In terms of Cross Country (Reading axis), my favourite timetable would probably be 1982/3, which was actually the year
before I first started seriously "getting into" XC.
I did make one XC trip to Stafford and back from Guildford in late 1982, however it was only during the 1983/4 timetable that I first started seriously observing XC operations.
The reasons why the 1982 timetable edges it, however, are:
- it was the first year the Portsmouth-Manchester ran, which was my "local" XC service; any candidate for favourite XC timetable has to feature a Portsmouth service.
- a slightly-better-than-hourly frequency from Reading to Birmingham, due to a large number of Paddington-originators in addition to decent numbers of Pooles, Brightons and Portsmouths. This was never bettered in the following few years, which all featured at least one 2-hour gap during the day.
- Birmingham-Manchester was also hourly with just one gap, a pattern introduced 1979. From 1983 more gaps appeared on this route.
- hourly service from Stafford to Birmingham, again in later years gaps appeared. Stafford was a station I visited a fair amount. Where there would have been gaps, they got a Glasgow/Edinburgh service to call.
It's a shame my interest hadn't developed fully by 1982/3. The timetable is available in the 1982 GBPTT available for free (uniquely) on Timetable World.
More generally I would probably say 1982/83-1986/87 was
especially good for XC. The Portsmouths went in May 1987 and by then there were less changeovers of locos in New Street, so while there was still plenty of interest to be had right up to the end of the 20th century, the stated period was especially good.
However I could also extend that and say 1979 to 2000 for XC as the "classic XC" carried on pretty much right up to the end of the century. Indeed, my first rail trip of the year 2000 was a good old "47 to New Street, 86 onwards" classic XC service, the Sunday morning Poole to Glasgow, I think. I chose 1979 as the starting year as that seems to be when "XC-as-we-knew-it" came to be with the Brightons, and some Paddingtons working through to Manchester/Liverpool.
As for least-favourite XC period: Arriva! (especially post-Covid...)
* Slam door stock. Seriously, what the hell?
I realise I am a fan of the SR slam-door era, but: what was the alternative in the 50s and 60s when most of it was built?
One era from the not-too-distant past which I don't miss is when South West Trains operated unrefurbished ex-Southern Class 456s on the Guildford to Ascot route.
I remember using one of these from Wanborough to Guildford in October 2014. My only ever trip on a 456, my only ever use of Wanborough station, and I have to admit it was an interesting change to the typical traction on SWT so I quite enjoyed it!
My favourite era of anything in the entirety of railway history as I've experienced it has to be Class 101s on the Conwy Valley, without any shadow of a doubt.
Something I thankfully experienced, in the latter years (1997-99). Did Llandudno Junction-Betws-y-Coed and v.v. and Blaenau Ffestiniog to the station with the youth hostel in the valley (was it Dolwyddelan?) and v.v. So did most of the line except a small section in the middle.
1990s on the WCML was depressing - watch that Victoria Wood Great Railway Journey. The whole thing felt like the railway was going to close next week.
I didn't mind the 1990s on the WCML, and I did travel via Euston around 1991-93 quite a bit in particular, which was presumably the worst period being the recession. Didn't seem that run-down to me, and of course, from an enthusiast POV it was still the good old AC electric locos we knew and loved, albeit with DVTs.