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What should be considered 'Inter-City' under GBR?

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Bletchleyite

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The government is irrelevant. The industry, DfT and Treasury are probably comfortable with the state of LNER, and will present that to the government as a favoured model for the operation of similar parts of the railway.

Aside from the fares they could do worse. It's without a doubt better managed than the execrable Avanti West Coast, and GWR IC services are somewhere in the middle in my mind.

That's where the Intercity Express brand could be useful. All the LNER services would be Intercity due to the route lengths, destinations and rolling stock. "Intercity Express" would be applied to highlight the fastest services

BR had InterCity Shuttle for frequent short distance services like the Birminghams, Bristols (?) and Norwich too.

One thing that could make that of value would be if longer-distance trains moved to the LNER like fares approach - I just can't see that working for London-Birmingham as people don't plan short distance journeys to the Nth degree in advance like they do going from London to Edinburgh. The ICS routes could maybe keep a three-step walk up fare structure, say.
 
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Mgameing123

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Would the same principle be applied to all services that will be IC? What would be the criteria for a station to be served by IC trains? For example, you could have 2 London-Swansea trains, 1 IC calling at Reading, Swindon, Bristol Parkway, Newport, Cardiff Central and Swansea with an IR calling at Reading, Didcot Parkway, Bristol Parkway, Newport, Cardiff Central, Bridgend, Port Talbot Parkway, Neath and Swansea.
I'd like to point out that something that matters for a train to be IC and ICE isn't nessesarilly how many stops the train makes because it can stop at small towns when on smaller lines. What matters the most is the section where ICE skips and IC stops. I'd say your IC is ICE (IET :D ) then the IR train is actually IC. Its definitely not Regional Express since its a core intercity service.
 

geoffk

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I would roll "intercity" under the current cross-country brand. I prefer that as a concept to intercity/interurban. The actual services operated by the area sector with it mainly just being a branding exercise. No GBR national brand, regional sector based branding.

I would include, LNER, TPE, XC, AVANTI and GWR (mainline services from Paddington) under the new "Cross Country" brand. Not sure about EMR (mainline). I would like to keep midland as it's own thing same for SWR, GA and SE long distance. A regional brand seems to work well for them.

Could take a leaf out of Canadas book and have a Go transit like brand. "Go South East", "Go South West", "Go North" (maybe not the last one).
Can we base the definition on train types rather than operator - i.e. Pendolinos, IET/Azumas, Voyagers and Meridians (and their successors) are Inter-City. So that will embrace all of Avanti and LNER, GWR and EMR long-distance trains from London, Cross-Country via Bristol and Reading, TPE Manchester/Liverpool - Scotland and Liverpool - Newcastle. My definition would exclude TPE services run by 185s and XC Cardiff - Nottingham as well as the Leicester and Nottingham semi-fasts. All trains to have reservation capability, catering and First Class. (Provision of reservations and First Class seating is course not confined to the routes I've listed).
 

JLH4AC

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I would roll "intercity" under the current cross-country brand. I prefer that as a concept to intercity/interurban. The actual services operated by the area sector with it mainly just being a branding exercise. No GBR national brand, regional sector based branding.
What brand certain services will be operated as part of is a different matter to what train types whose services would be, unless your Cross-Country idea involves reducing all the service patterns and Passenger facilities to a single or a few closely related standard/s there will be different train types operating under that brand.
Could take a leaf out of Canadas book and have a Go transit like brand. "Go South East", "Go South West", "Go North" (maybe not the last one).
If we actually took a leaf out of Canada's book it would be called HMG Transit as Go Transit was an acronym for Government of Ontario Transit. As for going for using Go as part of the name, sure we can come up with more locally relevant and/or functional names.
Lots of services dont neatly fit those subcategories , either your going to create extra confusion and layers for customers to worry about, or you will see GBR taking an axe to services that dont fit into any silo. Having tickets that are only valid for a certain class create anxiety for customers , not helping them.
Every existing and possible service will fit into one of seven broad train categories (EuroCity, InterCity, Night, InterRegional, Regional, Suburban, Metro). Most European nations have further sub-categories than this yet the public seems to handle it fine likely because they reduce the amount of information people have to read to understand service patterns and passenger facilities of a given train and people who don't need that information can just ignore it. Tickets only valid for certain classes is not imperative to there being publicly listed train categories.
 

Transilien

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Can we base the definition on train types rather than operator - i.e. Pendolinos, IET/Azumas, Voyagers and Meridians (and their successors) are Inter-City. So that will embrace all of Avanti and LNER, GWR and EMR long-distance trains from London, Cross-Country via Bristol and Reading, TPE Manchester/Liverpool - Scotland and Liverpool - Newcastle. My definition would exclude TPE services run by 185s and XC Cardiff - Nottingham as well as the Leicester and Nottingham semi-fasts. All trains to have reservation capability, catering and First Class. (Provision of reservations and First Class seating is course not confined to the routes I've listed).
Would the inter7city routes operated by ScotRail fall under that category? They have first class, reservations and catering and are operated by inter city trains (HSTs). I know that ScotRail will probably be different to GBR but they could at least take on the train types.
 

Bletchleyite

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Would the inter7city routes operated by ScotRail fall under that category? They have first class, reservations and catering and are operated by inter city trains (HSTs). I know that ScotRail will probably be different to GBR but they could at least take on the train types.

I don't see why they shouldn't be. The Highland Mainline in particular.
 

AndrewE

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Can we base the definition on train types rather than operator - i.e. Pendolinos, IET/Azumas, Voyagers and Meridians (and their successors) are Inter-City. So that will embrace all of Avanti and LNER, GWR and EMR long-distance trains from London, Cross-Country via Bristol and Reading, TPE Manchester/Liverpool - Scotland and Liverpool - Newcastle.
Absolutely not, because what we have at the moment is the result of a flawed franchising process and then random decisions (with DfT constraints applied) on top of that. We are currently living with all the accidents of history.

It wouldn't be difficult to redefine and reallocate the services on our network in terms of what their purpose should be. There are areas where it is difficult because we have shoe-horned trains into a rationalised infrastructure and it is impossible to deliver what the country needs - e.g. Brum to Derby. However a bit of investment in key locations (like fast lines so that e.g. XC trains can pass stoppers at Burton-on-Trent) done in conjunction with a planned reorganisation of services should help us move forward... (Just like BR would have done... I can't wait for the re-emergence of one railway!)
 

Djgr

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Absolutely not, because what we have at the moment is the result of a flawed franchising process and then random decisions (with DfT constraints applied) on top of that. We are currently living with all the accidents of history.

It wouldn't be difficult to redefine and reallocate the services on our network in terms of what their purpose should be. There are areas where it is difficult because we have shoe-horned trains into a rationalised infrastructure and it is impossible to deliver what the country needs - e.g. Brum to Derby. However a bit of investment in key locations (like fast lines so that e.g. XC trains can pass stoppers at Burton-on-Trent) done in conjunction with a planned reorganisation of services should help us move forward... (Just like BR would have done... I can't wait for the re-emergence of one railway!)
Agreed. We need a "scorched earth policy".
 

AndrewE

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Surely it was BR that rationalised the railway in the Burton-on-Trent area in the first place?
it probably was... in the era of managed decline. Now that the XC network needs a major capacity increase (which could partly be done by doubling train lengths) and local stations are reopening and their business is booming we need for the infrastructure to match.
 

Rhydgaled

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But I'm not sure any "slightly reimagined" version of historical intericty services can really be justified.
In a world where essentially all trains are multiple units with increasingly similar performance characteristics, there seems to be precious little to differentiate "Intercity" or similar trains from others.
Well, maybe that should have been "significantly reimagined" - or maybe the InterCity name should just be left on preserved stock. However, with some more-local TOCs removing first class provision entirely, perhaps that will end up being the thing which differentiates InterCity services under GBR. InterCity services would then just be any limited-stop service which has first class provision (although, ideally, a buffet would also be provided).

I think the distinctions have become so small as to have been rendered entirely meaningless.
In my view we now have "metro" and "non-metro" and that's about it, beyond minor edge cases like sleepers.

They've converged under technical advances and economic pressures.
I agree that there has been significant convergence; I call it 'creeping suburbanisation' as it has largely involved trains optimised for shorter distances and frequent stops being deployed on much longer runs. XC's use of class 170s on the Cardiff-Nottingham service being a case in point - not a design I feel should be used on such a long run.

The economics of hot meals on trains on journeys as short as the UK's are extremely questionable.
What fraction of journeys on the system are longer than say 4 hours with a change of train?
I'm not sure many passengers will be denied an opportunity to have a meal at a somewhat reasonable hour.

Is it really a reasonalbe use of taxpayers money?
Well, I for one have certainly ended up having nothing but a flapjack off the trolley as an 'evening meal' because I couldn't find anywhere to eat at my destination and was very disatisified as a result. As for the economics, the question there is whether a buffet makes or loses money? Clearly, on a 2/3-car train there would not be sufficient demand to justify it, but TfW clearly think that upgrading to mark 4s with catering available on the Cardiff-Manchester route could bring in more revenue - so much so that they have diverted the sets away from two of the three Holyhead-Cardiff workings they were previously booked for.

Dwell times will always be a concern, because a platform blocked for an intercity train is not available for any other trains.
The railway is far too intensively operated to be messing around with things like that in the modern era.

Even so, a modern long distance train in the UK on routes widely considered to be "intercity" might expect to stop several times.
5 minutes of dwell time per station would add up rapidly.

Personally I've come around to the position that we should have a Class 730 style carriage in virtually every train formation to soak up the inevitable short distance passengers more efficiently. Analogously to the standing area near the disabled toilet in the Class 185.
I disagree with most of that. Yes, even an express service will still stop several times but if you don't have anyone standing (and on a long-distance service you really should make sure the train is long enough to avoid standees) even a class 158 can manage a dwell time of under 2 minutes at the quieter stations. If the dwell time is 5 minutes, that will be a busy station and just because a suburban unit like a class 185 will have a shorter dwell time than an express unit it will still be significantly longer than zero seconds. The difference in dwell times between stock types will therefore be significantly less than 5 minutes per stop - it wouldn't surprise me if the difference between a class 197 and a class 175 at somewhere like Leominister is just seconds if enough coaches have been provided to avoid standees.

Well I'd argue the primary goal should probably be to reduce net subsidy to the industry, and the secondary goal is to grow traffic levels.
While both of those are laudable aims, I do wonder which should be ranked higher and whether the second should be rephrased as reducing car/van/lorry traffic on the roads (modal shift). There should certainly also be a third goal, to contribute to reducing the nation's total greenhouse gas emissions. This addition should probably the primary objective, with the other two considered secondary to it.
Our railways are one of the tools that we have to get people out of their cars and it needs to be a tempting offer.
Well said. This is why I simply cannot support the 'creeping suburbanisation' we have been seeing and why I feel strongly that the rolling stock used on Secondary Express / Regional Express services and long-distance Regional/Rural stoppers (such as the Cambrian Coast (if it didn't couple up to the Aberystwyth-Birmingham and therefore turn into a Regional Express itself) and Heart Of Wales lines) should have far more in common with InterCity stock than with Suburban/Metro stock. A long journey on a Turbostar, Electrostar, 195, 196 or 197 simply isn't very tempting (ok, neither is a long journey on a 9-car class 801 but in that case that is only because the seats are carp, the class has far more potential for long distance than the suburban units, if only the interior could be sorted).

Two and a half decades of privatisation have meant TOCs have ordered stock uniquely for their own patch of grass so the offering is inconsistent everywhere. A five hour London - Penzance with only a trolley and a three hour London - Weymouth with 2+2 first class and no catering vs a sub two hour London - Norwich with 2+1 first and a buffet.

If GBR was to take brand consistency seriously it would take a lot of money to have all rolling stock in consistent liveries and interior specs for S-bahn/commuter, Regio and InterRegio/Regional and Regional Express, and InterCity. If you wanted to neaten up all services you would need new calling patterns. The IC Waterloo - Exeter would need to call only at Woking (if at all), Basingstoke, Andover, Salisbury, Yeovil, Honiton and Exeter with a regional picking up the extra stops. Instead we have a half hourly calling at most stations and some not going the entire distance.
I don't think it is necessary to rush to make the service consistent. All I would do to start with is identify things that are similar (eg. most Turbostars, Electrostars, 350s, 450s, 385s, Networkers, 331s, 195s, 197s etc. are fairly similar products - another grouping being classes 800-803, 805, 807, 810, 397, 897, 220, 221, 222 and 180) and brand them the same (within the group of similar units) so that they can be operated as a common pool where this is helpful.

Every existing and possible service will fit into one of seven broad train categories (EuroCity, InterCity, Night, InterRegional, Regional, Suburban, Metro). Most European nations have further sub-categories than this yet the public seems to handle it fine likely because they reduce the amount of information people have to read to understand service patterns and passenger facilities of a given train and people who don't need that information can just ignore it. Tickets only valid for certain classes is not imperative to there being publicly listed train categories.
Stopping patterns yes, but are there really all that many different levels of passenger facilities?
  • toilet provision can be put into one of four categories:
    • 85 or fewer seats per toilet, for intercity and inter-urban services
    • 86-125 seats per toilet, for short distance / commuter services
    • over 125 seats per toilet
    • none at all
  • catering provision can be put into one of three categories:
    • full kitchen/buffet (hot and cold meals)
    • trolley service (hot and cold drinks and cold snacks/sandwiches)
    • none at all
  • ambience (this might not be the best term) can be put into one of three categories:
    • internal doors between saloon and vestibules/gangways, and toilets leading off vestibules not saloons
    • no internal doors between saloon and vestibules/gangways
    • walk-through wide gangways with no internal doors anywhere
and so on...
I disagree that a named train needs to be once daily or less - I think a system like Japan's where all express trains with the same stopping pattern share the same name (with numbers to differentiate) is the best from both a marketing and passenger information view.
That's not a named train - it's more like the London 'tube map' where you have different colour lines each with a 'line name' (such as the 'Victoria Line' or 'Circle Line'). I guess I don't have a problem with that concept being applied more widely if you're going to have a stricter clockface 'Takt' system (provided that any fast service is operated by express stock that doesn't prioritise standing room / dwell times as double-width doors-at-thirds do), but it's subtly different to the named train concept (of which the 'Pembroke Coast Express' is one example and the 'Flying Scotsman' and 'Cornish Riviera Express' are two more).

I don't think we can say that just because there is a loco + coaches consist, it would classify as an inter city route in future GBR / today. The stopping pattern has barely changed, nor have journey times. It's still a very regional, secondary service.
Secondary service... Actually, maybe primary/secondary is a better way to describe routes than regional, suburban etc.? In which case, something like Aberystwyth-Birmingham, Cardiff-Portsmouth or Liverpool-Norwich which, up to now, I have known as 'Regional Express' would become 'Secondary Express'; while London-Swansea, London-Manchester, Edinburgh-Plymouth and London-Edinburgh and would be 'Primary Express'. That releases the 'InterCity' name to be applied more in terms of the facilities provided by the rolling stock than the actual stock used. Manchester-Swansea would be a 'Secondary Express' but any services with buffet and first class provision could be described as 'Secondary InterCity' instead.

If we look at most of Europe it's not some dogmatic "can't call at towns" nonsense (nor was BR, after all) but a service proposition - a reasonably fast train with a known level of comfort and on-board service e.g. catering.

This has value - and EMR agree, for what it's worth as they use it - otherwise you end up with things like XC where you can have wildly different levels of service under the same brand. If you look at something like LNER or Avanti it's fairly consistent (aside from the time-of-day First Class service differentiation), for instance.
Sounds sensible.

You wouldn't advocate all trains calling at all stops on the Trent valley?
That's probably not the best example; if and when HS2 (for want of a better name) reaches Crewe I would have whatever top-tier classic line services remain either route via Wolverhampton and Birmingham or call at Rugeley TV, Lichfield TV, Tamworth, Nuneaton, AND Rugby if using the Trent Valley route. I would still use stock with end-doors for this, but ultimately given the need that may end up being something more like an electric gangwayed version of a class 175 (no buffet or first class) than an 11-car Voyager. In other words, I would make a post-HS2 WCML more like the GWML (still having express-style rolling stock, but more frequent stops such as Swindon, Reading and Didcot on the Western) than the WCML is today.
 

Bletchleyite

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Well said. This is why I simply cannot support the 'creeping suburbanisation' we have been seeing and why I feel strongly that the rolling stock used on Secondary Express / Regional Express services and long-distance Regional/Rural stoppers (such as the Cambrian Coast (if it didn't couple up to the Aberystwyth-Birmingham and therefore turn into a Regional Express itself) and Heart Of Wales lines) should have far more in common with InterCity stock than with Suburban/Metro stock. A long journey on a Turbostar, Electrostar, 195, 196 or 197 simply isn't very tempting (ok, neither is a long journey on a 9-car class 801 but in that case that is only because the seats are carp, the class has far more potential for long distance than the suburban units, if only the interior could be sorted).

I still don't get this door position prejudice thing. In my view one of the most comfortable trains in Standard in the country is the Chiltern Class 168, due to their policy of, instead of having First Class, making Standard very good (they originally called it Club Class, along with the Clubman brand). Almost perfectly aligned with massive windows and easy access through the doors at thirds, and nice seats too. The only thing that's lacking is luggage space due to the small overheads.
 

renegademaster

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I can uderstand the argument for differenting based on facilities like buffet and what not, even i think its not worth the effort and extra complication, but i dont get the need to differentiate between shorter Azuma/Pendo services and longer distance ones, most people will only buy advances and the facalities will be the same.
 

Bletchleyite

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I can uderstand the argument for differenting based on facilities like buffet and what not, even i think its not worth the effort and extra complication, but i dont get the need to differentiate between shorter Azuma/Pendo services and longer distance ones, most people will only buy advances and the facalities will be the same.

I'd be interested to see the Advance vs walk up proportion on Euston-Brum as against Euston-Glasgow. I strongly suspect it won't even be similar.
 

JLH4AC

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Stopping patterns yes, but are there really all that many different levels of passenger facilities?
  • toilet provision can be put into one of four categories:
    • 85 or fewer seats per toilet, for intercity and inter-urban services
    • 86-125 seats per toilet, for short distance / commuter services
    • over 125 seats per toilet
    • none at all
  • catering provision can be put into one of three categories:
    • full kitchen/buffet (hot and cold meals)
    • trolley service (hot and cold drinks and cold snacks/sandwiches)
    • none at all
  • ambience (this might not be the best term) can be put into one of three categories:
    • internal doors between saloon and vestibules/gangways, and toilets leading off vestibules not saloons
    • no internal doors between saloon and vestibules/gangways
    • walk-through wide gangways with no internal doors anywhere
and so on...
There are different levels of passenger facilities yet most of the time especially in continental Europe it aligns with the broader train categories and/or stopping patterns/speed through are a few train categories based on them having extra/fewer passenger facilities such as different train categories for budget or premium Intercity trains, and Panorama Express for Swiss tourism-focused services.
 

Rhydgaled

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I still don't get this door position prejudice thing.
I've said this before and I'll say it again: prejudice is a "preconceived opinion that is not based on reason or actual experience". Since my opposition to Turbostars and the like on long-distance services is based on both reason and actual experience it is not a prejudice.

In my view one of the most comfortable trains in Standard in the country is the Chiltern Class 168, due to their policy of, instead of having First Class, making Standard very good
That's a good point but not entirely relevant. My point is that applying a similar policy to something with narrower doors (like a 175) would create something even better. Double-width doors, as on a class 168, immediately reduce the amount of furnishable space and increase the amount of standing area compared to narrower doors. Perhaps I have a particularly intense dislike of standing still (I get sore feet very quickly, not sure if this is normal or if I'm odd in that respect) but this just doesn't seem morally right to me for any sort of long journey.

That's the 'reason'. Now, how about some 'actual experience':
  • Class 150/2, ATW Fishguard boat train, non-stop Llanelli to Cardiff, legroom insufficient (knees crushed against seat in front) - huge standing areas around metro-sliding doors. Result: resentment - give that space to my knees not to manage dwell times at (virtually non-existent) station stops
  • Class 170, XC Cardiff-Nottingham service, fewer calls than ATW between Newport and Cheltenham (so it's the fast service on this section at least), legroom insufficient (knees crushed against seat in front), huge standing areas around double-width doors. Result: glad I was only going as far as Gloucester on this occasion
  • (presumably) class 170, XC Cardiff-Nottingham service, sent one of my brothers (very much a motorist now and not one for public transport generally, but at the time he either wasn't yet old enough to drive, hadn't passed his test yet or didn't yet have a suitable car) on the train to Nottingham - when he got back I expected a load of rude comments about trains being late or slow etc. (he can be a bit of a wind-up merchant) but instead all I got was "the doors were in the wrong place" - I can only guess he experienced a load of cold draughts from the doorways at each stop*, but I don't think I pressed him for an explanation at the time and it was ages ago so he cannot remember now
  • Class 197, seat plan, basically the same total seating capacity as a class 175, but the 175s have more 4-seat bays (which take up more room than airline-style seating), more toilets, more ground-level luggage racks and greater seat pitch (legroom) (at least in the airline-style seating). Yes, the 197s have the catering cupboard taking up room too, but that only (nearly) accounts for the toilet(s) - the loss of furnishable space to the wider doors has objectively resulted in an inferior passenger experience on the 197s.
* I've certainly experienced this, but most of my rail travel is now a long time ago so cannot remember a specific example where I definately experencied it in order to identify the route and type of stock

If the trip is over an hour, I don't want my knees crushed against the seat in front (or to be forced to sit on the floor in a double-width 'vestibule') to save a few minutes on the overall journey through quicker dwells. Even if the trip is under an hour, I'd rather have the space for seats and legroom unless the train makes loads of stops within that hour, in which case the dwell times will start to become a more-significant factor.

Note however that I've not actually mentioned the position of the doors here, just the width of them and (by implication) the lack of internal doors seperating the 'vestibules' from the passenger saloons. Something with 175/Voyager-style single-width plug doors at somewhat random positions (like some coaches on a 444) could, provided internal doors seperating the 'vestibules' from the saloons, could well be an acceptable compromise as long as the other factors (such as number of table bays and toilets) work out well.

I dont get the need to differentiate between shorter Azuma/Pendo services and longer distance ones
Neither do I. A (semi-)fast inter-urban service is a (semi-)fast inter-urban service regardless of whether it is going from London to Edinburgh, Swansea to Manchester, London to Portsmouth or Portsmouth to Cardiff. Some of these will justify a buffet and first class, others won't, but those with the same set of facilities should be branded the same.

The short distance ICs (Bristol, Birmingham and Norwich) probably don't justify any catering, nor would any potential Manchester-Birmingham shuttle. So maybe bring back ICS for those, a brand for high frequency short distance ICs with no catering?
If they don't justify catering (or only a trolley), do they justify first class? If not, maybe just not brand them INTERCITY at all, even though they are inter-city services. I'm very much leaning towards two or three 'base brands' at the moment (none of which would actually feature the brand name on the livery or have any first class and kitchen/buffet facilities):
  • Express and Inter-Urban
  • Short Distance and Commuter
  • Metro (probably not actually needed due to Metros being devolved and each having their own local identities)
Selected 'Express and Inter-Urban' services would have an INTERCITY logo added to the 'Express and Inter-Urban' 'base brand' livery and these would have first class (2+1 seating inside and a yellow livery band along the cantrail outside) and a kitchen/buffet (optionally with a red livery band along the cantrail outside).

If the speculation of the way LNER went as the way GBR is going is true, GBR wont want walk ups on either
Has LNER abolished walk-up tickets and requires pre-booking now then? If so, I'm surprised there hasn't been more of a fuss kicked up about it like there was with the proposed ticket office closures.
 

Harpo

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On the suitability of 170s for XC, Peter Hendy’s Union Connectivity Review concluded that Cardiff to Birmingham needs ‘better quality rolling stock’.

I’ve not checked to see the list of consultees for Hendy’s report but I think its safe to assume that he found stakeholder consensus on the inadequacy of 170s away from suburban work?
 

HSTEd

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I agree that there has been significant convergence; I call it 'creeping suburbanisation' as it has largely involved trains optimised for shorter distances and frequent stops being deployed on much longer runs. XC's use of class 170s on the Cardiff-Nottingham service being a case in point - not a design I feel should be used on such a long run.
Personally I feel that the only real problem with Turbostars is the diesel engine noise and vibration - but there is nothing that can be done about that given the collapse of the electrification programme.
To me, with modern door seals vestibules seem to have been made essentially pointless.

Doors don't really 'blow' when other trains pass them, like they used to in the old days. I remember that noise from early generation Sprinters, but I don't really notice it now - even on stock with no vestibules.


Well, I for one have certainly ended up having nothing but a flapjack off the trolley as an 'evening meal' because I couldn't find anywhere to eat at my destination and was very disatisified as a result. As for the economics, the question there is whether a buffet makes or loses money? Clearly, on a 2/3-car train there would not be sufficient demand to justify it, but TfW clearly think that upgrading to mark 4s with catering available on the Cardiff-Manchester route could bring in more revenue - so much so that they have diverted the sets away from two of the three Holyhead-Cardiff workings they were previously booked for.
I think it is probably more likely that that is the rolling stock that is available, given that they apparently got the sets cheap after the Grand Central workings were abandoned.
I am very skeptical there is a single buffet service in the UK that actually manages to make money - especially when the fully burdened cost is calculated (including foregone revenue from the removed seats).
TfW happens to be one of the most heavily subsidised railway system segments in the country, after all.

I disagree with most of that. Yes, even an express service will still stop several times but if you don't have anyone standing (and on a long-distance service you really should make sure the train is long enough to avoid standees) even a class 158 can manage a dwell time of under 2 minutes at the quieter stations. If the dwell time is 5 minutes, that will be a busy station and just because a suburban unit like a class 185 will have a shorter dwell time than an express unit it will still be significantly longer than zero seconds. The difference in dwell times between stock types will therefore be significantly less than 5 minutes per stop - it wouldn't surprise me if the difference between a class 197 and a class 175 at somewhere like Leominister is just seconds if enough coaches have been provided to avoid standees.
The problem is that it is essentially impossible to guarantee no standees, given that the second disruption occurs there will be passengers flowing in every direction on every train available.
If we want a robust timetable that doesn't chain-reaction-collapse when disruption occurs, we have to assume that any train is going to be heavily loaded.

There is also the problem that a railway that provides enough stock to avoid standees 100% of the time is going to be extremely expensive to operate.

While both of those are laudable aims, I do wonder which should be ranked higher and whether the second should be rephrased as reducing car/van/lorry traffic on the roads (modal shift). There should certainly also be a third goal, to contribute to reducing the nation's total greenhouse gas emissions. This addition should probably the primary objective, with the other two considered secondary to it.
As a decarbonisation policy researcher, if I was attempting to spend public money to drive decarbonisation.... I would not put it into the railway.
There are far superior decarbonisation-per-pound routes available at this time, and even if I was putting money into the railway, I would not spend it trying to provide "ambience" on intercity railway services.
I would be concentrating on the aforementioned "suburbanisation".

There just aren't that many long distance journeys to capture, and capturing them appears to be rather expensive.
 

Rhydgaled

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diesel engine noise and vibration
Yes, that is another issue - if we could wipe away all the existing rolling stock and start from scratch (and electrify where necessary) overnight then all stock for the INTERCITY brand, if retained, should be provided either with EMUs or with LHCS if diesel operation is absolutely necessary.

To me, with modern door seals vestibules seem to have been made essentially pointless.

Doors don't really 'blow' when other trains pass them, like they used to in the old days. I remember that noise from early generation Sprinters, but I don't really notice it now - even on stock with no vestibules.
I was talking about the 'blow' of cold air that comes in (a problem that's at its worst late in the evenings during winter) when the exterior doors are wide open at each stop, not the 'blow' when other trains pass (which, as you say, seems to be very rare now). That's one reason for proper vestibules with internal doors, another is to provide greater privacy if going to use the toilet (provided that toilets lead off the vestibules, not off the saloon as they do in most UK suburban stock).

I think it is probably more likely that that is the rolling stock that is available, given that they apparently got the sets cheap after the Grand Central workings were abandoned.
I am very skeptical there is a single buffet service in the UK that actually manages to make money - especially when the fully burdened cost is calculated (including foregone revenue from the removed seats).
TfW happens to be one of the most heavily subsidised railway system segments in the country, after all.
While there probably wasn't much choice of alternative stock, they didn't have to use the buffet car did they? Unless the rest of the set had already been scrapped by the time Grand Central 'threw in the towel', the mark 4 rakes were originally 9 coaches so TfW could have made up 5-coach sets using four TSOs and a TSO(E) if they wanted to. Also, isn't Manchester-Swansea reported to be TfW's only profitable route?

The problem is that it is essentially impossible to guarantee no standees, given that the second disruption occurs there will be passengers flowing in every direction on every train available.

If we want a robust timetable that doesn't chain-reaction-collapse when disruption occurs, we have to assume that any train is going to be heavily loaded.
Impossible to guarantee yes, but not impossible to plan for. GWR, LNER, EMR and Avanti InterCity services can all be heavily loaded very often and yet even today's railway sees fit to provide stock with narrow doors. Even though passenegers will have to sit on the floor occasionally, the balance should still be tilted towards maximising furnishable space and not for the times when it goes wrong and you have people sat on the floor. Any sufficiently long-distance fast(ish) service is no different in my view and should be treated much the same, the only difference (as I have said) being whether you have sufficient long-distance demand on a particular service to provide hot meals and first class (and LHCS for unelectrified lines).

There is also the problem that a railway that provides enough stock to avoid standees 100% of the time is going to be extremely expensive to operate.

As a decarbonisation policy researcher, if I was attempting to spend public money to drive decarbonisation.... I would not put it into the railway.
There are far superior decarbonisation-per-pound routes available at this time, and even if I was putting money into the railway, I would not spend it trying to provide "ambience" on intercity railway services.
I would be concentrating on the aforementioned "suburbanisation".

There just aren't that many long distance journeys to capture, and capturing them appears to be rather expensive.
Long-distance car travellers expensive to capture? Yes, that could well be true but 'not that many'? Really? What are Highways England / National Highways / Whatever They're Called This Week playing at with all their major capacity schemes for Motorways and Trunk Roads then? Out of interests, if you were spending public money to drive decarbonisation, where would you put it if not the railway? Encouraging modal shift from car to bus? If so, I would certainly argee that is an area which needs attention. In terms of cost:benefit ratio on the decarbonisation front, telling the Highways Agency (or whatever) and local highways authorities where to stick all their 'more space for more cars' projects (ie. into the nearest bin) probably comes out fairly near the top because the cost is negative - you're actually saving money by not doing those stupid things.
 

renegademaster

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You can have trolleys with high density stock, like the ex stanstead flirts that Greater Anglia use on Norwich services
 

Wolfie

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Yes, that is another issue - if we could wipe away all the existing rolling stock and start from scratch (and electrify where necessary) overnight then all stock for the INTERCITY brand, if retained, should be provided either with EMUs or with LHCS if diesel operation is absolutely necessary.

I was talking about the 'blow' of cold air that comes in (a problem that's at its worst late in the evenings during winter) when the exterior doors are wide open at each stop, not the 'blow' when other trains pass (which, as you say, seems to be very rare now). That's one reason for proper vestibules with internal doors, another is to provide greater privacy if going to use the toilet (provided that toilets lead off the vestibules, not off the saloon as they do in most UK suburban stock).

While there probably wasn't much choice of alternative stock, they didn't have to use the buffet car did they? Unless the rest of the set had already been scrapped by the time Grand Central 'threw in the towel', the mark 4 rakes were originally 9 coaches so TfW could have made up 5-coach sets using four TSOs and a TSO(E) if they wanted to. Also, isn't Manchester-Swansea reported to be TfW's only profitable route?

Impossible to guarantee yes, but not impossible to plan for. GWR, LNER, EMR and Avanti InterCity services can all be heavily loaded very often and yet even today's railway sees fit to provide stock with narrow doors. Even though passenegers will have to sit on the floor occasionally, the balance should still be tilted towards maximising furnishable space and not for the times when it goes wrong and you have people sat on the floor. Any sufficiently long-distance fast(ish) service is no different in my view and should be treated much the same, the only difference (as I have said) being whether you have sufficient long-distance demand on a particular service to provide hot meals and first class (and LHCS for unelectrified lines).

Long-distance car travellers expensive to capture? Yes, that could well be true but 'not that many'? Really? What are Highways England / National Highways / Whatever They're Called This Week playing at with all their major capacity schemes for Motorways and Trunk Roads then? Out of interests, if you were spending public money to drive decarbonisation, where would you put it if not the railway? Encouraging modal shift from car to bus? If so, I would certainly argee that is an area which needs attention. In terms of cost:benefit ratio on the decarbonisation front, telling the Highways Agency (or whatever) and local highways authorities where to stick all their 'more space for more cars' projects (ie. into the nearest bin) probably comes out fairly near the top because the cost is negative - you're actually saving money by not doing those stupid things.
Just about every single hobbyhorse in one post. Quite an achievement.
 

Krokodil

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Out of interests, if you were spending public money to drive decarbonisation, where would you put it if not the railway?
In terms of bang-for-buck and quick results, the answer is Active Travel and fifteen minute neighbourhoods. Eliminating those 1-3 mile trips which make up nearly half of all car journeys and making it more practical to walk, wheel (as in wheelchairs) or cycle instead. Cheaper to install and much cheaper to maintain. Much quicker to implement than rail infrastructure too (how long has Portishead been waiting since reopening was first mooted?) and even a small modal shift has a large impact on congestion which in turn means reduced tailpipe emissions. That's the one avenue that local authorities are able to get funding these days.

You can have trolleys with high density stock, like the ex stanstead flirts that Greater Anglia use on Norwich services
I'd sooner have a vending machine. They can offer everything a trolley has and possibly more (I wonder if anyone has invented one for hot food). The hot drinks can be of better quality than instant coffee too. On top of which, it would be available from first train to last train.
 

Dr Hoo

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I'd sooner have a vending machine. They can offer everything a trolley has and possibly more (I wonder if anyone has invented one for hot food). The hot drinks can be of better quality than instant coffee too. On top of which, it would be available from first train to last train.
Does that include alcoholic drinks (legally)? Also what about soup/ noodle/ porridge pots?
 

HSTEd

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Long-distance car travellers expensive to capture? Yes, that could well be true but 'not that many'? Really? What are Highways England / National Highways / Whatever They're Called This Week playing at with all their major capacity schemes for Motorways and Trunk Roads then?
The vast majority of journeys on motorways and trunk roads are not "long" distance journeys.
People might travel 20 or 30 miles on them, but normally not the length of the country.

Out of interests, if you were spending public money to drive decarbonisation, where would you put it if not the railway? Encouraging modal shift from car to bus? If so, I would certainly argee that is an area which needs attention. In terms of cost:benefit ratio on the decarbonisation front, telling the Highways Agency (or whatever) and local highways authorities where to stick all their 'more space for more cars' projects (ie. into the nearest bin) probably comes out fairly near the top because the cost is negative - you're actually saving money by not doing those stupid things.
It is almost certainly renewable electricity generating capacity, given the capability of electricity to substitute for various uses of natural gas - meaning that almost all electricity is 'worth' at least 200g CO2 per kWh- at least until we have long periods of no fossil fuel consumption in the economy. Solar farms and wind turbines are very cheap, even including the cost of the required grid upgrades.

In purely financial terms, ICE cars are pretty good for the treasury. After all the non-HS2 rail network manages to pull down as much subsidy as the entire cost of the road network.

Does that include alcoholic drinks (legally)? Also what about soup/ noodle/ porridge pots?
Self service beer taps exist, although I'm not sure how they work.
However I expect theft/vandalism concerns would militate against serving alcohol in machines.
 
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