starrymarkb
Established Member
Other than painting its trains and buses in the same livery, of course.
The rail livery came first - IIRC It appeared in 1998 - First Stagecoach buses I saw in the new livery was late 2000
Other than painting its trains and buses in the same livery, of course.
Apart from the short lived Island Line franchise, there haven't been many franchise names which accurately describe every route in their geography.
Up until a few years ago SWT used to run to Plymouth and Paignton.
I suppose so, but then TPE are also "cross country", as is the infamous Norwich-Liverpool "East Midlands" (previously Central!) service.Cross Country?
You'd better tell that to the College of West Anglia, based in King's Lynn. Incidentally; before 1974, Cambridgeshire Constabulary was called Mid-Anglia Constabulary."West" Anglia does not really exist unless you mean the West Country (Anglia means England)
Does anyone agree with me that a good deal of FGW and SWT could be merged into one franchise - perhaps as well as some of ATW? If this rings a bell, I've mentioned it before.
I know it wouldn't be historically accurate.
I also agree that the naming of SWT isn't exactly perverse.
You do all know that the Scotrail sleepers serve London, don't you?![]()
well, suburban trains and the 450s aren't really in anything like the Bus livery, apart from the use of orange.
It was perhaps a possibility at one point. The Wessex Trains franchise was originally due to take on SWT's diesel London-Salisbury-Exeter route, it was even shown in timetables as a future route but in the end the route stayed with SWT. I'm not 100% sure of the reasons behind the decision but I have a feeling the transfer was stopped because of the future merging of Wessex with FGW.Does anyone agree with me that a good deal of FGW and SWT could be merged into one franchise - perhaps as well as some of ATW? If this rings a bell, I've mentioned it before.
I believe this was at the time when the SRA were going to let a series of 20 year franchises. The only one of these that was actually let though was Chiltern. After Hatfield the network descended into chaos so there were clearly other priorities.It was perhaps a possibility at one point. The Wessex Trains franchise was originally due to take on SWT's diesel London-Salisbury-Exeter route, it was even shown in timetables as a future route but in the end the route stayed with SWT. I'm not 100% sure of the reasons behind the decision but I have a feeling the transfer was stopped because of the future merging of Wessex with FGW.
It could happen... I did read a paper somewhere about plans to potentially consolidate some franchises in the UK
Cross Country?
Some of Stagecoach Warwickshire's buses use a variant of the red with blue livery that 455s have...
Even better "British Rail operated by (TOC)" with a simple blue and grey livery. London's buses are still red and even after privatization were still operated by a company for London Transport. The bus companies were however at one time allowed to use their own liveries.Would it be easier if we went back to the BR sector names and then added the contractor's own brand in small type underneath ?
Even better "British Rail operated by (TOC)" with a simple blue and grey livery. London's buses are still red and even after privatization were still operated by a company for London Transport. The bus companies were however at one time allowed to use their own liveries.
Now yes but there was a time when they didn't have to.I think it was 80% red that they had to keep, thus allowing for something like the Arriva "cow horns" or the First "willow leaf", whilst retaining the overall look of a London bus
I think it's quite useful to have different brands for different types of service - e.g. InterCity, local, regional express etc.Even better "British Rail operated by (TOC)" with a simple blue and grey livery.
I think it was 80% red that they had to keep, thus allowing for something like the Arriva "cow horns" or the First "willow leaf", whilst retaining the overall look of a London bus
I think that rule only applied to buses in zone 1 - and yes it was only introduced after a few high profile routes were won by companies using non-red liveries (e.g. 19 by Kentish Bus and 24 by Grey Green, both now part of Arriva).Now yes but there was a time when they didn't have to.
Would it be easier if we went back to the BR sector names and then added the contractor's own brand in small type underneath ?
eg
INTERCITY
operated by Virgin
NETWORK SOUTH EAST
operated by Stagecoach South West
REGIONAL RAILWAYS
operated by Stagecoach East Midlands Trains