greaterwest
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I also remember being awoken at Melksham as the train went around the tight bend last time I used the sleeper. I'd imagine it's the same situation at Yeovil too.
The refurbished sleps will be all convertable on the day ie, any berth can be double or single as required unlike mow when each coach has 4 doubles and 8 singles. Certainly initially, the first coach will have a following on here ! Due to lack of vehicles, we cant do a whole set at a time, its nearly a year to get this far repainting them ! I guess when they start coming out you could ask at time of booking.
I was definitely awakened at Yeovil - I put a pin in my phone map so that I could see where I was at the time of the wake up. I was soon asleep again.
It did seem that after the engine noise awoke me the journey was no fun after that. Being attached directly to the loco is bad thing![]()
Sounds like when I did the Cally to Oban - on leaving Edinburgh we had the 73 within 10m of our berth and the noise of it through Princes Street tunnels woke me up!
To be fair, when I did the Caley sleeper last month I was in the 4th coach down and I could hear those 73s at the front through Princess Street Tunnels too!![]()
One could argue there are worse sounds to wake up to![]()
Also - if there are no-shows for the berths, is there any chance of getting one of the empty beds if I have a chat with the conductor?
As per Night Riviera thread, we now find ourselves reserving B coach on a regular basis. The Fri down will have an extra A coach too. There is only one table now in the refurbished B coaches, seats 24 or 30 - strangely, both coaches done so far have them in a different place !
Custyomer Hosts will advise on any spare berths. There will be 90 beds.
As per Night Riviera thread, we now find ourselves reserving B coach on a regular basis. The Fri down will have an extra A coach too. There is only one table now in the refurbished B coaches, seats 24 or 30 - strangely, both coaches done so far have them in a different place !
Custyomer Hosts will advise on any spare berths. There will be 90 beds.
Also - if there are no-shows for the berths, is there any chance of getting one of the empty beds if I have a chat with the conductor?
So my advice would be to arrive in good time to a) ask if any berths aren't going to be occupied and b) get your name at the top of the list for 'no-show' berths.
Thanks - I might just do that, seeing as I have nothing better to do with the rest of the evening. Do passengers in seats also get to use the lounge at Paddington, or is that for berth holders only? The Night Riviera website does a remarkable job at not mentioning anything to do with cattle class...
The First Class lounge at Pad is only for use of sleeping berth peeps sadly.
Although on the occasions I've used it, the max 1 or 2 staff have been far more interested in cleaning up and getting ready to close the lounge as soon as the sleeper service departs. Never had my ticket checked - just walked straight in and helped myself to the (meagre) offerings.
Thank you very much for the info, Paul - good to know. Is there a difference between the A and B coaches in terms of travel experience? I read on another forum that the lights are kept on in B but not A, but that sounds a little arbitrary. Here's hoping for a decent night's sleep one way or another...!
God, those seats look horrific.
Hi everyone - thanks again for all your help and advice! I thought I'd report back. The berths were indeed full, but as it turned out the seats were far from it. I arrived at 10.30 and found that lots of the seats in the A carriages (there were indeed two) were unreserved, so grabbed one of those. What on Earth drove GWR to make the new (presumably) B coaches so awful? I sat in them in the morning and they were worse than any conventional or night seat I've ever sat in.
Anyway - the lady behind the bar, who kept the waiting list for berth no-shows, suggested that some passengers lie across the aisle in the A coaches overnight, where two seat backs meet and form a triangle of space. So that's what I did, and got a reasonable night's sleep.
Cornwall is gorgeous, too! First time out there, and the coast really is pretty spectacular. Thanks again for helping me get informed about the journey there!
God, those seats look horrific.
I'm going to be using the seated sleeper extensively this summer and seeing those photos fill me somewhat with dread.
That said, I don't think any of the services I used were filled heavily enough to see anyone sat next to each other. I've fallen asleep lying across MK3 seats on VTEC and they look largely similar.
The old seats were a bit sunk and ruined, but putting my feet up with shoes off on the seat opposite and using my jacket as a blanket saw me sufficiently knocked out to sleep most of the way!
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