although the seats are quite firm, they are at a good pitch so, yes they seem good on posture.
I still believe on longer journeys numb-bum occurs, and the ride quality of this type of stock isnt great so you can feel the ride over points etc through your spine.
I just dont understand why we have gone away from sprung seats.....
the early 377 2x2 seating have sprung seats even, but the 377/2, /4s, /5s and onwards don't and its noticable.
I just feel like its a dumbing down of journey quality overall..... and the lack of tables etc etc on 700s is yet another dumbing down.
My final point on 700s lack of seats (for a while hopefully) is that i drove an East Grinstead to London Bridge the other day (which will eventually be 700s) and a large number of people had a cup of coffee in their hands... and were carrying laptops and tablets... (im talking about 60 odd people at upper warlingham alone)
Everyone of these people will people will have an issue come the 700s.
The whole debate about the inadequacy of class 700 seats seems to be coming from those who regularly get seats on current services. With the expected increases in passenger numbers, those who get on these trains near their country-end origins will probably still get seats but those who might currently be lucky when boarding at the busier stations nearer London, may not even be able to get on the trains unless their overall capacity is increased. So they will be grateful for accommodation that has much increased capacity.
Many of the complaints expressed by posters on this forum seem to be soley concerned about their personal travel experience, not recognising that the railway is a public transport system, and as such it caters for a group of travellers rather than a particular subset them. Thus within such budget as is available to invest in infrastructure and rolling stock, the best fit for all passengers is what the DfT are obliged to oversee. I am just a leisure traveller, so have no selfish interest in the balance of peak capacity, - standing or seated on Thameslink, or whether there is something to put a cup of coffee on, - only that if the paths are truly maxed out with maximum length trains, then those that run must be fit for purpose.