dk1
Veteran Member
Sounds good until one of them is delayed
One will just get left behind with passengers changing to next available.
Sounds good until one of them is delayed
The southbound service (1V64) seems the obvious choice for that. What I can’t understand is why northbound it will be in place of an existing 170 CDF-NOT (1M60)? Surely that will be a problem, trying to diagram the 170 around that?Northbound it's the 09:45 calling at Chepstow, Worcestershire Parkway (no Ashchurch), Tamworth, Burton-on-Trent, Chesterfield, Alnmouth and Berwick as well as the normal Cheltenham – Leeds – Edinburgh stops. Southbound it's the 13:07 from Edinburgh calling at Berwick, Alnmouth and Burton-on-Trent and only calling at Cheltenham and Gloucester between Birmingham and Newport.
The 13:07 Edinburgh to Gloucester currently gets to Gloucester on time 5% of the time, within 5 minutes 39% and 61% within 15 minutes. The 12:03 Birmingham New Street to Edinburgh is on time 23% of the time, within 5 minutes 45% of the time and 64% within 15 minutes (the 12:07 via Preston's better but not massively).The novelty of long through services with abysmal reliability (because it will be) lives on. Chaning as long as connections are reliable and well timed is more important than a long direct service with less capacity because it has to split.
The 170 for 1D60, the 1149 Birmingham NS to Nottingham arrives empty from Tysley depot. Doesn’t allow for a change, but it shouldn’t be difficult to diagram, should it?The southbound service (1V64) seems the obvious choice for that. What I can’t understand is why northbound it will be in place of an existing 170 CDF-NOT (1M60)? Surely that will be a problem, trying to diagram the 170 around that?
Perhaps what @FlybeDash8Q400 was wondering at was what happens to the current 0600 from Nottingham? Presumably there's to be an odd gap now between 0724 when that service terminates at Birmingham New Street and 1149 when it again resumes. One can only guess at this stage, but perhaps a more efficient solution has been found where those are part of different diagrams.The 170 for 1D60, the 1149 Birmingham NS to Nottingham arrives empty from Tysley depot. Doesn’t allow for a change, but it shouldn’t be difficult to diagram, should it?
I think it’s a bit patchy in places but overall does seem to work. Ultimately biggest priority for XC is getting the Voyager back to Central Rivers.The 170 for 1D60, the 1149 Birmingham NS to Nottingham arrives empty from Tysley depot. Doesn’t allow for a change, but it shouldn’t be difficult to diagram, should it?
Looking in Real Time Trains the 0749 Birmingham to Nottingham now forms off the 0600 Nottingham to Birmingham instead of a unit from Tyseley, and in turn the 1149 Birmingham to Nottingham is formed off an ECS from Tyseley. Would be interesting to know if XC have diagrammed anything for the 170 before the 1149 as theoretically it could be used for strengthening something else, but on the whole I think it's quite an efficient way of diagramming it.Perhaps what @FlybeDash8Q400 was wondering at was what happens to the current 0600 from Nottingham? Presumably there's to be an odd gap now between 0724 when that service terminates at Birmingham New Street and 1149 when it again resumes. One can only guess at this stage, but perhaps a more efficient solution has been found where those are part of different diagrams.
For completeness, the new 0649 Derby to Cardiff Central doesn't have a service correspondingly between Derby and Birmingham New Street in the current timetable. However, in December 2019 this service did used to run starting back at Sheffield at 0559 and continuing after Birmingham New Street at 0733 to Reading. I will wait with great interest to see if the 0733 from Birmingham New Street and 0945 from Reading are restored next year.
Pembroke Dock did operate this yearI'm probably missing a few, but once a day / very limited services withdrawn since Covid:
- Chiltern between Stourbridge and Kidderminster
- CrossCountry to Guildford and Newquay
- EMR services north of Sheffield / Doncaster to Leeds / Scarborough
- All Eurostar services except Lille, Brussels, Rotterdam, Amsterdam and Paris (with Brexit being a factor as well)
- Thameslink to Littlehampton
- Southern to Guildford and Wimbledon (and Milton Keynes, as a more frequent withdrawn service)
- GWR to Pembroke Dock (I'm fairly sure didn't come back this summer?) and Brighton
- LNER to Glasgow and the non-Inverness Stirling service (from this December)
- The through Northern / ScotRail Newcastle – Dumfries – Glasgow service
- SWR between Weymouth and Yeovil and between Westbury and Bristol Temple Meads
I can't think of any similar services which have been introduced since Covid, although Cardiff – Edinburgh's completely following existing CrossCountry services when a lot of those were outside their TOC's area. The closest post-Covid one I can think of is London to Middlesbrough, and I think that's partly daily because Middlesbrough's platform 3 isn't finished yet.
Edit: GWR serving Axminster daily's another new infrequent service.
See Posts #4, 5 and 6In the mid 1980s there was a 1S61 0735 Cardiff to Glasgow/Edinburgh which was called 'The Principality'.
In the southbound direction it's a full hour slower than the change at Crewe is. The direct train leaves at 1307, arriving 2007. The following journey leaves at 1452, after a change at Crewe arriving at Cardiff Central at 2054.Will the timings be notably faster? I’d be quite surprised.
Assuming this is all above board, the fact that it is even an option says a huge amount about our rail system today!For anybody wanting to do this end to end, use a ticket splitting website such as trainsplit.com - even a simple split at BHM saves £100 (the through fare on most days is £219.80 Standard / £359.60 in 1st)
Of course Swansea passengers would have to change at least once anyway and Cardiff will likely be the largest flow, but the fact that the arrival from Swansea is due to get to Cardiff Central seven minutes before the Edinburgh train's due to leave (and a twelve minute connection going to Swansea), at a station with a minimum connection time of seven minutes, means that I suspect Crewe will stay the best option for Swansea – Edinburgh.A lot of passengers prefer a slower direct service rather than faster with the perceived hassle of changing and risk of missed connections.
Presumably the northbound calls at Cheltenham and Gloucester as well?Northbound it's the 09:45 calling at Chepstow, Worcestershire Parkway (no Ashchurch), Tamworth, Burton-on-Trent, Chesterfield, Alnmouth and Berwick as well as the normal Cheltenham – Leeds – Edinburgh stops. Southbound it's the 13:07 from Edinburgh calling at Berwick, Alnmouth and Burton-on-Trent and only calling at Cheltenham and Gloucester between Birmingham and Newport.
Yes.Presumably the northbound calls at Cheltenham and Gloucester as well?
A lot of passengers prefer a slower direct service rather than faster with the perceived hassle of changing and risk of missed connections.
Does that mean there’s now a 2 hour gap at WOP heading south or is the southbound one of the regular Plymouth timingsAgreed, so a real shame that this new service calls at Worcestershire Parkway northbound, but not southbound
Appears there's now a gap at 1858I read one
Does that mean there’s now a 2 hour gap at WOP heading south or is the southbound one of the regular Plymouth timings
The southbound leaves Birmingham New Street at 18:12 and there's an 18:30 to Gloucester ex Nottingham. It gets to Cheltenham at 19:12 with 19:40 being the following Cardiff service.I read one
Does that mean there’s now a 2 hour gap at WOP heading south or is the southbound one of the regular Plymouth timings
It's all about choice, I guess.I just had a look on a journey planner for the northbound trip. Except for people who really don't like changing trains it doesn't seem that useful as a Cardiff to Edinburgh train.
Ah ok thanks. I’ve been on a service that’s split at Gloucester a few times, I think it’s the same one, where currently a portion continues to Bristol and the south west and the other portion goes home to the depot. I guess it now lives in Cardiff for the night and picks up the northbound service the following morning.The southbound leaves Birmingham New Street at 18:12 and there's an 18:30 to Gloucester ex Nottingham. It gets to Cheltenham at 19:12 with 19:40 being the following Cardiff service.
It's all about choice, I guess.
If, for instance, you're putting an elderly relative on a train to be met the other end, you would chose the direct service, even if it took longer. The same would go for wheelchair users, students at the beginning of the academic year, people traveling with bikes, etc etc.
There are are a lot of passengers who would prefer not to change for very practical reasons. It's not a case of "people who really don't like changing trains". It's a case of people for whom changing trains is a problem.