Transilien
Member
Yes I agree.Eurostar is EuroCity as opposed to InterCity.
Yes I agree.Eurostar is EuroCity as opposed to InterCity.
Manchester Airport – Scotland not being IC would solve the issue of Lockerbie and Penrith otherwise only having IC services.
It should have been part of ICWC in the first placeSorry, I always forget that bit of TPE. It would also be IC.
No premium fares please.That's by far the easiest approach. Rebrand LNER as Intercity then gradually merge-in Avanti and the long distance parts of GWR, EMR and XC as the franchises end.
I would consider a setting up a "Regional Express" brand alongside it for some of the slower services such as London-Lincoln, Avanti's London-Birmingham-Scotland etc, but that's a fairly minor detail.
Chiltern Marylebone - Moor Street trains are Intercity. They are fast (only 20 minutes slower than Avanti) but they won’t be branded Intercity Express or Intercity Lightning.Chiltern is not an InterCity service. It is a secondary route near enough exactly the same in concept to LNR bar being diesel.
On TPE I would say only the Liverpool to Newcastle expresses are IC. The rest is middle tier or regional.
I don't see how Marylebone - Moor Street trains are intercity. They are at most Regional Express. They are regional trains which call at so many places along the route which are not anywhere resembling cities or large towns.No premium fares please.
Chiltern Marylebone - Moor Street trains are Intercity. They are fast (only 20 minutes slower than Avanti) but they won’t be branded Intercity Express or Intercity Lightning.
It used to be a regional train (and for the tine being services operated by 197s very much still are) but on alternate hours the rolling stock has been upgraded to include full catering and First Class accommodation for the likes of business travellers. It's as much an Intercity service as certain 80x/Voyager/Pendo routes are.Cardiff-Manchester really isn't. It could be, but it's basically a regional train which happens to link two fairly far flung, and not that closely associated cities.
I know which stock uses it. Chiltern B'ham was once the same - but then the stops all crept back in, and it became its commuter former self. With tewo big cities on either end. Cardiff-Manc is the same, actually - just stretched and more rural in the middle.It used to be a regional train (and for the tine being services operated by 197s very much still are) but on alternate hours the rolling stock has been upgraded to include full catering and First Class accommodation for the likes of business travellers. It's as much an Intercity service as certain 80x/Voyager/Pendo routes are.
But the service offered (first class, catering etc.) is geared towards attracting business travel on what is TfW's most profitable route.I know which stock uses it. Chiltern B'ham was once the same - but then the stops all crept back in, and it became its commuter former self. With tewo big cities on either end. Cardiff-Manc is the same, actually - just stretched and more rural in the middle.
I don't think we can say that just because there is a loco + coaches consist, it would classify as an inter city route in future GBR / today. The stopping pattern has barely changed, nor have journey times. It's still a very regional, secondary service.
It would probs fill the Danish requirement but you’re right. It’s definitely going to be an RX train.I don't see how Marylebone - Moor Street trains are intercity. They are at most Regional Express. They are regional trains which call at so many places along the route which are not anywhere resembling cities or large towns.
Avanti takes 1h16 from London to Birmingham but Chiltern takes 1h57, so it is 41 minutes slower. Chiltern trains call at High Wycombe, Bicester North, Dorridge, etc. which are just small towns or even villages.
Would the same principle be applied to all services that will be IC? What would be the criteria for a station to be served by IC trains? For example, you could have 2 London-Swansea trains, 1 IC calling at Reading, Swindon, Bristol Parkway, Newport, Cardiff Central and Swansea with an IR calling at Reading, Didcot Parkway, Bristol Parkway, Newport, Cardiff Central, Bridgend, Port Talbot Parkway, Neath and Swansea.I don't see how Marylebone - Moor Street trains are intercity. They are at most Regional Express. They are regional trains which call at so many places along the route which are not anywhere resembling cities or large towns.
Avanti takes 1h16 from London to Birmingham but Chiltern takes 1h57, so it is 41 minutes slower. Chiltern trains call at High Wycombe, Bicester North, Dorridge, etc. which are just small towns or even villages.
In these cases both should be IC, because the minor stations serve just the minority of the passengers. In the Chiltern example, most flows are for intermediate towns and villages, rather than end to end.Would the same principle be applied to all services that will be IC? What would be the criteria for a station to be served by IC trains? For example, you could have 2 London-Swansea trains, 1 IC calling at Reading, Swindon, Bristol Parkway, Newport, Cardiff Central and Swansea with an IR calling at Reading, Didcot Parkway, Bristol Parkway, Newport, Cardiff Central, Bridgend, Port Talbot Parkway, Neath and Swansea.
Would the same principle be applied to all services that will be IC? What would be the criteria for a station to be served by IC trains? For example, you could have 2 London-Swansea trains, 1 IC calling at Reading, Swindon, Bristol Parkway, Newport, Cardiff Central and Swansea with an IR calling at Reading, Didcot Parkway, Bristol Parkway, Newport, Cardiff Central, Bridgend, Port Talbot Parkway, Neath and Swansea.
But is the differences of service level an actual issue though, in the age of Google maps and Trainline?otherwise you end up with things like XC where you can have wildly different levels of service
But is the differences of service level an actual issue though, in the age of Google maps and Trainline?
XC does not imply anything about its service level. The brand only means an intercity service without going through London.Yes. Expectations about the product you've purchased are important. You're creating a brand that carries brand values in both soft and hard product - the railway does this rather randomly at present, almost no other business does.
I'm not sure what Google Maps and Trainline tell you about the quality of the seating for instance.
If the government wants to continue with the Ryanairisation of long-distance services then no because there will be no facilities to differentiate and the only difference between a pointy train and a not-pointy train is that one is faster than the other.But is the differences of service level an actual issue though, in the age of Google maps and Trainline?
Of course it does matter. If it stops at places like Leyland or Euxton (and Golborne one day) then you are seriously going to piss off people who thought they were on an Intercity Train from London or Brum to Carlisle or Glasgow. You wouldn't advocate all trains calling at all stops on the Trent valley?Thus does it matter if an IC calls all stations between Warrington and Preston? Clearly not.
Of course it does matter. If it stops at places like Leyland or Euxton (and Golborne one day) then you are seriously going to piss off people who thought they were on an Intercity Train from London or Brum to Carlisle or Glasgow. You wouldn't advocate all trains calling at all stops on the Trent valley?
If there was a better inter-regional service of semi-fasts I would support cutting calls on the "top" WCML trains to Crewe, Preston and Carlisle. As it is, we have all trains filling in for the missing tier.
That was the plan for HS2; 2 tph from Euston to Glasgow / Edinburgh via Old Oak Common, Birmingham International (1 tph), Preston and Carlisle, then dividing and nonstop to Glasgow Central or Haymarket.If there was a better inter-regional service of semi-fasts I would support cutting calls on the "top" WCML trains to Crewe, Preston and Carlisle. As it is, we have all trains filling in for the missing tier.
Could take a leaf out of Canadas book and have a Go transit like brand. "Go South East", "Go South West", "Go North" (maybe not the last one).
When the TOCs and their "brands" vanish, there are three choices.All the arguments in the thread over wether a particular service is intercity or not just highlights the futility of the categories. All it will mean is some services will see a fare jump because someones urge to put everything in boxes. Each service has unique circumstances and should be treated individually.
I dont buy the marketing utility argument ,since most of our trains are allready pretty full without much coherent advertising.
Lots of services dont neatly fit those subcategories , either your going to create extra confusion and layers for customers to worry about, or you will see GBR taking an axe to services that dont fit into any silo. Having tickets that are only valid for a certain class create anxiety for customers , not helping them.When the TOCs and their "brands" vanish, there are three choices.
You either a) call all the trains nothing "the train", b) call all the trains "Great British Railways" or c) provide them with useful subcategories for customers-the most obvious ones being 1)Inter-City/Fast/Express, 2) Regional, 3) Urban/Metro.
Who knows what they want to do really? Thr goverment that has pushed LNER to its current state is gone, and we have a new one keeping their cards close to their chest , or most likely , dont know what they want.If the government wants to continue with the Ryanairisation of long-distance services
Even if you do have some differentiation that doesn‘t necessitate that there should be different prices. A standard class ticket from A to B is still a standard class ticket from A to B. Provision of a buffet doesn‘t mean that passengers get charged extra unless they actually buy something from it, likewise the provision of First Class accommodation on a given train doesn‘t increase the price for those passengers who remain in Standard.Having tickets that are only valid for a certain class create anxiety for customers , not helping them.
one "class" (train type) or one operator tickets are the first thing that should be abolished anyway. The railway offers a network and most "inter-city" journeys will not be solely between main stations, so cost-effective no-hassle "add-ons" for each end of the trunk haul are essential. They should also include travel on bus/tram networks too so that it's seen as an easy option to take.Lots of services dont neatly fit those subcategories , either your going to create extra confusion and layers for customers to worry about, or you will see GBR taking an axe to services that dont fit into any silo. Having tickets that are only valid for a certain class create anxiety for customers , not helping them.
The government is irrelevant. The industry, DfT and Treasury are probably comfortable with the state of LNER, and will present that to the government as a favoured model for the operation of similar parts of the railway.Thr goverment that has pushed LNER to its current state is gone, and we have a new one keeping their cards close to their chest , or most likely , dont know what they want.
That's where the Intercity Express brand could be useful. All the LNER services would be Intercity due to the route lengths, destinations and rolling stock. "Intercity Express" would be applied to highlight the fastest servicesI think realistically everything Avanti West Coast operate would be IC except the Birmingham semifast, and similarly everything LNER operate except the York semifast, unless we were to give them an "IC+" or something for the superfast Edinburgh.