Ashley Hill
Established Member
Track circuit failure at Hemerdon (east of Plymouth). Caused delays and cancellations first thing this morning and delays during the day.There was a track circuit failure West of Plymouth
Track circuit failure at Hemerdon (east of Plymouth). Caused delays and cancellations first thing this morning and delays during the day.There was a track circuit failure West of Plymouth
The problem is, and let’s face it, GWRs cascade plans since 2016 have been pretty much a failure. From casting far too much hope on the 769s to release the Turbos to releasing units such as the 153s with no replacement. They were lucky that the HSTs were readily available with the franchise and First Group owning a number, and Angel having no work lined up for the rest. Here we are in 2023, the 150s expected to prop up the West Country branches, HSTs expected to be replaced and IETs expected to cover both High Speed work to London and local services in the West Country. With additional services and fleet reliability still not great (eg 165 / 166s) Something will go wrong, and it won’t be pretty.It's been obvious since this plan was formulated that it was unachievable in reality. The IETs have never met their availability targets with any regularity since they were built and it's hard to see why that would change now, short of Hitachi having the proverbial "blinding light on the road to Damascus" moment. Add in the 802 fleet having more maintenance undertaken at Laira, which will no doubt precipitate the inevitable reliability dip while they get used to them and the whole thing has fiasco written all over it.
but the CIS was claiming the 16:06 was both full and standing and no air conditioning available in the front set. The service, formed of 2 x IET according to RTT.
but the CIS was claiming the 16:06 was both full and standing and no air conditioning available in the front set.
Unlikely. Not that many Argyle fans in west Cornwall. Passenger load tends to be very poorly distributed in my experience on the 10 car sets, with in the down direction the rear unit always wedged.The "full and standing" may perhaps have something to do with the fact that there was a Exeter v Plymouth local football derby going on?
The problem is, and let’s face it, GWRs cascade plans since 2016 have been pretty much a failure. From casting far too much hope on the 769s to release the Turbos to releasing units such as the 153s with no replacement. They were lucky that the HSTs were readily available with the franchise and First Group owning a number, and Angel having no work lined up for the rest. Here we are in 2023, the 150s expected to prop up the West Country branches, HSTs expected to be replaced and IETs expected to cover both High Speed work to London and local services in the West Country. With additional services and fleet reliability still not great (eg 165 / 166s) Something will go wrong, and it won’t be pretty.
I've seen several more reports today that during an ASLEF meeting, it was confirmed that four sets + one spare is to be retained until December 2024 owing to woeful IETs.
It was confirmed by Simon Green on the all colleagues call last week.I've seen several more reports today that during an ASLEF meeting, it was confirmed that four sets + one spare is to be retained until December 2024 owing to woeful IETs.
Exeter sign up to Cardiff and down to Penzance, potentially only one depot needs to sign them.Isn't Five a little low for GWR crew to retain traction knowledge?
Do they sign Laira?Exeter sign up to Cardiff and down to Penzance, potentially only one depot needs to sign them.
You got there first! Plymouth are the rightful heirs to the HST throne not Exeter! Though Taunton to Cardiff would be problematic! Perhaps diagrams that just do Exeter to Penzance, and only Plymouth and PZ drivers then needed. However I rather suspect that looking at past decision making, it will all be about Exeter as usual and they will get to keep any HST work.Do they sign Laira?
You got there first! Plymouth are the rightful heirs to the HST throne not Exeter! Though Taunton to Cardiff would be problematic! Perhaps diagrams that just do Exeter to Penzance, and only Plymouth and PZ drivers then needed. However I rather suspect that looking at past decision making, it will all be about Exeter as usual and they will get to keep any HST work.
As Plymouth HSS lost Taunton to Bristol I don’t see how you could claim this. Exeter GWR drivers cover the Cardiff to Penzance route in its entirety. It’s only Laira that both Exeter HSS and GWR no longer sign and you’re welcome to those ECS shunts.You got there first! Plymouth are the rightful heirs to the HST throne not Exeter! Though Taunton to Cardiff would be problematic
I've seen several more reports today that during an ASLEF meeting, it was confirmed that four sets + one spare is to be retained until December 2024 owing to woeful IETs.
Not so much the leases of course as it will be the first group and or franchise assets staying until the end. Angel ones will end up joining their classmates in Ely when their time comes (43005 already de-named in preparation for the handback), unless heavily stripped and that will be down to Angel to arrange disposal of. But it certainly made sense to retain a number for longer with the current pressures on both West Fleet DMUs and IET sets. And, on top of 207 & 216s overhauls and standardisation, the rest of the 150/2 fleet also has their C6s coming up to boot.Don’t forget the lease on some of the HSTs was through to 2025 anyway, the original rundown plan was based around traincrew strategy and saving money not a fixed lease end like XC so it’s not so much about retention of the sets but postponing the withdrawal from traffic date.
The exact scope of the future use of GWR HSTs is still being worked on by the teams at GWR with December 2024 being the date currently being looked at. There are also issues with current West DMU availability and heavy maintenance due which is another factor into looking at retaining the HSTs in traffic for longer.
Not going to happen. Plymouth made it clear back in 2019 that ECS only wasn't acceptable on 2+4 HSTs. I've no doubt I, as a HSS driver will lose HSTs come December, but the west drivers at Plymouth most certainly need to retain them on the mainline.As Plymouth HSS lost Taunton to Bristol I don’t see how you could claim this. Exeter GWR drivers cover the Cardiff to Penzance route in its entirety. It’s only Laira that both Exeter HSS and GWR no longer sign and you’re welcome to those ECS shunts.
The exact scope of the future use of GWR HSTs is still being worked on by the teams at GWR with December 2024 being the date currently being looked at. There are also issues with current West DMU availability and heavy maintenance due which is another factor into looking at retaining the HSTs in traffic for longer.
Laira has "depot drivers" still doesn't it? Exeter and those would probably keep enough regular work between them.Do they sign Laira?
I meant say 4 sets will be retained post Dec 2023 timetable and only those not due heavy maintenance/overhaul.It was confirmed by Simon Green on the all colleagues call last week.
Is there something here you’re hinting at having an issue with?I rather suspect that looking at past decision making, it will all be about Exeter as usual and they will get to keep any HST work.
Was it not four sets mentioned above?Clearly if plan is to keep 5 sets for 3 diagrams, have to wonder when the maintenance backlog of other types will end.
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I know Treasury want to cut the railways spending, and there are parts of country with excess capacity, but I am not convinced that South West England has any slack in the fleet, ever since the 142s went without direct replacement.
142s and 150/1s were replaced by 150/2s that used to run down to Penzance replaced by the HSTs and 158s. I remember early morning going to Penzance from Totnes and a 2 car 150 came in. Exeter has all the GWR 150/2s and I think all the GWR 3 car 158sIs there something here you’re hinting at having an issue with?
Was it not four sets mentioned above?
Also, weren’t the 142s replaced by 150/1s, which in turn were replaced by the 166 cascade?
150/1 and 150/2 both worked across Bristol and Devon/Cornwall routes. The 16x came down to replace all 150s in the Bristol area, the 150/2s could then ALL work in Devon/Cornwall as they were no longer needed in Bristol, and so the extra ones took over from 150/1s.142s and 150/1s were replaced by 150/2s that used to run down to Penzance replaced by the HSTs and 158s. I remember early morning going to Penzance from Totnes and a 2 car 150 came in. Exeter has all the GWR 150/2s and I think all the GWR 3 car 158s
No chance, as the small pool of depot drivers cannot be ring fenced for HST moves that would clearly be detrimental to the core work of ferrying IETs to and from North Road. Staff resilience at somewhere like Laira is vital, must be sufficient drivers who can drive the HST sets.Laira has "depot drivers" still doesn't it? Exeter and those would probably keep enough regular work between them.
No chance, as the small pool of depot drivers cannot be ring fenced for HST moves that would clearly be detrimental to the core work of ferrying IETs to and from North Road. Staff resilience at somewhere like Laira is vital, must be sufficient drivers who can drive the HST sets.
Who else has the competency to do anything above an A or B exam?You’re making a big assumption they will continue to be maintained at Laira, although likely has that actually been confirmed as Laira is taking on extra IET work?
It was Four Sets + A Spare Set so I would assume 10 PowercarsWas it not four sets mentioned above?
An assumption perhaps but it would be madness now to move it to the Marsh or even Long Rock.You’re making a big assumption they will continue to be maintained at Laira, although likely has that actually been confirmed as Laira is taking on extra IET work?
Who else has the competency to do anything above an A or B exam?