I think you may have omitted at least some of the other 7,799999m tourist/holidaymakers who also visit Dartmoor annually of which Tavistock (and Okehampton) is one the main gateway towns to this national park?
I was taking
@yorksrob 's quote about the importance of the "
people wanting to get from Tavistock to further afield" at face value, i.e. this time when he's suggesting the same thing he's promoting it in terms of the thousands of people living in Tavistock who travel further than Plymouth each day
(I'm sure he'll be back to promote exactly the same solution - but with a different "problem" before long though)
Not to mention the hundreds of people from Tavistock wanting a holiday in Normanton!
A crucial market - why isn't there a direct link already?
And Tavistock has several bus services into Plymouth, so that ought to sustain a train service
Yes - and I've repeatedly suggested that a simple Tavistock - Plymouth service would be worth considering - it's a link from a town of eleven thousand people to the nearest city on a corridor that can sustain a frequent commercial bus service - whilst the train won't serve the popular Hospital or penetrate Plymouth City Centre properly, it's worth investigating whether a railway can be re-opened for that kind of line
It wouldn't need to be anything fancy, a single track siding from Bere Alston, it doesn't need to be "high speed" - but then projects like Ebbw Vale and Alloa were pretty modest (simple short and "slow") and seem to have worked okay
However, your perennial problem is that you can never accept just a modest proposal and have to try to tie it into a much bigger scheme with bells and whistles (through large chunks of empty countryside, a double track line capable of sustaining a competitive Exeter - Plymouth journey time for all of the InterCity services)
If the Tweedbank line had been tied to the Hawick - Carlisle route it would never have got built - but re=opening obsessives never bother to learn the lessons from what works elsewhere, they are always trying to plan mega-schemes instead of focussing on a practical case that might stand a chance (e.g. I could see benefits in a simple short and slow single track line like Harrogate - Ripon but that always gets packaged up as a line to run InterCity services from Leeds - Northallerton - Newcastle faster than the current route via York... I could see the benefit in a simple short and slow single track line from Matlock to Buxton but that always gets packaged up as a London - Buxton - Manchester route...
...look at how the Levenmouth line will be re-opening - a simple short and slow route from Thornton junction - because providing a line into Leven/ Methil etc will provide practical benefits to a lot of people - but insisting that nothing should happen unless we re-open the whole route from Thornton Junction to Leuchars via Leven, St Andrews and lots of empty countryside in between would be doomed to failure.
You've said a few times that you wouldn't support (just) a Tavistock - Plymouth re-opening because it wouldn't deliver as many benefits as the entire-bells-and-whistles double tracked through route via Okehampton though
We know that the Windermere line, the Marshlink line, the Borders line all generate substantial passenger usage, in spite of being rural routes, that would never get past the prejudice of the anti-heavy rail contingent on here
I think you're fighting a Strawman here
Windermere does well as a popular tourist town where the station is pretty central as well as Kendall (and if you think the five thousand people in Okehampton make it "large" then Kendall is worth of city status)
Marshlink sees the shortest trains in the Southern/ South Eastern area - and only every hour - so not a resounding success
The Tweedbank line provided a link from the "stagnant" Borders area to the "overheating" city of Edinburgh (certainly, when the line was being built, Edinburgh was booming, the housing market pricing a lot of people out but not a lot of jobs in the much more affordable Galashiels area) - it also had a good bus service and provided stations in Midlothian which were prime commuter territory and sustained lots of commercial bus services into Edinburgh
So it's instructive to look at the different cases, rather than blindly supporting each and every case.
There is a refusal to look at real life examples in the network today, and instead to clutch at any argument that supports their prejudice.
Might as well call off the competition, even though its only September - there's no topping that
From my perspective I find it very frustrating how rail fails to serve some close-by major urban centres effectively at all, but that these generate no real attention. For example, there's no functional rail service connecting Milton Keynes with Luton, Coventry with Leicester, Hartlepool with Durham, Northampton with Kettering, Neath with Rhondda, Harlow with Chelmsford, Reading with Wycombe and Aylesbury with Oxford. But there's precious little attention on those and lots on Okehampton to Tavistock.
Some excellent examples there
Sadly we'll be discussing Woodhead/ SELRAP/ Bakewell etc every few months whilst ignoring the corridors that don't fit neatly into the "Beeching" folder or aren't through several miles of national park