I'm worried about 'jimm'!
He seems to be under the impression that the new trains are animate objects and that if they hear criticism of themselves they'll go into a sulk and refuse to run.
He accuses people of being somewhat overheated in their approach to these trains, and yet can barely contain his anger at any suggestion they might not be what everyone approves of.
The trains cant be blamed for any inadequacies. The fault lies with Network Rail and the DfT.
Hitachi are making the best of a bum deal.
What some of us are expressing, much to the annoyance of some on here, is disappointment that we are getting trains that might just be able to keeep to a timetable introduced 40 years ago!
That certain aspects of passenger comfort leave somethings to be desired, that taxpayers money is being spent, for whatever reason, on trains that are too heavy, too slow, too expensive to buy, run and maintain, and that will be with us for the next 30 years!
And I'm worried about people who keep trying to hold these trains to a performance standard on diesel power - keeping up to the milli-second with HST timings on 125mph-passed track, that they were not planned to have to meet, and will only need to get somewhere near for a little over a year before use of 25kv into Wiltshire and South Wales renders such 'disappointment' utterly irrelevant - and yet appear unwilling to brook any criticism when I and others keep pointing this out.
Hitachi are indeed making the best of a bum deal - yet you and railperf seem to think that this still isn't good enough.
You also manage to trot out the old one about how much the trains cost - the thing that is costing stupid money is the 27-year deal that DfT went with to maintain the pretence that the IEP programme is not part of the public debt, never mind that the government is the guarantor of that agreement - and you could say the same about every other PFI-type agreement for school, hospitals, etc, made under governments of various political persuasions since the 1990s. Subsequent orders for Class 802s for First Group operations, made in the normal way via a leasing company, have come in at a price per coach that is competitive with other orders for various types of express train around Europe.
For trains running for extended periods off the wires - I.E to Cornwall, Cotswolds, Aberdeen, Inverness etc, the specification should have been enough installed power in diesel mode (power to weight ratio) to match a Class 180 or 220/1/2.
Why? It could be argued the 180 is massively overpowered for operation away from 125mph track - we are talking about a train that was designed to keep time at 125mph with one engine not working.
I am aware of the odd occasion when 180s recovered something like a 15-minute late start from Hereford by Oxford, which was largely achieved by absolutely hammering the acceleration to get up to line speed after every stop. C'est magnifique, but knows what it all cost in extra fuel burned.
When it comes to Scotland, we are still more than a year away from entry to service with Virgin, and I expect they will probably be sitting down with Hitachi and the DfT to discuss how the trains should be set up for their part of the world once there is lots of data to look at from GWR operations. What exactly requirements north of Edinburgh have to do with sustained running on diesel at speeds above 100mph escapes me.