Just amazing how a manufacturer who inherited some of the networker builds from BREL and gather a lot of customers over the years with their series of turbostar/electrostars and then all of a sudden flop with these aventras, when you have near suscessful units such as Desiros and Junipers rolling from CAF/Simens.
Is it now safe to say British motive engineering is coming to an end?
I’m sure the first Electrostars had a few teething issues, but understandably fewer than an Aventra would have now as it would have had less software and less control given to the software.
The Aventra is a completely new product, I can’t think of any part of it being an evolution of its Electrostar counterpart; new products typically have even more teething problems than just a new unit of an existing product range. So I’m certainly not the only one here not being surprised with all these Aventra problems.
It does indeed seem that the 710 approval is taking ages, but I’d rather have Bombardier solving all of the issues for a long time than see it have a brake failure (wink wink Hitachi) and eventually killing someone. After all, if you’re being rational, a year long delay doesn’t seem that long compared to the eventual 40 year service life of the train.
Plus anything to do with the first Electrostars on test (sticking with this late 1990s example) would have been less noticed than the same situation with an Aventra as at that time it wouldn’t’ve been "followed" on the internet (forums and social media especially) as much as the 710s are.
Bombardier is having approval issues with their R179 contract for the New York Subway (as a result they were effectively banned from running for the subsequent R211 contract (which was awarded to Kawasaki)), and France’s SNCF has had issues with Bombardier products in the past, most noticeably the late 2000s Z 50000 ‘Francilien’ EMUs; among those were a lot of issues with software. The trains eventually got over all those issues and they are now the most reliable units SNCF have, and we will soon have 360 in service. Mind you, SNCF did put a lot of pressure on Bombardier to solve these issues, which TfL must be doing for their 710 contract, no doubt.
The side effect of the 710 issue (shortage of rolling stock on the GOBLIN due to the transfer of 172 units) is certainly not Bombardier’s fault, but rather the poor management and inflexibility of all parties involved in this cascade.
About the second-to-last part of your message, the Junipers are an Alstom product, and seem not to have worked very well from the start.
So, no, British motive engineering isn’t dying, it’s evolving (as no evolving takes place without a few issues along the way, issues from which we learn); what everyone should rather be concerned about, is how patience is becoming less and less common.