This is why I rate the arrangements 153s have. Bikes below, luggage aboveAgreed. Unfortunately with the UK public these are the source of endless arguments.
This is why I rate the arrangements 153s have. Bikes below, luggage aboveAgreed. Unfortunately with the UK public these are the source of endless arguments.
I suppose the other side of that argument would be that the ‘green’ dilemma and urban congestion problem weren’t really issues back then? Nowadays we have a moral necessity to encourage cycle use in the face of stiff competition from the private car, which might suggest that public transport needs to do better?
This is why I rate the arrangements 153s have. Bikes below, luggage above
I always got the impression the railways moved away from charging for bicycle reservations because being able to honour them is problematic.Making a charge for using extra space is reasonable.
A problem of the TOC's own making. Folding seats in areas intended for luggage, bicycles or pushchairs have never been a good idea.I always got the impression the railways moved away from charging for bicycle reservations because being able to honour them is problematic.
TPE is a great example, supposedly it has mandatory bicycle reservations but the bike rack is in the middle of the train and has tip-up seats on it. In reality people aren't going to give up their seat for a bike, reservation or no reservation.
^This. A thousand times this. Particularly the 195s and 331s running to Manchester Airport. The overhead racks are decent, but I wouldn't put a big suitcase up there, although they take my small case easily enough. I understand the need to get as many people on at commuter peaks, but I think the mix has gone too far the wrong way. Also on my grumpy list are Avanti, and having small luggage spaces at the end of the carriage and big ones in the middle, especially so people with giant suitcases can have two goes at splattering everyone as they move through the carriage with their luggage!Of course the real cause of this issue isn't, apart from a small minority, people bringing unrealistic amounts of luggage it's the fact we've procured a generation of long distance trains (some of which serve airports!) which do not have sufficient luggage capacity.
And spares or both, and T-Shirts/shirts/trousers. Possibly shoes too. Except that doesn't all fit in my laptop bag, so now I need a case too...I couldn't agree more. If you're going away for a weekend all you need to take with you is your normal day rucksack plus a toothbrush and a pair of socks and pants for each day you're away. What exactly do these people with massive suitcases on wheels put in them?
Yeah, but you can get so many pairs of socks in a double bass caseIt’s interesting that a ban on transporting double basses caused such an outcry. It’s not common to see them on UK trains - albeit I did see one a couple of weeks ago on a Southeastern networker. They’re absolutely enormous and take up at least as much space as a grown man.
Yes, although it could be a bit tricky manoeuvring your bike in from the vestibule, it was a good solution. Also good are the 156s that have that little room at the end for bikes and luggage.This is why I rate the arrangements 153s have. Bikes below, luggage above
I love how everyone is being so British and just ignoring it!Or bring a motorbike onboard to transport it from once place to another, blocking half the carriage during rush hour and potentially hindering emergency escape routes.
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^This. A thousand times this. Particularly the 195s and 331s running to Manchester Airport. The overhead racks are decent, but I wouldn't put a big suitcase up there, although they take my small case easily enough. I understand the need to get as many people on at commuter peaks, but I think the mix has gone too far the wrong way. Also on my grumpy list are Avanti, and having small luggage spaces at the end of the carriage and big ones in the middle, especially so people with giant suitcases can have two goes at splattering everyone as they move through the carriage with their luggage!
How did they even get that through the barriers and onto the train without being stopped?!Or bring a motorbike onboard to transport it from once place to another, blocking half the carriage during rush hour and potentially hindering emergency escape routes.
Gate line staff unaware, or too busy with other travellers, or don't want the agro associated with challenging the kind of person who think it's ok to take a moped/scooter (can't tell from the pic) on a rush hour train.How did they even get that through the barriers and onto the train without being stopped?!
How did they even get that through the barriers and onto the train without being stopped?!
Gate line staff unaware, or too busy with other travellers, or don't want the agro associated with challenging the kind of person who think it's ok to take a moped/scooter (can't tell from the pic) on a rush hour train.
Don't blame you in the slightest.I saw these a couple of times when I used to drive commuter trains and was changing ends. I simply pretended I hadn’t seen them - not worth the aggro!
Must have got on at the MML stations past Kentish Town towards LutonHow did they even get that through the barriers and onto the train without being stopped?!
Eurostar have them on some London to Paris/Brussels services. But then that's a bit more akin to air travel in that your luggage is scanned before you board, and you have to show a passport.The days of luggage vans are gone aren’t they? Aside from the lack of train length for them station stops are not long enough, the fear of theft would be too high, plus the security threat of unaccompanied luggage.
They should enforce Harrow and Wealdstone station, the amount of modified bikes there boarding the LNWR services into Euston is ridiculous. (Deliveroo, just eat etc)Re: full sized bikes, Santander/Lime etc. bikes and motorscooters on commuter trains. It's becoming moderately common to see these even on the London tube. Gateline staff seem typically just let them through, as do National Rail, presumably as noted to avoid aggro. Even in peak hours. Given the general level of low-level tension that exists on most rail/tube services in London, I'd probably do the same.... (NB. the practice of 'bumping' gates, at least in London, is becoming ubiquitous.) It's fine to imagine that trains should be made larger but, for the most part, we are stuck with the stock that we have at least until refurb or rebuild time. Even the Dutch railways, which generally have large bike storage spaces require you to have a bike ticket (but enforcement of this is still patchy.)
Some enforcement work, though, is needed right now in the London area in particular with very large bikes and petrol/electric scooters. The fire the other day at Rayners Lane on LUL, involving an e-bike of some kind, is a reminder of this. A couple of 'enforcement days' in the London area would help. Preceded by something in in place of the endless 'see it. etc.' and 'it would really great if you had the right ticket' announcements...
As things stand, once the train gets busy and where gangways are blocked by bikes, I'm off ... and waiting for the next one.
They should enforce Harrow and Wealdstone station, the amount of modified bikes there boarding the LNWR services into Euston is ridiculous. (Deliveroo, just eat etc)
And the size of some the bikes are extremely large.
Without going off topic, if its fully pedal with what they call fat tires then to a degree this is true, but in general especially the ebikes, the fatter tires provide more suspension and the lower pressure allows the less punctures in the bike. The only downside being its a slightly harder bike to get going but most of the time the electric bikes will be using these tires so that aspect of pedaling barely matters.Some of the folders also utterly take the mick (and half the vestibule). The massive tyres are just a stylistic point and add nothing to the function of these pseudo-motorcycles.
as a kayaker this has inspired me to see what I can get away withThere was a gentleman at KX arguing my TM about a Kayak.
He had booked the bike space and his logic was that the Kayak was "about the same as the bike". He didn't travel but that's probably the most bizarre thing I've seen someone try and pass of as "normal" baggage.
No. £5 each.Back with the double bass, I did see one intending traveller with apparently two Cellos:
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To be fair - she is carrying both of them, so I presume would meet the current rules for two carried items?
Fort William to Corrour has been done in the past, by asking nicely. I don't know whether that is still practical.as a kayaker this has inspired me to see what I can get away with![]()
ooh, that looks fun... (and the Abhainn Ghuilbinn!)The objective being the River Ossian.
Fort William to Corrour has been done in the past, by asking nicely. I don't know whether that is still practical.
I have not seen any recent reports, but I have not been looking. As for the kayaks, almost certainly the sort you saw.How long ago was that, and with what sort of kayak?
I once saw someone getting on a train at Birmingham International with a kayak that they had presumably just bought at the canoe exhibition at the NEC that I had also just been to, but a) it was in the days of Mk2 half-brakes on Virgin XC, and b) it was one of those very short whitewater ones that almost look like something that you wear rather than a boat in which you travel.
good luck finding a kayak which will be less than 1 metre in any direction! Playboats ("freestyle boats", e.g. https://www.manchester-canoes-and-kayaks.co.uk/kayaks/wave-sport-fuse) are the smallest, but typically 1.6-2 metres long. These are not well suited for whitewater for various reasons (both paddling efficiency and safety-wise)The very small whitewater ones may well be?