Have you never heard of Turbos? The 165/166 body is wider than other rolling stock precisely because it is able to take advantage of the clearances on former GWR routes - but the increased space available is hardly on a par with continental loading gauges, so no, you won't get a "massive capacity increase".
And the wider clearances will also make it easier to use the 26m-long coaches of the IEP than in other places on the network.
Yes I have, and it appears to be a Wiki myth that they are wider than other trains.
Plus there are 365's, 465's and 466's, do these have the same bodies as 166s? If so then South Eastern and Great northern has a larger loading gauge too?
EDIT: Aha found it -2.81 m is the width of the stock, a 319 is 2.81 m too so no, you're wrong. It's a wiki myth.
Now back to the original question, would shaving platforms and building wider long distance/commuter stock be a quick and easy way of increasing capacity and passenger comfort?
Plus, I didn't say that it would be on a par with continental loading gauge, surely they could be wide enough to
comfortably have a 3+2 configuration?
--- old post above --- --- new post below ---
I don't know where to start. I'll just write that only the old Mainline is 10 feet between the lines (and no longer everywhere and think about diverting from Main to Relief)) so that solves that one. On capacity, an extra 6 ins (which is what the GW used for excess-size stock) will not exactly enable another passenger to sit in the row, and it's height that is more important, allowing double deck trains.
not really. why are France abandoning that then and going for wide floor single deck commuter trains?
What I can't understand though is why everyone on here is always so down on building bigger trains, enhancing loading gauges, using what we currently have better etc etc.
"Can't be done, can't afford it" is almost always the answer. If this is the prevailing attitude between enthusiasts then will we ever get a better railway?
If the mainline was built to a larger loading gauge then why not build larger captive stock to increase capacity and passenger comfort? Crossing onto the slows makes no difference as they were also built to broad gauge no?