psmith2023
Member
A single decker electric is on the 63 this morning wonder if it will last the full day with no issues
Service 170 runs hourly from Chesterfield (rail station and New Beetwell Street), offering connections to the Peak Sightseer Blue route in Baslow or Chatsworth and the Red route at Chatsworth or Bakewell. Peak Sightseer tickets are also valid and can be bought on bus 170.
It looks like a Peak Sightseer ticket is basically a Dayrider Gold with an upgrade to cover the open top buses, so it's valid on all Stagecoach Yorkshire services, not just the 170.I don't know if anyone else has picked this up, but I was reading through the Peak Sightseer web page and hidden amongst the Q&A text at the bottom it mentioned Peak Sightseer tickets are valid and can be bought on the 170. This will be useful for people travelling from Chesterfield to use the Sightseer services.
Hopefully there are lots of extra passengers heading out to Matlock and the relatively new extension to Matlock Bath, Cromford and Wirksworth given the fabulous weather!Stagecoach running extra trips on x17 more buses out then normal 4 more then normal is it just to try and keep to time due to Matlock being Like car park
Easter Holidays and weather couldnt have timed more perfect! X17 has been very well loaded all week from Chesterfield towards Matlock. I've not observed the 170 today but there also wasnt a spare seat on the double deckers from mid morning to early afternoon yesterday.Hopefully there are lots of extra passengers heading out to Matlock and the relatively new extension to Matlock Bath, Cromford and Wirksworth given the fabulous weather!
Not to forget the diversion of some journeys via the excellent Matlock Farm Park!
The problem you have here is that if it had tipped it down with rain last week, the same buses that have been really busy would have carted less than half the passengers otherwise. Having said that though you cant deny how successful the X17 is and continues to becomeStagecoach need to make wirksworth runs every half hour Saturdays and hourly not enough Sundays needs to be half hour Inbeteween 11am and 5pm
The X17 is a very good service and will be further enhanced by the introduction of the electric double deckers which seem to fly up Slack Hill to Matlock!Easter Holidays and weather couldnt have timed more perfect! X17 has been very well loaded all week from Chesterfield towards Matlock. I've not observed the 170 today but there also wasnt a spare seat on the double deckers from mid morning to early afternoon yesterday.
The problem you have here is that if it had tipped it down with rain last week, the same buses that have been really busy would have carted less than half the passengers otherwise. Having said that though you cant deny how successful the X17 is and continues to become
Via Chesterfield doesn't make much sense - you might as well just connect in with the X17.Suprized stagecoach has tryed a pronto express type of service on Saturdays and school holidays service to Matlock from Sutton or Mansfield via chesterfield as it would work as it's the right type area run it express from Mansfield then towards chesterfield then to wirksworth
This is my fear, that out of season Stagecoach will drop the frequency because they are only really interested in the tourist traffic on this route. Serving the smaller communities with the bonus of the summer traffic worked for Hulleys, the way the Stagecoach service is structured doesn't really support the year-round traffic Hulleys had.The problem you have here is that if it had tipped it down with rain last week, the same buses that have been really busy would have carted less than half the passengers otherwise.
I'm surprised they haven't done something about the Saturday service though, there are so many potential pinch-points along the route that it often suffers significant delays. I've not noticed in the past any extra vehicles being added on so it's good if they are starting to do that, but I still believe the route is just too long to run reliably. The 'core' Sheffield to Chesterfield could also easily support a 20 minute frequency, allowing it to be split in to three:Having said that though you cant deny how successful the X17 is and continues to become
You couldn't be more wrong.This is my fear, that out of season Stagecoach will drop the frequency because they are only really interested in the tourist traffic on this route.
I have literally no idea what you mean with the second half of your sentence. On the first part of your sentence, the fact that Hulley's closed abruptly and their published accounts show significant losses suggest that their network didn't work for them otherwise they would still be in business.Serving the smaller communities with the bonus of the summer traffic worked for Hulleys, the way the Stagecoach service is structured doesn't really support the year-round traffic Hulleys had.
I hope time proves that correct. However, out of season usage of the 170 was low, I'd say lower than the local services around Walton and Brampton that were culled in recent years for example. Hulleys as a lower cost operator were more able to sustain that low usage. If you are happy to offset losses in the low season with good usage in high season then that's great.You couldn't be more wrong.
Maybe you know more about they closed, what I've gathered and been told is that it's not really linked to their core network, more certain adventures and miscalculations.the fact that Hulley's closed abruptly and their published accounts show significant losses suggest that their network didn't work for them otherwise they would still be in business.
I don't disagree there, indeed I'd suggest that in summer there might even be market for a direct Chesterfield to Bakewell bus that bypasses Chatsworth in addition to the 170. Extending the 170 to Buxton in the holidays also seems a good option, to link with trains on to Manchester.a direct link between Bakewell and Chesterfield is more attractive to users than diversions via villages that cost an extra bus in the cycle but don't generate enough traffic to justify that extra resource and to replace the customers put off by the lack of direct connections. We've done our research on this.
Great to hear that the Stagecoach 170 is steadily building patronage from Chesterfield rail station to Chatsworth and Bakewell.You couldn't be more wrong.
I have literally no idea what you mean with the second half of your sentence. On the first part of your sentence, the fact that Hulley's closed abruptly and their published accounts show significant losses suggest that their network didn't work for them otherwise they would still be in business.
Bakewell is the largest conurbation in the National Park, Chesterfield is the most significant destination for people in Bakewell plus Chesterfield rail station is a natural hub for onward journeys. Add to the fact that Chesterfield rail station is increasingly seen as the gateway to the Peak District for visitors arriving by rail and a direct link between Bakewell and Chesterfield is more attractive to users than diversions via villages that cost an extra bus in the cycle but don't generate enough traffic to justify that extra resource and to replace the customers put off by the lack of direct connections. We've done our research on this.
From a very low start the 170 is improving on a daily basis. It needs a lot of TLC to restore customer confidence and to maximise their opportunity but work is already afoot. Same goes for 63 and 84.
You said "they are only really interested in the tourist traffic on this route. " - you are just making stuff up with statements like that hence you could not be more wrong. Time doesn't need to prove anything!I hope time proves that correct.
The base traffic of locals using the 170 was low because it had become chronically unreliable for at least 18 months plus the constant tinkering with timetables and routes. What the route needs is a sustained period of reliable operation to build back trust. The numbers and the annecdotal feedback so far says we're achieving just that. As I said in my last post, we've done our research and have a good handle on what the base demand should be.However, out of season usage of the 170 was low, I'd say lower than the local services around Walton and Brampton that were culled in recent years for example. Hulleys as a lower cost operator were more able to sustain that low usage. If you are happy to offset losses in the low season with good usage in high season then that's great.
All of those impacted the core network one way or another.Maybe you know more about they closed, what I've gathered and been told is that it's not really linked to their core network, more certain adventures and miscalculations.
All I'll say is hold that thought! We had a very productive meeting with Cross Country Trains earlier in the week who've already produced the following page on their website:Great to hear that the Stagecoach 170 is steadily building patronage from Chesterfield rail station to Chatsworth and Bakewell.
Is their any potential in offering through rail/bus tickets to Chatsworth and Bakewell and offering connections and ticketing on rail journey planners and booking engines, similar to some of the new initiatives offered in Wales with their TrawsBus services?
Major improvements will be introduced to buses between Barnsley, Hemsworth and Pontefract, between Barnsley, Royston and Wakefield and between Barnsley, Goldthorpe and Doncaster. See 28, 38, 59/59a and X19 below.
A new bus 38 will be introduced running between Barnsley and Pontefract via Monk Bretton, Cudworth, Grimethorpe, Hemsworth, then going the same way as the 28 to Pontefract. This will provide some new links and double the number of buses between Barnsley, Hemsworth and Pontefract during Monday to Saturday daytimes.
The following services will have minor timetable changes to improve punctuality:
Service 6 Barnsley - Kendray and Bank End
Service 21 Rotherham - Whiston - Swallownest - Kiveton Park - Harthill
Following customer requests, the 21 towards Rotherham will now serve Chaff Lane in Whiston and call at the "Chaff Lane/High Street" stop.
Towards Harthill the route is unchanged.
Service 22a/22c Barnsley - Gilroyd Circulars
Service 22x Barnsley - Wath-upon Dearne - Rotherham
Service 27/27a/27b - Timetable to follow, please check back later.
Service 28 Barnsley - Grimethorpe - Hemsworth - Pontefract
Major improvements will be introduced to buses between Barnsley, Hemsworth and Pontefract.
A new bus 38 will be introduced running between Barnsley and Pontefract via Monk Bretton, Cudworth, Grimethorpe, Hemsworth, then going the same way as the 28 to Pontefract. This will provide double the number of buses between Barnsley, Hemsworth and Pontefract during Monday to Saturday daytimes.
Service 28 will also be revised to improve punctuality. In the evenings and on Sundays, bus 28C will be replaced by journeys on bus 28 with Cudworth, Crown Avenue being served by new service 32 journeys at these times. This provides more direct journeys for customers and also provides an extra bus an hour along Pontefract Road to and from Barnsley in the evenings and on Sundays. All evening journeys on bus 28 will go the same way as the daytime buses, with Purston Jaglin no longer being served.
Service 32 - Evening and Sunday journey will be introduced, replacing service 28C which is withdrawn. The timetable is revised.
Timetable to follow, please check back later.
Service 38 - A new bus 38 will be introduced running between Barnsley and Pontefract via Monk Bretton, Cudworth, Grimethorpe, Hemsworth and then the same way as the 28 to Pontefract. This will double the frequency of buses between Barnsley, Hemsworth and Pontefract during Monday to Saturday daytimes. Timetable to follow, please check back later.
Service 57/59/59a - Major improvements will be introduced to buses between Barnsley, Royston and Wakefield.
Service 59/59a will be improved to run every half hour during Monday to Saturday daytimes.
Timetable to follow, please check back later.
Service 66 Barnsley - Elsecar
Service 67/67a/67b/67c - Timetable to follow, please check back later.
Service 93/95/95a - Timetable to follow, please check back later.
Service 114/114a Rotherham - Stag - Rotherham
The morning journey from Thorpe Hesley is renumbered 114a
Service 135 Rotherham - Kimberworth - Droppingwell - Thorpe Hesley - Chapeltown
Service 136 Rotherham - Hoyland
Service 137 Sheffield - Meadowhall - Blackburn - Rotherham
Service 138 Rotherham - Kimberworth Park
Service 203 - Wombwell - Doncaster
Buses will now depart from stand A10 at Doncaster Interchange.
Service 208 Rotherham - Mexborough - Grimethorpe
Service 216, 217, 218 Barnsley - Mexborough - Rotherham
Service 221 - Rotherham – Mexborough - Doncaster
Timetable to follow, please check back later.
Service X19 Barnsley - Goldthorpe - Doncaster
The timetable is improved to provide buses every half hour during Monday to Saturday daytimes.
Changes to buses in Sheffield - from Sunday 27 April 2025
The following services will have minor timetable changes to improve punctuality:
Service 1 High Green - Sheffield - Jordanthorpe
Service 6 Millhouses - Sheffield - Millhouses
Service 7/7a Manor Top - Heeley - Upperthorpe - Sheffield - Manor Top
The early morning 7a bus will no longer serve Meadow Gate Avenue.
Service 10-10a Manor Top - Heeley - Upperthorpe - Sheffield - Manor Top
Service 83 Chapeltown - Sheffield - Lodge Moor
Service 86 Chapeltown - Sheffield - Lowedges
Changes to buses in Chesterfield - from Sunday 27 April 2025
The below services will have minor timetable changes, mainly to improve punctuality:
Service 1, 2, 3 Chesterfield - Calow Royal Hospital - Arkwright - Duckmanton - Markham Vale - Bolsover - Hillstown - Scarcliffe - Shirebrook - Langwith - Whaley Thorns
Journeys that only run to Calow Royal Hospital will be renumbered service 3
Service 5 Chesterfield - Newbold Circular
Service 16 Broomfield - Chesterfield - Cutthorpe - Millthorpe - Dronfield
Service 25 Chesterfield – New Whittington
Early morning journeys will start from Brearley Park
Service 38 Chesterfield - Green Farm Circular
Service 39 Grangewood Farm - Chesterfield - Loudsley Green - Holme Hall
Service 50/50a Sheffield - Eckington - Chesterfield
Service 51 Chesterfield - Tupton - Holmgate - Clay Cross - Danesmoor
Service 77/77a - Chesterfield - Brimington - Staveley - Clowne - Creswell - Worksop
Minor timetable changes Monday - Saturday
Service X17 Barnsley - Meadowhall - Sheffield - Chesterfield - Matlock - Wirksworth
Service X66 - Buxton – Baslow – Eyam –Chesterfield
I'll admit I maybe overstated things - and I do have a habit of not communicating as clearly as I mean. To be honest, I suspect also you've made your mind up about me and it's really not worth me engaging. Hopefully I'm also wrong about that.You said "they are only really interested in the tourist traffic on this route. " - you are just making stuff up with statements like that hence you could not be more wrong.
That shows an interesting contrast between Stagecoach and Hulleys. The latter were far too fast to change things, while you seem happy to let opportunities pass as they don't fit in with a rigid timetable change regime.Two service changes a year - April and Autumn. We're busy working on final implementation of the April changes now, not looked at Autumn yet.
Sort of related to this, but prior to you joining Stagecoach Yorkshire it was common to consult passengers when changes were proposed and occasionally things were altered based on that feedback. There now seems to be no engagement with (potential) passengers - do you not feel there is a benefit in doing this? (Or have I just missed any engagement - in which case I'd ask the question how effective it is)And we've got plenty more ideas in relation to bus/rail integrations including what you've suggested above.
Hulleys ran out of money and went bust of course!Thirdly, the considerably hike in fares. Hulleys day ticket was something like £6.40, your ticket to cover the full 170 route is £10.50.
I doubt planning for two changes date a year prevents minor changes to/for anything that crops up in the meantime.That shows an interesting contrast between Stagecoach and Hulleys. The latter were far too fast to change things, while you seem happy to let opportunities pass as they don't fit in with a rigid timetable change regime.
As I commented above, more due to other factors. Also consider the Stagecoach Silver day tickets - which cover a very significant area - are only 10p more expensive than the Hulleys ticket was.Hulleys ran out of money and went bust of course!
Midland General/Trent used to do a Mansfield-Sutton-Alfreton-Matlock service. Needed dupes from Alfreton During Easter. Most i saw was 3 dupes. All with full loads. Plus the service car with a full swinging load.Suprized stagecoach has tryed a pronto express type of service on Saturdays and school holidays service to Matlock from Sutton or Mansfield via chesterfield as it would work as it's the right type area run it express from Mansfield then towards chesterfield then to wirksworth
Great to hear that you have had positive discussions with XC trains especially as XC are at last reinstating their hourly calls at Chesterfield on the Plymouth/Birmingham/Chesterfield/Edinburgh axis.You said "they are only really interested in the tourist traffic on this route. " - you are just making stuff up with statements like that hence you could not be more wrong. Time doesn't need to prove anything!
The base traffic of locals using the 170 was low because it had become chronically unreliable for at least 18 months plus the constant tinkering with timetables and routes. What the route needs is a sustained period of reliable operation to build back trust. The numbers and the annecdotal feedback so far says we're achieving just that. As I said in my last post, we've done our research and have a good handle on what the base demand should be.
All of those impacted the core network one way or another.
Two service changes a year - April and Autumn. We're busy working on final implementation of the April changes now, not looked at Autumn yet.
All I'll say is hold that thought! We had a very productive meeting with Cross Country Trains earlier in the week who've already produced the following page on their website:
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Trains to the Peak District | CrossCountry
It’s easy to experience the best of the British countryside by rail, so book your train to the Peak District now.www.crosscountrytrains.co.uk
And we've got plenty more ideas in relation to bus/rail integrations including what you've suggested above.
Stagecoach has announced several changes for their South Yorkshire & Derbyshire network from 26 April:
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Remember we have many years experience of providing a bus link to Holymoorside, its not commercially viable.Four things that made me make that statement however. Firstly, dropping Holymoorside until DCC came along with a tender.
That requires additional buses to be provided commercially, see my comment above re: Holymoorside and see my previous comments about we've done our research on the Bakewell corridor and have a good idea on expected demand.Until the recent 'panic attempt to recover' timetable change that Hulleys made, the 170 and 84 worked well together and were popular. You could have tried replicating that on a commercial basis. (Note as mentioned before I'm not in any way criticising Stagecoach for the current 84 timetable).
Everyone wants a direct link to the hospital *just incase*. Most people don't go to hospital on a regular basis to justify direct links from everywhere. Ask yourself, how often does the average person go to hospital and when they do is the bus going to be the most convenient option? Yes people can change in Chesterfield onto an already frequent service to the hospital, a corridor that became more frequent in last October's change going from 3 to 4 an hour on the 1's and 2's.Second is breaking the link with the hospital which is quite important to many. Yes, you can change buses but that just adds to the cost for many.
I'd refer you to the comment made by another poster on this subject. There is the dichotomy of people want simple ticketing and people want choice in ticketing, we've simplified a lot of the ticket range in recent years based on the later ask.Thirdly, the considerably hike in fares. Hulleys day ticket was something like £6.40, your ticket to cover the full 170 route is £10.50. I really think that due to the recent expansion in to Derbyshire it would be good to consider a Chesterfield-centered ticket which extends to Matlock and Bakewell.
I understand Hulleys received BSIP funding for the 170 rail station extension, some evening and Sunday trips. We're doing the rail extension and Sunday daytime commercially. We've spoken to DCC about the evening journeys.And lastly, the lack of any evening service. This means there is no bus link up Chatsworth road after 5:30 - even if you didn't want to run to Bakewell, surely the odd trip up to Storrs Road would be possible?
There are up to five service change dates a year in Derbyshire as agreed under the Enhanced Partnership. Most operators stuck to those five. In South Yorkshire it's limited to two per year (although there's been more in recent years to suit SYMCA). Two changes per year work well, it gives customers and colleagues (particularly drivers rotas) certainty.That shows an interesting contrast between Stagecoach and Hulleys. The latter were far too fast to change things, while you seem happy to let opportunities pass as they don't fit in with a rigid timetable change regime.
We consult on major service changes as we did in October 2024 and received hundreds of comments from customers. Some of the April changes are as a consequence of that consultation and comments made subsequently. What we cannot do is add in additional resource because one person comments they think it is a good idea. We use a lot of data in the background to validate network decisions including most recently using aggregated mobile phone data to understand where travel demand really is, not just based on trips currently made by bus or ten year old census data.Sort of related to this, but prior to you joining Stagecoach Yorkshire it was common to consult passengers when changes were proposed and occasionally things were altered based on that feedback. There now seems to be no engagement with (potential) passengers - do you not feel there is a benefit in doing this? (Or have I just missed any engagement - in which case I'd ask the question how effective it is)
Yes, EMR as operator of Chesterfield station will be involved. I'm sure Northern will be engaged at some point too. A lot seems to depend on resource and structure within the TOC's but we're starting to see a more joined up railway on stuff like this, which is positive.Great to hear that you have had positive discussions with XC trains especially as XC are at last reinstating their hourly calls at Chesterfield on the Plymouth/Birmingham/Chesterfield/Edinburgh axis.
Are there any plans to include EMR and Northern in the discussions?
Matlock has a railway station so demand for people to catch a bus from Chesterfield railway station is minimal. Would only benefit those coming from the north wishing to travel to Matlock and to be honest probably little/no time benefit that travelling via Derby on the train.What about getting a X17 towards Matlock at chesterfield station hourly you would get more passagners as the connection would be better as not ever one can walk to the centre to catch it