• Our new ticketing site is now live! Using either this or the original site (both 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!

Scotrail HST alternatives?

Status
Not open for further replies.
Sponsor Post - registered members do not see these adverts; click here to register, or click here to log in
R

RailUK Forums

najaB

Veteran Member
Joined
28 Aug 2011
Messages
32,332
Location
Scotland
Mechanically I doubt the sets have 6 more years left in them.
I think you'd be more accurate to say that they might not have 6 years economical life left in them. They could be made to last another 60 years, if enough money was available. To whit, look at the USAF and the current project to re-engine their B-52 bombers. By the time they're expected to leave service, the oldest examples will be approaching 100 years old!
 
Last edited:

chuff chuff

Member
Joined
25 Sep 2018
Messages
670
I think you need to try more closer to 2035... that is about the current estimation for full replacement if something was ordered right now.
Funny you say that and the railway loves a rumour but someone did tell me that they had heard that transport scotland had asked about another five years.
 
Joined
31 Jan 2020
Messages
376
Location
Inverness
I think you'd be more accurate to say that they might not have 6 years economical life left in them. They could be made to last another 60 years, if enough money was available. To whit, look at the USAF and the current project to re-engine their B-52 bombers. By the time they're expected to leave service, the oldest examples will be approaching 100 years old!
I've heard lines like this often quoted, but I don't think it's realistic.

The fact is that they're 5 years (or less) out of extensive overhaul and are not fit for purpose. Availability is through the floor, they're generally regarded as a pain by everyone who deals with them. An expensive pain.

If Transport Scotland signed such a bad contract that they're stuck with them then maybe they'll be dragged out to the bitter end. But I suspect that'll be before 2035. I just can't see them lasting another 12 years.
 

Speed43125

Member
Joined
20 Jul 2019
Messages
1,166
Location
Dunblane
I've heard lines like this often quoted, but I don't think it's realistic.

The fact is that they're 5 years (or less) out of extensive overhaul and are not fit for purpose. Availability is through the floor, they're generally regarded as a pain by everyone who deals with them. An expensive pain.

If Transport Scotland signed such a bad contract that they're stuck with them then maybe they'll be dragged out to the bitter end. But I suspect that'll be before 2035. I just can't see them lasting another 12 years.
In fairness you'd hope at the end of the current lease they could buy the remaining operable sets for a peppercorn rate and allow a more serious running down of the fleet than currently where we're still paying for power cars that haven't run in 2 or 3 years and they scramble about trying to return them to work with mixed results.
 

43096

On Moderation
Joined
23 Nov 2015
Messages
16,929
I've heard lines like this often quoted, but I don't think it's realistic.

The fact is that they're 5 years (or less) out of extensive overhaul and are not fit for purpose. Availability is through the floor, they're generally regarded as a pain by everyone who deals with them. An expensive pain.

If Transport Scotland signed such a bad contract that they're stuck with them then maybe they'll be dragged out to the bitter end. But I suspect that'll be before 2035. I just can't see them lasting another 12 years.
And there we have a big part of the problem. Attitude.
 
Joined
31 Jan 2020
Messages
376
Location
Inverness
In fairness you'd hope at the end of the current lease they could buy the remaining operable sets for a peppercorn rate and allow a more serious running down of the fleet than currently where we're still paying for power cars that haven't run in 2 or 3 years and they scramble about trying to return them to work with mixed results.
That implies that there will be a fleet to run down in 2035...
 

170UTD

Member
Joined
14 Mar 2022
Messages
271
Location
Lincolnshire
The only potential alternative, the 222s was discounted on cost.
Is this "confirmed?" Surley its better to pay a slightly more expensive leasing cost for a few years until new stock can be found (assuming ScotRail can get out of the HST lease) than have a fleet that's not going to work well.
 

hexagon789

Veteran Member
Joined
2 Sep 2016
Messages
17,117
Location
Glasgow
Is this "confirmed?" Surley its better to pay a slightly more expensive leasing cost for a few years until new stock can be found (assuming ScotRail can get out of the HST lease) than have a fleet that's not going to work well.
They would be paying for both though.
 

Speed43125

Member
Joined
20 Jul 2019
Messages
1,166
Location
Dunblane
Is this "confirmed?" Surley its better to pay a slightly more expensive leasing cost for a few years until new stock can be found (assuming ScotRail can get out of the HST lease) than have a fleet that's not going to work well.
If the 222s were also owned by Angel trains, there might be a way of organizing an early termination in return for taking on the 222s, but as you'd have to get Eversholt involved too, I think that might be a bridge too far.
 

43096

On Moderation
Joined
23 Nov 2015
Messages
16,929
This whole conversation hinges on the contents of a lease agreement that I don't believe any of us have ever seen.....
I have posted this before, but seeing as you are sceptical...

The Angel Trains investor report (as per Angel's website) for the period when the lease was signed can be found here: https://angeltrains.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Investor-Report-01_07_14-to-30_06_15-Final.pdf

The relevant part is:
1702670166934.png

Th relevant text is:

The following new leases were entered into on existing or improved terms following the award of new franchises;
- 30 Class 442 vehicles with Govia Thameslink Railway Limited until January 2019, 90 Class 442 vehicles until January 2016 and 48 Class 317/3 vehicles until December 2019 (includes vehicles currently with Southern)
- 112 Class 357/2 vehicles with National Express Essex Thameside for 15 years until November 2029
- 271 vehicles have been leased with Abellio Scotrail:
- 76 x Class 156 leased from April 2015 to March 2025
- 20 x Class 156, 16 Class158 and 48 Class 314 leased from April 2015 to Dec 2018
- 175 x HST will be transferred from First Great Western and leased to Scotrail from September 2017 to March 2025, with a Section 54 until 2030
 

takno

Established Member
Joined
9 Jul 2016
Messages
6,145
This whole conversation hinges on the contents of a lease agreement that I don't believe any of us have ever seen.....
Well, that and on the other side somebody's passionate but unsourced belief that the machines are fundamentally broken and about to fall to pieces on the track they stand on.
 
Joined
31 Jan 2020
Messages
376
Location
Inverness
Well, that and on the other side somebody's passionate but unsourced belief that the machines are fundamentally broken and about to fall to pieces on the track they stand on.
Would have thought it was painfully obvious to everyone even tangentially involved that they're on their last legs? I mean come on....

Half this thread is people with links to the programme discussing how dire the HST situation is at Scotrail. The other half is enthusiasts sticking their fingers in their ears and acting as if nothing's wrong with their favourite trains, in spite of overwhelming evidence....
 

najaB

Veteran Member
Joined
28 Aug 2011
Messages
32,332
Location
Scotland
The other half is enthusiasts sticking their fingers in their ears and acting as if nothing's wrong with their favourite trains, in spite of overwhelming evidence....
Since I'm not completely familiar with the situation, would you be kind enough to provide a link to some of that evidence?
 

takno

Established Member
Joined
9 Jul 2016
Messages
6,145
Would have thought it was painfully obvious to everyone even tangentially involved that they're on their last legs? I mean come on....

Half this thread is people with links to the programme discussing how dire the HST situation is at Scotrail. The other half is enthusiasts sticking their fingers in their ears and acting as if nothing's wrong with their favourite trains, in spite of overwhelming evidence....
That's clearly the way you're interpreting it. I'm seeing a company which has come out of a challenging overhaul which was done on the cheap, finally made some of the changes which should have been made all along, and is starting to make progressing on training and retaining engineering talent. I'm not seeing the units do any worse than quite a lot of new stock in terms of miles per failure, or a company which would necessarily be doing any better with any intercity grade stock. It's not at all clear that switching horses in the middle of the race is a winning strategy here.

As to the enthusiast bit, I'm mildly interested at best, and in terms of any personal attachment to HSTs I couldn't give a toss whether they replace them tomorrow. As a general supporter of public transport I want there to be a reasonable quality of service to Inverness/Aberdeen, and as consumer of Scottish public services generally I'd like to see that done at a reasonable price so that there's less of a black hole in the budget.

What I don't see is any strong indication that replacing the HSTs is a cheaper alternative, likely to provide a better service, or in any way inevitable prior to 2030.
 

Gonzalez

Member
Joined
20 Nov 2023
Messages
13
Location
North London
I speculate that the HSTs will go in around 2-3 years time, by then the 222s would become available.

The HSTs were somewhat controversial in Scotrail for their unreliable ATPs and the prohibitively high costs of ordering them back in 2018/2019 despite being decades old.

Though it's obvious on why Scotrail would take them as they were looking for Intercity style trains to run long distance In the region and HSTs were the only ones of the kind available.
 

RobShipway

Established Member
Joined
20 Sep 2009
Messages
3,337
I speculate that the HSTs will go in around 2-3 years time, by then the 222s would become available.

The HSTs were somewhat controversial in Scotrail for their unreliable ATPs and the prohibitively high costs of ordering them back in 2018/2019 despite being decades old.

Though it's obvious on why Scotrail would take them as they were looking for Intercity style trains to run long distance In the region and HSTs were the only ones of the kind available.
Can you explain why Scotrail would take on the class 222 units to replace the HSTs, when long term it maybe better to take on new BEMU units based on either Hitachi AT300, CAF Civity or Alstom Aventra?
 

snowball

Established Member
Joined
4 Mar 2013
Messages
8,111
Location
Leeds
Can you explain why Scotrail would take on the class 222 units to replace the HSTs, when long term it maybe better to take on new BEMU units based on either Hitachi AT300, CAF Civity or Alstom Aventra?
I have no idea whether they will take on 222s, but one very obvious possible answer to your question might be that not enough electrification is now likely to be in place on the relevant timescale to allow use of BEMUs, except in Fife.
 

najaB

Veteran Member
Joined
28 Aug 2011
Messages
32,332
Location
Scotland
I have no idea whether they will take on 222s, but one very obvious possible answer to your question might be that not enough electrification is now likely to be in place on the relevant timescale to allow use of BEMUs, except in Fife.
The answer to that problem is Stadler FLIRTs with generator carriages.
 

HSTEd

Veteran Member
Joined
14 Jul 2011
Messages
18,798
Is there any 100mph+ running on these routes?
What advantage would a 222 have over a FLIRT or similar?
 

hexagon789

Veteran Member
Joined
2 Sep 2016
Messages
17,117
Location
Glasgow
Is there any 100mph+ running on these routes?
What advantage would a 222 have over a FLIRT or similar?
None currently, the only 100+ sections in Scotland are only on the ECML and WCML. ScotRail also only has a safety for 100mph presently.

222s would accelerate slower, also very inefficient internal use of space so lower capacity; Voyagers are slightly worse still mind you.
 

gingertom

Established Member
Joined
19 Jun 2017
Messages
1,299
Location
Kilsyth
None currently, the only 100+ sections in Scotland are only on the ECML and WCML. ScotRail also only has a safety for 100mph presently.

222s would accelerate slower, also very inefficient internal use of space so lower capacity; Voyagers are slightly worse still mind you.
true, but at least the 222s are going to be available soon and will last until the wires eventually go up. It will take some time to do a procurement for any bi/tri mode stock before they can be in service, by which time the HSTs will be even more knackered than they are now, if they even last that long.
 

John Bishop

Member
Joined
15 Nov 2018
Messages
636
Location
Perth
I speculate that the HSTs will go in around 2-3 years time, by then the 222s would become available.

The HSTs were somewhat controversial in Scotrail for their unreliable ATPs and the prohibitively high costs of ordering them back in 2018/2019 despite being decades old.

Though it's obvious on why Scotrail would take them as they were looking for Intercity style trains to run long distance In the region and HSTs were the only ones of the kind available.
I agree. As someone who works on them on an almost daily basis, they are knackered! Any talk of the, lasting until 2035 is just fantasy. With set failures on a daily basis requiring 2 car 158s to pick up the pieces on Intercity routes resulting in passengers left behind is just not a situation which will be tolerated moving forward. I understand there a fitters on platforms in Inverness to see out every HST departure due to the unreliability of them.

It’s got nothing to do with attitude of the staff, the sets are knackered and clearly not fit for purpose.
 

Killingworth

Established Member
Joined
30 May 2018
Messages
5,760
Location
Sheffield
I agree. As someone who works on them on an almost daily basis, they are knackered! Any talk of the, lasting until 2035 is just fantasy. With set failures on a daily basis requiring 2 car 158s to pick up the pieces on Intercity routes resulting in passengers left behind is just not a situation which will be tolerated moving forward. I understand there a fitters on platforms in Inverness to see out every HST departure due to the unreliability of them.

It’s got nothing to do with attitude of the staff, the sets are knackered and clearly not fit for purpose.
Are GWR sets similarly knackered?
 

RobShipway

Established Member
Joined
20 Sep 2009
Messages
3,337
I have no idea whether they will take on 222s, but one very obvious possible answer to your question might be that not enough electrification is now likely to be in place on the relevant timescale to allow use of BEMUs, except in Fife.
Maybe me, but there seems to be much more electrification going on in Scotland than there does in the rest of the UK.

The answer to that problem is Stadler FLIRTs with generator carriages.
true, but at least the 222s are going to be available soon and will last until the wires eventually go up. It will take some time to do a procurement for any bi/tri mode stock before they can be in service, by which time the HSTs will be even more knackered than they are now, if they even last that long.
Any new bi/tri mode would be based on an existing design of train, which would mean that there is not so much in the way of testing that would be required of new stock, other than testing to make sure all systems work and that all systems work in the area that the units are to be used. Other than that the only other time consuming event would be training of staff but in driving the units etc... and with doing maintenance.
 

snookertam

Member
Joined
22 Sep 2018
Messages
843
And there we have a big part of the problem. Attitude.
Im not sure I understand this. It’s not the attitude towards these trains which results in them being utterly unreliable and ridiculously frequent failures, it’s the fact they’re too old and completely unfit for purpose.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Top