The reality is driving costs me 15p/mile in diesel, I've already paid MOT and insurance, the tyres, servicing etc will come round a bit sooner the more I drive, but say 30p/mile. If I get in my car I know that I can leave when I want, journeys at rush hour will hit some congestion, but that can be planned for, and unless I'm going to London will still be as fast when you allow for buses and trains not going exactly where needed so there is probably a bit of walking or a second bus at the other end. If going to a city parking is probably chargeable. If I do get caught in a traffic jam I'm in an air conditioned car listening to music of my choosing and not adjacent to any person who is loud, smelly or otherwise annoying.
Getting a train was unreliable, particularly at the evening and weekend since covid, since the strikes kicked in family, friends and colleagues have all adopted a position of not planning to travel by train more than 2 weeks in advance. Which pretty much wipes out the availability of cheap advance tickets for longer journeys. Trains therefore look quite expensive, are often overcrowded and there is no guarantee of a seat or associated food and drink service.
Hopefully the railway will resolve the various operational and industrial issues, but it will take time to change minds about the service which is offered. This will limit pricing opportunities which makes the economics harder, people will pay a premium if they get on board, sit down and have a pleasant journey, but who really believes that is the reality of Avanti, TPE or even LNER at the moment?
The answer isn't wholly car or train. For most passengers, getting to an Intercity station is most efficiently done by driving there, but not all stations have large multi-storey car parks which are discounted for rail users. Places like Darlington, Doncaster, Crewe and Warrington should be set up as parkway stations, if passengers have an hour or sitting on a Sprinter or bus to get there, the relative comfort of an intercity train is largely lost. Supermarkets and Cinemas provide their customers with a car park, the railway could as well.
Getting a train was unreliable, particularly at the evening and weekend since covid, since the strikes kicked in family, friends and colleagues have all adopted a position of not planning to travel by train more than 2 weeks in advance. Which pretty much wipes out the availability of cheap advance tickets for longer journeys. Trains therefore look quite expensive, are often overcrowded and there is no guarantee of a seat or associated food and drink service.
Hopefully the railway will resolve the various operational and industrial issues, but it will take time to change minds about the service which is offered. This will limit pricing opportunities which makes the economics harder, people will pay a premium if they get on board, sit down and have a pleasant journey, but who really believes that is the reality of Avanti, TPE or even LNER at the moment?
The answer isn't wholly car or train. For most passengers, getting to an Intercity station is most efficiently done by driving there, but not all stations have large multi-storey car parks which are discounted for rail users. Places like Darlington, Doncaster, Crewe and Warrington should be set up as parkway stations, if passengers have an hour or sitting on a Sprinter or bus to get there, the relative comfort of an intercity train is largely lost. Supermarkets and Cinemas provide their customers with a car park, the railway could as well.