The odds are very slim indeed that a pass driver would apply to go freight, nice clean cab on a dayshift
Some pass drivers (e.g. Northern) are stuck on the same 2 routes all day, having not been trained on anything else years after passing out due to staff shortages, very bored with the job, some already say they sometimes have to get up at 1am to get into work for a 3 O'clock start (yes even for pass work) - not everyone lives local and shifts where they take the first units off depots in the morning tend to be as bad as the worse shifts on the freight. Also, 142 cabs are anything but nice or clean.
So freight might appeal to some of these drivers? Also working with locos instead of units appeals to some. Not just spotter types as well.
Even still its only something like 3 days to learn the 66, core routes would be a few weeks if that.
Really a few weeks when DBS Crewe (for example) sign the WCML from Euston all the way to Carlisle, plus a lot more??
In my TOC, it takes a few weeks to get a qualified driver signed off on a 45 mile route!
Also, wouldn't a pass driver have to complete a number of hours freight handling as part of the training? Something like 100-150 hours if I remember correctly?
Yes traction training wouldn't be much but when you add route learning, assessments and everything else I could see the training taking a while for a pass driver.
so end of the day it would cost DBS nothing to employ another freight man, thats why if there can get a freight man ASAP thats what will happen, it will be last resort internal, then external trainees.
yes completely agree with that one, its just how many would really leave FHH/DRS/GBRf to go to DB Schenker?