They say they want the most comfortable train and then they pick an existing seat that, whilst not an ironing board, isn’t great…
You could probably have finished your post at "existing seat" really; since new seats on new and refurbished trains in GB seem to range from diabolical (the Northern and Thameslink 'ironing board') to 'not great'.
People seem to like the refurbished Pendolino’s seats, from what I’ve read, so hopefully that will bode well.
Really? I prefer the original seats
I've only had one trip on a refurbished Pendolino, but the seats were one of the few good things about them before the refurb - the new ones (in common with everything else) seem to be quite a bit harder.
Except we didn't, did we? The IET fleet is very expensive - around 1/3 more than a Pendolino from memory (inflation adjusted) - yet somehow we'd been landed with a "cheap" product. Worst of all words, and a fine example of why civil servants should never be allowed to run projects such as IEP.
I thought IEP (ie. class 800 and 801) was expensive because it included a complicated 27.5 year 'rolling stock as a service' deal where the supplier provided diagrams rather than trains (are the class 802s, which if I understood correctly were ordered conventionally, also expensive compared to a Pendo?). Interestingly I believe the IEP
first class seats are 'Fainsa MD' with the letters standing for 'Medium Distance'. If even first class are only getting a medium-distance product, I wonder what market Fainsa intended the standard class seats (Fainsa Sophia) to be aimed at?
I am not saying the whole product is "cheap", but the seating is. Better seats could have been specified but they would have added to the cost.
Could better seats have been specified though? A few TOCs now have tried to design a better seat to suplant the 'Sophia' and 'ironing board' but those I have sat on have disapointed. Perhaps there is some truth in the rumour that hard seats are now mandatory due to PRM requirements after all.
I personally like the ScotRail HST and Inverness 158 seats. They are fairly modern and are not over or under padded in my opinion.
I believe those are the Grammer IC3000 seats which can also be found on TfW class 158s and possibly any Castle HSTs that GWR still has left (the ScotRail Inter7City HSTs retain the seats FirstGW fitted I think). They are probably my favourite 'modern' seats (particularly the TfW/ATW version, which seem to have a slightly softer headrest but I think are otherwise the same). Unfortunately, I'm not sure if they still meet the necessary regulations for new installations, since I don't think they have appear in any new or refurbished fleet for a good while now and didn't TPE claim that the Fainsa Sophia was the only authorised standard class seat for their Nova fleets at the time?
GWR 158 seats would be nice.
Agreed. The legroom is appalling, not helped by the very deep seat backs and overall I find the seats rather small. Comfortable enough, but certainly not a premium design!
Are these the seats you are talking about (
my photo, taken on a Northern 158 a good few years back)? If so, they are massively softer than even the Grammer IC3000, let alone the current concrete offerings. In all my GB rail holidays, those class 158 seats are probably the only thing that compares to the 3-CIG slammer on the Lymington branch for nice, soft, seats (although I think I've only managed to sample refurbished examples of IC70 seats, so maybe the likes of Chiltern and EMT replaced the padding with a much-harder foam compared to whatever BR used). I would agree that the class 158 seats offer poor legroom; but the bodyshell doesn't help, with nine windows in probably less space than a mark 4 coach has eight the seats wouldn't align with the windows otherwise. I would like to try the seats from that Northern 158 in something with bigger windows at the 84cm seat pitch of a class 175 and see what the legroom is like then.
The original concept was that there would be 2 HS2 ‘sets‘ coupled together potentially splitting to serve 2 destinations. As no platforms have been constructed as yet on HS2 & most trains will now run on existing lines has any consideration been given to train lengths?
I see press comment that there will be less seats available London - Manchester because a HS2 ‘set‘ has less seats than a pendolino. Surely a ‘set’ could be made the same length as a Pendolino. Then existing non HS2 stations can accommodate the maximum seats Without further platform alteration.
Personally, I think the HS2 fleet should be comprised of 'classic compatible' sets the same length as an 11-car Pendolino. If it ever reaches Manchester, then they should build some fixed-formation 400m 'captive' sets, probably double-deck, to suplement the fleet but at no point should they plan to run sets (of either type) in multiple. If multiple working ever happens it should only be because something failed and the other set came to rescue it, or other unplanned disruption. Portion working should be ruled out.