which can go wrong. I have just got off a almost new (presumably DDA/EU compliant) Bombardier SNCF unit from Basel to Mulhouse and that had a normal curved 'accesible' type toilet door.It resembled inside a compliant one, EXCEPT the door was manual, with a handle low enough for a wheelchair user. Why don't we have these?
 

ryan125hst

Established Member
Joined
2 Jun 2011
Messages
1,230
Location
Retford
Automatic toilet doors? Another pain in the neck thing to go wrong unlike good old fashioned & reliable hinged doors with a basic lock.

It probably is! If that's the case, it's obviously the case that one failed and now they are all going to fail! :lol:

theageofthetra said:
Why do we have those ridiculous electric doors which can go wrong. I have just got off a almost new (presumably DDA/EU compliant) Bombardier SNCF unit from Basel to Mulhouse and that had a normal curved 'accesible' type toilet door.It resembled inside a compliant one, EXCEPT the door was manual, with a handle low enough for a wheelchair user. Why don't we have these?

It's probably in some standard somewhere that says it needs to be electric. I wonder if it's possible to design an electric door with back up handles? That's probably over-complicating things though and making it even more likely to fail!
--- old post above --- --- new post below ---
I wonder if the latter notice (the one with the unit numbers) is a message that has been lifted straight from internal communications without removing some of the details before it goes on Journeycheck? I've seen it reported on here in the past, although that time with EC (as it was).

It probably is, and the case when this happened before with East Coast was posted by me :) Believe it or not, I notice one on VTEC today as well saying that the DVT was locked out of use so customers with cycle reservations need to be directed to another service. The thing was, the whole notice was in capitals! :lol:
 

Domh245

Established Member
Joined
6 Apr 2013
Messages
8,426
Location
nowhere
Alternatively, the toilets might be out of use because the CET tanks have become full for one reason or another, and so the toilet has declared itself out of use. At that time of the evening, it is entirely feasibly, especially if there has been a lot of traffic during the day or if it wasn't tanked the previous night. Might be a bit of a clue to try and avoid that coach as well if possible because if the CET tank is full, well, the smell might be worse than usual!
 

Aldaniti

Member
Joined
13 Jun 2009
Messages
669
Problem is, quite often these toilets will be out of service on early morning trains, immediately after they are supposed to have been serviced. It's a poor state of affairs but one that I have come to expect from Virgin Trains.
 

physics34

Established Member
Joined
1 Dec 2013
Messages
3,681
How many toilets on a pendolino? 6? Been on a packed one once that must have had 4 of them out of use. Once again a modern unit that has less/worse facilities than previous stock on the route.... (Didnt mk2/3s have a loo per coach?)
 
Last edited:

Bletchleyite

Veteran Member
Joined
20 Oct 2014
Messages
97,524
Location
"Marston Vale mafia"
How many toilets on a pendolino? 6? Been on a packed one once that must have had 4 of them out of use. Once again a modern unit that has less/worse facilities than previous stock on the route.... (Didnt no2/3s have a loo per coach?)

2 per coach. Though half of them would often be broken.
 

physics34

Established Member
Joined
1 Dec 2013
Messages
3,681
Why do we have those ridiculous electric doors which can go wrong. I have just got off a almost new (presumably DDA/EU compliant) Bombardier SNCF unit from Basel to Mulhouse and that had a normal curved 'accesible' type toilet door.It resembled inside a compliant one, EXCEPT the door was manual, with a handle low enough for a wheelchair user. Why don't we have these?

Exactly. As usual we have overkill over here on our trains.
 

CyrusWuff

Established Member
Joined
20 May 2013
Messages
3,944
Location
London
I wonder if the latter notice (the one with the unit numbers) is a message that has been lifted straight from internal communications without removing some of the details before it goes on Journeycheck? I've seen it reported on here in the past, although that time with EC (as it was).

Wouldn't surprise me, given the app used to post messages to JourneyCheck has three "Additional Information" type fields, one of which is for Internal Info and doesn't get published.
 

Pigeon

Member
Joined
8 Apr 2015
Messages
802
Why do we have those ridiculous electric doors which can go wrong. I have just got off a almost new (presumably DDA/EU compliant) Bombardier SNCF unit from Basel to Mulhouse and that had a normal curved 'accesible' type toilet door.It resembled inside a compliant one, EXCEPT the door was manual, with a handle low enough for a wheelchair user. Why don't we have these?

Either they were designed without any thought, on the basis that a disabled person "won't be able to use a handle" without considering that if they are that disabled they won't be able to haul themselves from their wheelchair onto the toilet either so the question doesn't arise, or some idiot thought it was "modern" and therefore "better" without bothering to verify the truth of that assumption, as all too often happens...

Not only do the electric doors go wrong, they are booby-trapped. With a normal door it is dead obvious how to lock it and also dead obvious whether you've succeeded. With these fancy rubbish doors neither of these things are true. They then add insult to injury, as it were, by refusing to respond to the controls until they have swung fully open. I have been both the person who unwittingly opens the door only to find someone already in residence and then can't instantly shut it again, and the person who is revealed in mid-flow to an entire carriage full of people. I'm not sure which is more embarrassing, but I am sure that the person who designed a system that encourages such misadventures ought to be very embarrassed indeed at having done such a bad job.
 

physics34

Established Member
Joined
1 Dec 2013
Messages
3,681
Either they were designed without any thought, on the basis that a disabled person "won't be able to use a handle" without considering that if they are that disabled they won't be able to haul themselves from their wheelchair onto the toilet either so the question doesn't arise, or some idiot thought it was "modern" and therefore "better" without bothering to verify the truth of that assumption, as all too often happens...

Not only do the electric doors go wrong, they are booby-trapped. With a normal door it is dead obvious how to lock it and also dead obvious whether you've succeeded. With these fancy rubbish doors neither of these things are true. They then add insult to injury, as it were, by refusing to respond to the controls until they have swung fully open. I have been both the person who unwittingly opens the door only to find someone already in residence and then can't instantly shut it again, and the person who is revealed in mid-flow to an entire carriage full of people. I'm not sure which is more embarrassing, but I am sure that the person who designed a system that encourages such misadventures ought to be very embarrassed indeed at having done such a bad job.


Spot on. Who designs this stuff? The incompetence angers me.
 

Aldaniti

Member
Joined
13 Jun 2009
Messages
669
On the subject of Virgin Trains lavatories, has anyone ever managed to extract the paper from the dispenser without shredding their fingers? ;) Bloody awful things, always try to go at the station before having to get on a Virgin Train. Mk3 lavatory provision was infinitely better - and you didn't have some cretin speaking through a loudspeaker as you were trying to go. Good old British Rail, missed more and more by me as time goes by.
 

Aldaniti

Member
Joined
13 Jun 2009
Messages
669
You've got vandals to blame for that. If people could be trusted not to put the whole roll down, we could have conventional bog rolls.

Your serious as well aren't you. ;) I think Virgin's dispensers must be by far the worst I've ever encountered. Perhaps vandals only exist on Virgin Trains? Although I confess, I haven't seen an obvious one sat in First Class :lol:
 

Bletchleyite

Veteran Member
Joined
20 Oct 2014
Messages
97,524
Location
"Marston Vale mafia"
Your serious as well aren't you. ;) I think Virgin's dispensers must be by far the worst I've ever encountered. Perhaps vandals only exist on Virgin Trains? Although I confess, I haven't seen an obvious one sat in First Class :lol:

You've not travelled LM off peak then...First Class is exclusively for fare dodgers... :(
 

33056

Established Member
Joined
12 Nov 2007
Messages
2,414
Location
On a train somewhere in Europe
Your serious as well aren't you. ;) I think Virgin's dispensers must be by far the worst I've ever encountered. Perhaps vandals only exist on Virgin Trains? Although I confess, I haven't seen an obvious one sat in First Class :lol:
You'll get the problem with any of the dispensers loaded with sheets of paper, it all depends on which way round the paper is placed. If loaded correctly, it should come out easily sheet by sheet, if put in "back to front" it is nigh-on impossible to get out without shredding it!
 

Boodiggy

Member
Joined
8 Nov 2012
Messages
524
Location
MK
I wonder if the latter notice (the one with the unit numbers) is a message that has been lifted straight from internal communications without removing some of the details before it goes on Journeycheck? I've seen it reported on here in the past, although that time with EC (as it was).

All of the above are messages sent out by VT control.
It will go to all on the distribution list but will aid the TMs and station staff. They will need to know this so passengers including disabled ones are in the right place when the train arrives at a station.
They send out various messages including units running non tilt, units in reverse
formation, toilets, additional stops, diversions and cancellations and many other bits. Some stuff will go to internal staff only and not show on Journey Check.
 

ryan125hst

Established Member
Joined
2 Jun 2011
Messages
1,230
Location
Retford
He was referring to Mk2s and Mk3s... Hence the past tense when referring to the toilets being broken.

Oh no! I've reread the post now including the quote and see what you mean. It certainly helps to read the whole thing doesn't it! :oops:

My apologies Neil
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Top