Agreed. I'm embarrassed to work them at present. I've always extolled the virtue of the train to my friends family and neighbours , but right now id be embarrassed too with the horrific seat base situation, completely unsuitable for Plymouth to Reading or London journies. I just pity the poor folk of Cornwall travelling up to London! Such a shame as GWR is a good TOC and pretty well run but these seats are now a total farce.They really need an emergency seat cushion refit. Just the base needs doing but it can’t be left any longer, it ridiculous that on an inter city train you’re expected to sit on a metal bar for hours on end.
With the first part Id rather not reduce capacity on services that are already standing room only. Seats are more important than food. Being on a five car out of Newport full you don't want less seats.I really hope in the future they add a LNER style buffet into the GWR units. The amount of times I've had "stationary trolley in coach x". Might as well just get rid of the trolleys that never really run.
The state of the GWR fleet is shoddy worn out look about 20 years old. Carpets are filthy, seats hard and broken, toliets are always out of service, paint coming off the body shells. The DfT should never ever have had the ability to specify rolling stock, as we are left with this as a result.
Again completely agree, but I suspect that would be a contract change which unfortunately isn't happening any time soonIETs really need a suspension fix, especially the GWR ones as the vibrations on those trains are very worrying
5 hours sat on a lump of concrete or metal bar, or just fly.I just pity the poor folk of Cornwall travelling up to London! Such a shame as GWR is a good TOC and pretty well run but these seats are now a total farce.
the shuddering issue around the reading to swindon area isn't only an IET issue, i remember the same thing happening on a HST i went on about 4 years ago5 hours sat on a lump of concrete or metal bar, or just fly.
I know which I’d do on comfort, cost and speed grounds.
yes, it’s a flippant answer and flying isn’t an option for all, but for those given a genuine choice it would be fly for me.
On the positive side
- The lighting is horrifically bright
- The seating is horrifically uncomfortable (apart from legroom)
- The toilets are poorly designed and unreliable
- They shudder horrendously at high speed between Reading and Swindon
- Not their fault but they run on diesel over most of the network, electrification would definitely improve the experience onboard these trains
- Did I mention the seats
- The combination of 5, 9, and 10 coach trains is both a lottery and confusing for passengers
- Oh, the seats aren’t worth sitting on
Overall they are technically miles better than what they replaced whilst also being terrible at providing a comfortable passenger experience.
- The seat reservation light/screen system is the best we’ve had to date in the UK
- They are impressive technically from a standing start the acceleration is amazing
- The staff are some of the best on the network, very helpful
- The door between the vestibule and the passenger seating is back to using a pressure pad and not that utterly ridiculous timed button used on the Voyagers (whoever designed that should never work in train design again)
- They don’t smell like the old HSTs (think there was historically a lot of burning smells when braking)
On a point of pedantry - PRM relates to accessibility and is entirely different to fire safety.The spec as a whole made little sense, and PRM fireproof regulations were a poor excuse for very poorly thought out seating.
Yes but either GWR aren’t reporting it so Hitachi’s KPI score isn’t being affected, Hitachi has decided the lost of money due to the lower KPI is better than fixing it, or they are trying to work out a long term solution. Unfortunately it isn’t as easy as just buying new cushions, and from deciding they’re being replaced with a different type to doing it could take months or years.At a minimum, surely the current state of the seats is unacceptable contractually, assuming that Hitachi have to make available trains available to GWR in a useable condition?
GWR and FG upper management are aware...Yes but either GWR aren’t reporting it so Hitachi’s KPI score isn’t being affected, Hitachi has decided the lost of money due to the lower KPI is better than fixing it, or they are trying to work out a long term solution. Unfortunately it isn’t as easy as just buying new cushions, and from deciding they’re being replaced with a different type to doing it could take months or years.
Yes, as are FG’s senior management.
Getting Hitachi to do something about it is “interesting”.
From the above post it sounds like if the seats are to be changed then it won’t be Hitachi paying for them. And the way the TOCs are run these days means I imagine the DfT won’t pay for it either. So they’ll probably be like this for some time.
I guess GWR are reluctant to press Hitachi too much , as taking sets out of service for seat repairs will mean less IETs available for service. In an ideal world, a couple more Castles would be kept to cover for a couple of years or however long it would take to fix the seats.
Indeed, I'd expect the issue to be who pays for the new cushions.Surely once you'd ordered in the TfW base cushions (which appear to solve the problem) and new covers you'd be able to do one a night while other stuff was being done at the same time? There's nothing wrong with the frames, the issue is the cushions.
Or even just a coach a night, doesn’t have to be fast.Surely once you'd ordered in the TfW base cushions (which appear to solve the problem) and new covers you'd be able to do one a night while other stuff was being done at the same time? There's nothing wrong with the frames, the issue is the cushions.
Whereas economy class in planes is renowned for extreme comfort, yes.5 hours sat on a lump of concrete or metal bar, or just fly.
I know which I’d do on comfort, cost and speed grounds.
yes, it’s a flippant answer and flying isn’t an option for all, but for those given a genuine choice it would be fly for me.
- The lighting is horrifically bright
- The seating is horrifically uncomfortable (apart from legroom)
Plane toilets are beautiful and fragrant and one of the most pleasant ways to spend a journey. I always look forward to my visit to a plane toilet.
- The toilets are poorly designed and unreliable
Planes have a super-smooth ride and there is never any shuddering as a result of atmospheric conditions.
- They shudder horrendously at high speed between Reading and Swindon
Planes now all run on electric power or bionic duckweed, making them a much more environmentally friendly alternative to diesel trains.
- Not their fault but they run on diesel over most of the network, electrification would definitely improve the experience onboard these trains
One of the great things about planes is that you always know exactly what type of aircraft you'll be flying on when you book!
- Did I mention the seats
- The combination of 5, 9, and 10 coach trains is both a lottery and confusing for passengers
I'm sorry, who is suffering spine damage?This is where railway group standards are wrong
Specify crash worthiness for 1 in many years event but,
Ignore fact might be causing spine damage to users on lots of journeys, clearly injuring occupants is low priority.
Whereas economy class in planes is renowned for extreme comfort, yes.
Plane toilets are beautiful and fragrant and one of the most pleasant ways to spend a journey. I always look forward to my visit to a plane toilet.
Planes have a super-smooth ride and there is never any shuddering as a result of atmospheric conditions.
Planes now all run on electric power or bionic duckweed, making them a much more environmentally friendly alternative to diesel trains.
One of the great things about planes is that you always know exactly what type of aircraft you'll be flying on when you book!
Yes, economy flights are not the most comfortable experience, but on the route in question they take 1 rather than 5 hours and I can manage an hour without needing a toiletWhereas economy class in planes is renowned for extreme comfort, yes.
Plane toilets are beautiful and fragrant and one of the most pleasant ways to spend a journey. I always look forward to my visit to a plane toilet.
Planes have a super-smooth ride and there is never any shuddering as a result of atmospheric conditions.
Planes now all run on electric power or bionic duckweed, making them a much more environmentally friendly alternative to diesel trains.
One of the great things about planes is that you always know exactly what type of aircraft you'll be flying on when you book!
I'm sorry, who is suffering spine damage?