Only 21 two cars are having ERTMS fitted initially.Does anybody know what the formation of Birmingham international to Aberystwyth and Pwhelli services will be (obviously they must split at Machynlleth so must either be 2+2,2+3 or 3+3.)
Only 21 two cars are having ERTMS fitted initially.Does anybody know what the formation of Birmingham international to Aberystwyth and Pwhelli services will be (obviously they must split at Machynlleth so must either be 2+2,2+3 or 3+3.)
Only the two coach units have ETCS fitted so any train to Aberystwyth and Pwllheli will be four coaches dividing in to two separate two coach portions. I suppose there may be some two coach working too on the services that do not divide. Possibly some 6 coach workings could be used too on busy services. But none of the three coach units will be used on this line.
But this can be very easily rectified in future if needs be.Only 21 two cars are having ERTMS fitted initially.
The Dec 2023 timetables that TfW were consulting on a little while ago show all trains on the Cambrian to be formed of two or four coaches. Six coaches between Shrewsbury and Birmingham only, and even then only twice a day each way. Between Shrewsbury and Machynlleth generally seems to alternate between two and four coaches, with some exceptions. In other words, little or no train lengthening on the Cambrian along with the introduction of unacceptably inferior rolling stock. On the plus side, the remaining gaps should be filled to get an hourly service.Only the two coach units have ETCS fitted so any train to Aberystwyth and Pwllheli will be four coaches dividing in to two separate two coach portions. I suppose there may be some two coach working too on the services that do not divide. Possibly some 6 coach workings could be used too on busy services. But none of the three coach units will be used on this line.Does anybody know what the formation of Birmingham international to Aberystwyth and Pwhelli services will be (obviously they must split at Machynlleth so must either be 2+2,2+3 or 3+3.)
Once again, I say to you, it’s only inferior in your personal opinion, and “unacceptably” is ridiculous hyperbole. There’s nothing wrong with the trains themselves, they just need to be running longer ones.The Dec 2023 timetables that TfW were consulting on a little while ago show all trains on the Cambrian to be formed of two or four coaches. Six coaches between Shrewsbury and Birmingham only, and even then only twice a day each way. Between Shrewsbury and Machynlleth generally seems to alternate between two and four coaches, with some exceptions. In other words, little or no train lengthening on the Cambrian along with the introduction of unacceptably inferior rolling stock. On the plus side, the remaining gaps should be filled to get an hourly service.
I’m more concerned about the downgrade of most ex Birmingham services from 4 coaches to 2 between Holyhead and Shrewsbury. Running 6 coaches to Shrewsbury and THEN dropping 2 to Aberysytwyth was what I had thought they would be doing, either that or running the extra Abers as a shuttle from Shrewsbury.The pattern on the proposed timetables is every 2 hours a 4-car train (2+2) between Machynlleth and Shrewsbury with Aberystwyth and Pwllheli portions splitting/joining at Machynlleth with the gaps filled by a 2-car train between Aberystwyth and Shrewsbury. Portion working leaves/arrives Shrewsbury at approximately half past the odd hour, Aberystwyth only leaves/arrives Shrewsbury at approx half past the even hour. Exceptions as follows:
08:30 from Aberystwyth joins the 06:30 from Pwllheli at Machynlleth to form an extra through working from the coast.
19:30 ex-Shrewsbury is 4-car to Aberystwyth only (coast line train leaves 1 hour afterwards). Obviously, the 21:30 Aberystwyth - Machynlleth is thus 4-car also
The following train is 2-car to Aberystwyth and coast passengers have to change at Machynlleth for the last train along the coast line
I think that you missed the words “in my opinion” there.The Dec 2023 timetables that TfW were consulting on a little while ago show all trains on the Cambrian to be formed of two or four coaches. Six coaches between Shrewsbury and Birmingham only, and even then only twice a day each way. Between Shrewsbury and Machynlleth generally seems to alternate between two and four coaches, with some exceptions. In other words, little or no train lengthening on the Cambrian along with the introduction of unacceptably inferior rolling stock. On the plus side, the remaining gaps should be filled to get an hourly service.
I think that you missed the words “in my opinion” there.
Absolutely. Wait at Barmouth or wherever and it’s pot luck whether or not the train terminates at or is swapped at Machynlleth.It'll be interesting to see if they stick to what is in the timetable. Sometimes services not shown as through are, and vice versa. It's like Mach is a law unto itself at times..
I beg that you don’t trigger a baseless rant that we’ve heard a hundred times, especially outside of the Speculative Discussion.@Rhydgaled Have you tried it yet? I liked it more than I thought I would.
To be fair, most of those services are 2 car already. And this is only the 2023 timetable - there may well be different formations in 2024. Also, by 2024 Chester - Shrewsbury should be half hourly which will help ease the load, combined with the extra North Wales services from 2023.I’m more concerned about the downgrade of most ex Birmingham services from 4 coaches to 2 between Holyhead and Shrewsbury. Running 6 coaches to Shrewsbury and THEN dropping 2 to Aberysytwyth was what I had thought they would be doing, either that or running the extra Abers as a shuttle from Shrewsbury.
Unfortunately, when you have a very limited fleet that's also getting on a bit, last minute set swaps are unavoidable if units develop faults during the day. Hopefully for various reasons I've discussed above it should be better with the 197s.It'll be interesting to see if they stick to what is in the timetable. Sometimes services not shown as through are, and vice versa. It's like Mach is a law unto itself at times.
After all this time of endless repetitive subjective rants do you really think @Rhydgaled will be saying anything different even if they don’t really feel that way about them?@Rhydgaled Have you tried it yet? I liked it more than I thought I would.
There's been a bit of that amongst drivers as well to be fair. A lot of people were pretty wary about the 197s before they came, but every driver I know who's done the course has come back pretty positive. They're not perfect, but they're a massive improvement over everything we have now.After all this time of endless repetitive subjective rants do you really think @Rhydgaled will be saying anything different even if they don’t really feel that way about them?
I honestly didn’t think I’d like 195’s/331’s when they were ordered but kept an open mind, stayed quiet about my thoughts and when I finally went on one whilst there are certain elements that I don’t like about them there are many more things that I like and I am more than happy to travel either long or short distances on them.
What I’m saying is that the trick is not to play your hand too early and spout about what you don’t like before they’re even in service because it might just come back to bite you on the bum when you do actually try them out. Apart from annoying all the people keeping open minds until you’ve actually tried one you may find you actually don’t mind them after all.
Your options then are either losing face and admitting you jumped the gun but at least then people know your genuine opinion of them. Alternatively if you don’t want to lose face you have to keep a false thought going for a long long time meaning nobody knows what you actually think from here on in because you shouted too loudly, too soon. The crux of that is though that if you genuinely don’t like them people might think you’re on the cover up because you actually do like them.
Unless they feel that the capacity is required and they can fit some of the standard only 3-cars with ETCS quickly if needed.But none of the three coach units will be used on this line.
Like I said, it's the last I heard. Will still be a while though as I believe they have to go through the higher mileage threshold as a new subclass.I have seen a few 3 car units running milage accumulation past the Crewe web cam. Sometimes in conjunction with other 3 or two car units.
I was expecting a lot more from them, that’s probably where I went wrongAfter all this time of endless repetitive subjective rants do you really think @Rhydgaled will be saying anything different even if they don’t really feel that way about them?
I honestly didn’t think I’d like 195’s/331’s when they were ordered but kept an open mind, stayed quiet about my thoughts and when I finally went on one whilst there are certain elements that I don’t like about them there are many more things that I like and I am more than happy to travel either long or short distances on them.
What I’m saying is that the trick is not to play your hand too early and spout about what you don’t like before they’re even in service because it might just come back to bite you on the bum when you do actually try them out. Apart from annoying all the people keeping open minds until you’ve actually tried one you may find you actually don’t mind them after all.
Your options then are either losing face and admitting you jumped the gun but at least then people know your genuine opinion of them. Alternatively if you don’t want to lose face you have to keep a false thought going for a long long time meaning nobody knows what you actually think from here on in because you shouted too loudly, too soon. The crux of that is though that if you genuinely don’t like them people might think you’re on the cover up because you actually do like them.
That'll depend on how they are deployed.To me, the main problem with Class 197 (2 car) seems to be that they have about 20 fewer seats than Class 158, so overcrowding of busy services is likely to be much worse.
I asked this question to tfw and they said they can order extra units or carriages if required in the futureDo TfW have the option to extend their 197s by adding coaches to them, should the need arise in the future?
That makes sense now, my local lines's timetable has always confused me more than any others!The pattern on the proposed timetables is every 2 hours a 4-car train (2+2) between Machynlleth and Shrewsbury with Aberystwyth and Pwllheli portions splitting/joining at Machynlleth with the gaps filled by a 2-car train between Aberystwyth and Shrewsbury. Portion working leaves/arrives Shrewsbury at approximately half past the odd hour, Aberystwyth only leaves/arrives Shrewsbury at approx half past the even hour. Exceptions as follows:
08:30 from Aberystwyth joins the 06:30 from Pwllheli at Machynlleth to form an extra through working from the coast.
19:30 ex-Shrewsbury is 4-car to Aberystwyth only (coast line train leaves 1 hour afterwards). Obviously, the 21:30 Aberystwyth - Machynlleth is thus 4-car also
The following train is 2-car to Aberystwyth and coast passengers have to change at Machynlleth for the last train along the coast line
Only if someone provides the money.I asked this question to tfw and they said they can order extra units or carriages if required in the future
TfW might also want a bi-mode design next time.
I was genuinely surprised when neither these or WMR's 196's were bi-mode when a good portion of there routes will be electrified in the coming 5-10 Years.
That is always the issue. They're already stumping up enough for a massive expansion as it is.Only if someone provides the money.
At least they'll have experience of such units at the Cardiff end of the franchise - but of course if you run Stadlers to the North you then lose the benefits of a large compatible fleet that the 197s bring. And they're not cheap.TfW might also want a bi-mode design next time.
Members of this forum who work for NR have suggested that it's not especially high. I would expect electrifying Shrewsbury station to be problematic and expensive, which won't help the business case much.Is New St-Shrewsbury high up the list for electrification? I'd have thought the Snow Hill Lines would be far higher up the list.
I'm in shock. Never thought I'd read those words coming from you@Rhydgaled Have you tried it yet? I liked it more than I thought I would.
I was thinking that they could put the panto down at Wolves while passengers board and when they run on the cross city lines when going to Hereford they could put the panto down wherever cables end down there.Is New St-Shrewsbury high up the list for electrification? I'd have thought the Snow Hill Lines would be far higher up the list.
TfW go Wolverhampton-Birmingham International under the wires, and don't use the cross-city line.I was thinking that they could put the panto down at Wolves while passengers board and when they run on the cross city lines when going to Hereford they could put the panto down wherever cables end down there.
Which sounds like a lot but put all together still only makes up a small percentage of the TfW network....TfW also run Warrington-Manchester Airport, Crewe-Manchester Piccadilly, Runcorn-Liverpool Lime St and Newport-Cardiff under the wires.
Sorry, was on about the 196's.TfW go Wolverhampton-Birmingham International under the wires, and don't use the cross-city line.
The complication there is that King's Norton-Longbridge is only wired on the slow (outer) lines, which wouldn't suit Worcester/Hereford services (or XC), which use the fast.
TfW also run Warrington-Manchester Airport, Crewe-Manchester Piccadilly, Runcorn-Liverpool Lime St and Newport-Cardiff under the wires.
A Class 158 started out on the CHR-LIV service yesterday but was then swapped out for 197002.
Was this the first day in service for 197002?