In an ideal world(*) [snip]
(*Excluding XC ordering 9 coach bimodal stock)
In an ideal world, the only new bi-modal stock XC would be ordering would be regional express units for the Birmingham-Stansted route (and possibly Cardiff-Nottingham). Bristol-York and Basingstoke-Birminghm (at least) would be being electrified, as would the GWML to Swansea and Bristol (with class 800s releasedfrom these to cascade to XC once those wires are up) and XC would have pure EMUs (with both 3rd rail and OHLE capability) on-order for Manchester-Bournemouth. Nobody should be building 125mph bi-modes after the 810s/805s since most of the routes the 80x fleets currently work should be being wired which would make plenty of bi-modes available for cascade elsewhere.
The IC125 trains are now 40+ years old and well past their sell-by date; they are ready for the scrapyard.
My own view, FWIW, is that withdrawing the HSTs is defensible, however they should certainly be being replaced with something else.
Yes, the IC125s are old - however they have recently had a large amount spent on them fitting power doors and (at least in XC's case)
there is no 'something else' available right now to replace them. If there had been a rational plan in the noughties and 2010s for electrification, cascades and PRM compliance (and it had been implemented smoothly and successfully) then withdrawing the XC IC125s (
before hacking them about to fit power doors) alongside those out of Paddington and Kings Cross would have been defensible, even sensible.
Of course, we didn't have the necessary electrification etc. in the 2010s, but withdrawing the XC IC125s
might be defensible again once the following 3 criteria are met:
- the Avanti class 805 and class 807 trains have been fully introduced and all Avanti's class 221s have been made available to XC,
- the EMR class 810 fleet has been fully introduced and all the class 222s have been made available to XC and
- a satisfactory period of use has been had from the power doors on the mark 3 coaches
I don't expect these critera to be met in full before 2025, but I may be mistaken.
It is preferable to concentrate on enhancing and developing services to/from London, which as the capital city generates the most demand for rail services, as distinct from secondary cross-country routes.
I disagree. One of the arguments for improved transport links (like HS2) is that they encourage businesses to locate in well-served cities. However, this increases demand meaning more capacity is needed - this isn't too much of a problem on secondary routes where you can increase capacity through upgraded signalling etc. but once you need parallel routes (such as HS2) we would be better off encouraging businesses to locate elsewhere rather than making these corridors even busier. London is plenty big enough - so let's encourage businesses to locate in regional cities by linking them to each other better (eg. upgrading Bristol-Birmingham) rather than to London.
That isn’t the issue, the issue is there’s 35 coaches being withdrawn without replacement from a route that already suffers from chronic overcrowding. If 35 replacement carriages were arriving at the same time there wouldn’t be an issue with the HSTs going.
Yes and no - the 35 replacement carriages also need to be fit for purpose (if they were comprised entirely of the toiletless cars of class 150 units that would not be suitable to fabricate an extreme example). Also, even if they were to be replaced by a larger fleet of luxury Pullman coaches, the timing of the withdrawal of the IC125s (so soon after the expense of fitting power doors) would leave an unpleasant smell in the air.