baldyman26
Member
- Joined
- 2 Aug 2012
- Messages
- 96
Merseytravel chose the livery not Merseyrail or if the screens on the train are to be believed the people of the city region chose the livery, they were after all "designed by you"
There is image, as in what it looks like, and then their is image, as in what it represents. Very often on forums like this people can't get past the first, and in many ways neither has a large part of the privatised railway, but MerseyTravel / Steve Rotherham are quite sensibly concentrating on the latter. And the image they want to portray is of a modern, reliable, accessible transport system and , to be honest, I think they are closer to the mark than people who worry about whether it is a train or a tram or what colour the front should be.But, image is all important, a lot of money and effort goes into design of everything these days. And I have to say I think they are hideous. Look like trams. Fine if travelling from Central to Aigburth, but would I want to travel on a Tram from Chester into Liverpool? Black fronts really are awful, and come with separate issues of dazzling oncoming drivers / pedestrians at foot crossings when the sun is in the right position the glare will cause problems (it does on crossrail 345s, which, have dazzled me causing me to see stars.). Yellow fronts provide a smart uniform appearance, I just don't get this black front love in myself, though I concede, beauty is in the eye of the beholder!
OK, but in my eyes the glare off the black front in bright sunshine is far more important than what Steve Rotherham thinks. If people either get dazzled by them or, do not see them coming (there are a good number of foot crossings on the merseyrail network) , then all the aesthetic cr*p goes out the window. Black really isn't a colour id choose for a heavy bit of machinery travelling at speed that will come into contact with the public ( at crossings). But hey they look good according to some so who cares if that catches out a few partially sighted pedestrians or dazzles a few train drivers..... be interesting to here David Powells take on the colour of the front.....There is image, as in what it looks like, and then their is image, as in what it represents. Very often on forums like this people can't get past the first, and in many ways neither has a large part of the privatised railway, but MerseyTravel / Steve Rotherham are quite sensibly concentrating on the latter. And the image they want to portray is of a modern, reliable, accessible transport system and , to be honest, I think they are closer to the mark than people who worry about whether it is a train or a tram or what colour the front should be.
I'm not sure if this is meant to be public knowledge but if it isn't perhaps people shouldn't talk so loudly and openly on public services, for anybody who is interested Ormskirk services are apparently scheduled to start going over to 777 operation in March.
Good job you wouldn't be traveling on a tram from Chester, or even lowly Aigburth, into Central then!But, image is all important, a lot of money and effort goes into design of everything these days. And I have to say I think they are hideous. Look like trams. Fine if travelling from Central to Aigburth, but would I want to travel on a Tram from Chester into Liverpool? Black fronts really are awful, and come with separate issues of dazzling oncoming drivers / pedestrians at foot crossings when the sun is in the right position the glare will cause problems (it does on crossrail 345s, which, have dazzled me causing me to see stars.). Yellow fronts provide a smart uniform appearance, I just don't get this black front love in myself, though I concede, beauty is in the eye of the beholder!
Very true but strangely, I do travel on trains myself especially in Merseyside and not just photograph trains. I still stick to my thoughts regardless which I am entitled to make, they are still bland.Doug they are trains to carry passengers not models for photography.
By"most people" don't you mean yourself and one other?
It's a metro train.
I think the livery could be beefed up, but otherwise I agree
There is no escaping non-yellow ends I'm afraid. Just look at the new TPE fleet, new Tyne & Wear fleet, new Avanti 80Xs etc.But, image is all important, a lot of money and effort goes into design of everything these days. And I have to say I think they are hideous. Look like trams. Fine if travelling from Central to Aigburth, but would I want to travel on a Tram from Chester into Liverpool? Black fronts really are awful, and come with separate issues of dazzling oncoming drivers / pedestrians at foot crossings when the sun is in the right position the glare will cause problems (it does on crossrail 345s, which, have dazzled me causing me to see stars.). Yellow fronts provide a smart uniform appearance, I just don't get this black front love in myself, though I concede, beauty is in the eye of the beholder!
Yes sorry there are 3 of you on here, not two. It's a metro train in my eyes in the same way that the Sun is a star and the Earth is a planet in my eyes. It's reality.Very true but strangely, I do travel on trains myself especially in Merseyside and not just photograph trains. I still stick to my thoughts regardless which I am entitled to make, they are still bland.
I think you know there is more two of us!Yes it is a Metro train in your eyes but it is STILL an enhanced tram which ever way you look at it. Nothing will suggest otherwise.
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And resenting every minute by the sounds of it!Very true but strangely, I do travel on trains myself especially in Merseyside
Repeating an opinion doesn’t end up making it a fact.I think you know there is more two of us!Yes it is a Metro train in your eyes but it is STILL an enhanced tram which ever way you look at it. Nothing will suggest otherwise.
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I’d say unfamiliar with metros and trams in general, really…I'm not really sure where people are getting this tram thing from, presumably people unfamiliar with most Stadler products?
Possible, although equally possible they just really like the 507s and 508s, and are trying to think of any excuse to keep them. And even though I also love those trains, their time is up, and Liverpool is moving into the 21st century, like it should, whether they like it or not.I’d say unfamiliar with metros and trams in general, really…
I’ve travelled on dozens of different tramways and on many urban rail systems throughout Europe. Whilst there are types of vehicles that are effectively a cross between trams and trains, the 777s do not fall into that category. They are examples of modern, electric, urban trains with features such as articulation and level boarding, qualities that are to be increasingly found on rail networks throughout the western world. Whilst many trams may share some characteristics with modern EMUs, they are built to lighter specifications, typically designed for a large proportion of standing passengers travelling relatively short distances at speeds of no more than 30-40 mph, with end loading requirements to suit.I’d say unfamiliar with metros and trams in general, really…
Arguing over "tram" " Metro" and colour schemes is like two bald men fighting over a comb
Personally I would just be glad we've got a new train/tramlite/tramtrain etc finally entering service to replace an ageing fleet that is not getting younger.
And resenting every minute by the sounds of it!
Whenever a new train comes into service there are two things guaranteed on these forums. One is a lengthy discussion about the seats, and the other an argument about the colour / design of the trains.Arguing over "tram" " Metro" and colour schemes is like two bald men fighting over a comb
Personally I would just be glad we've got a new train/tramlite/tramtrain etc finally entering service to replace an ageing fleet that is not getting younger.
That’s it, spot onI’ve travelled on dozens of different tramways and on many urban rail systems throughout Europe. Whilst there are types of vehicles that are effectively a cross between trams and trains, the 777s do not fall into that category. They are examples of modern, electric, urban trains with features such as articulation and level boarding, qualities that are to be increasingly found on rail networks throughout the western world. Whilst many trams may share some characteristics with modern EMUs, they are built to lighter specifications, typically designed for a large proportion of standing passengers travelling relatively short distances at speeds of no more than 30-40 mph, with end loading requirements to suit.
Whenever a new train comes into service there are two things guaranteed on these forums. One is a lengthy discussion about the seats, and the other an argument about the colour / design of the trains.![]()
They could postpone the introduction say to the Ormskirk Line until May 13th, so that they can be associated with the Eurovision Song Contest.Is that what the people of Liverpool really want their city to be known for for ever and a day - The Beatles and football? If they've got any sense they will try to link the launch of the new trains to a future of a modern thriving city, not a song released 60 years ago.
Not operating with discerning, fare-paying members of the public.For trains that they've been using internally for about 5 years. What exactly where they doing (or not doing) that meant they didn't pick up on such problems earlier?
They already have yellow stripes on them, aside from writing ramp I'm not to sure what they can do.for me (after witnessing it actually happening on Monday), is some less agile passengers got caught unawares by the ramp over the bogies! I'm not sure how this could be better mitigated though?
Perhaps having the ramps a different colour to the flat floor so it's more obvious?