Bletchleyite
Veteran Member
The 802s are the best all round solution, they just bene to be fitted with a buffet and better seats.
And be long enough.
The 802s are the best all round solution, they just bene to be fitted with a buffet and better seats.
Why don’t you write to the DFT and express your displeasure!
Department for Transport
Great Minster House
33 Horseferry Road
Westminster
London
SW1P 4DR
Quite.You think they would read it?
I wish you luck.SNIPPED
As they don't care much for what TOCs or user groups think, ...
The original DfT plan in the DA was to consider retaining HST vs 222. The 800 series were out of favour because of the cost of extending the IEP contract. SDG had done an 800 timetable West Country cl.800 option for "The Great Cartographer" as part of the original IET contract discussions but the option didn't get to contract stage.
When the 222 proposal became a no-go (as everyone thought it would!), it became cl.802 vs HST and the 802 won hands down on cost and deliverability. The problem was a 9 car killed the Cornish half hourly scheme, the cost of going all 9 car was prohibitive and there wasn't the all year round demand to justify it. So to get the proposition to fly and preserve the Cornish half-hourly, portion working saved the day. You could always go from 5 to 9 at a later date, when the all year round demand justified it but you wouldn't be able to easily resurrect the Cornish half hourly.
The potential for a different interior design of the cl.802 caused the DfT a major panic. It is fair to say (and I was there) they would not have been authorized by the DfT if they differed internally from the 800 build. It was a very, very sensitive issue with them.
Going from 5 to 9 on the 802 fleet to make all the West Country workings 9 car isn't a big deal. You can do it with 48 more cars (24 x GU, 12 x motor only and 12 x Trailer) to do 12 sets but if you want some kind of bun truck you would probably do 14 sets (28 x Bun truck GU, 14 x motor only and 14 x Trailer). That would make all the 802 x 9 car fitted with a buffet. You then could keep 8 or 10 x 5 car 802 on the Bedwyns and ex 180 North Cots 5 car workings. Putting this stock on regional services to absorb 5 car sets is a possibility, Cardiff to Penzance is the most likely as 26m long vehicles on Pompey-Cardiff is not going to work, even if they could keep to time.
Altering 800 sets is currently seen as too difficult. The hoops of fire you have to go through to do even a minor change on the IEP TARA means that if you had to boost formations, you go to the 802 fleet first. Re-instating Ponsondane sidings at Penzance to enable 9 cars to be stabled down there is currently required if GWR went to all 9 car operation on the London-Plymouth/Penzance trains and that needs money. Is the DfT up for all of this? Frankly, no. A two year DA doesn't make it easy to finance and they are still nervous about the buffet issue. As they don't care much for what TOCs or user groups think, a lot of Tory MP's need to get on Grayling's (or his SPADs) case to make it all happen.
Quite. Would be interesting hypothetically to see how much an even more powerful DfT with the ability to specify everything in excruciating detail and make it stick could foul up railway travel even more. Personally the prospect appalls me.I can't wait for the nationalised railway...
Quite. Would be interesting hypothetically to see how much an even more powerful DfT with the ability to specify everything in excruciating detail and make it stick could foul up railway travel even more. Personally the prospect appalls me.
BR was set up seventy years ago in very different political, social and economic circumstances to those pertaining now.Depends how it was done. BR was given a lot of independence - a lot more, in some ways, than the present TOCs.
Why don’t you write to the DFT and express your displeasure!
Department for Transport
Great Minster House
33 Horseferry Road
Westminster
London
SW1P 4DR
The 802s are the best all round solution, they just need to be fitted with a buffet and better seats.
I don’t buy all of that. FGW/GWR have been trying for years to go trolley only: they took the buffets out of a proportion of the HST fleet back in 2007, only to have to expensively convert some standard vehicles to small buffets when the trolleys were found to be sub-standard. Later still they took the buffets they had previously got rid of and converted them to standard vehicles, in what overall was a superb exercise in ****ing money up the wall.GWR have been well and truly stuffed with the 800s as they have very limited control over them thanks to the DFT who have left them at the mercy of Hitachi so far as allocation flexibility and any improvements can be made, for example the "Quiet Coach" signs mentioned up thread which have taken a year to do them and still counting. The main points about which passengers are complaining, seats and catering were done and dusted before they came out into the open so, by that time, it was past the point of no return so far as any modifications could be done. No prizes for guessing who has to take all the flak from customers, though. Not the DFT.
Allegedly this is because the GWR ones were to far along in their production for it to be viable whilst the East Coast ones were not. I'm not entirely sure I believe this as they managed to go back and convert the EMU variants into bi-modes relatively quickly plus the interior is supposed to be modular and comparatively easy to fiddle with (contractual issues aside)...Yet here we are again with the same situation and it’s apparently all DfT’s fault, even though East Coast got a design change to include buffets and FGW have been operator since well before IEP was dreamt up.
Allegedly this is because the GWR ones were to far along in their production for it to be viable whilst the East Coast ones were not. I'm not entirely sure I believe this as they managed to go back and convert the EMU variants into bi-modes relatively quickly plus the interior is supposed to be modular and comparatively easy to fiddle with (contractual issues aside)...
Given how (relatively) cheap seat foams and covers are (those being by far the biggest issue), I think I have difficulty believing it too.
So putting a buffet in is a minor variation....The GWR/LNER variation had nothing to do with any payback period. GWR were not allowed to make any changes nor were any suggestions of change at all welcome. The attitude then was that the DfT knew best and the TOC was just the operator of “their” trains to run “their” timetable.
The interior design for the GW sets was closed down earlier than the East Coast ones. The bidders for the EC franchise could propose up to (iirc) 12 minor variations to the interior of the EC trains.
This caused some upset on as the same people at FG who were dealing with the GWR MARA/TARA were also dealing with IEP matters in the EC bid.
I don’t buy all of that. FGW/GWR have been trying for years to go trolley only: they took the buffets out of a proportion of the HST fleet back in 2007, only to have to expensively convert some standard vehicles to small buffets when the trolleys were found to be sub-standard. Later still they took the buffets they had previously got rid of and converted them to standard vehicles, in what overall was a superb exercise in ****ing money up the wall.
Yet here we are again with the same situation and it’s apparently all DfT’s fault, even though East Coast got a design change to include buffets and FGW have been operator since well before IEP was dreamt up. Either WorstGroup have zero influence (unlike East Coast, it seems) and/or they don’t give a stuff about the quality of their service.
there's nothing in the rule book that specifies that a Front Set Lead (FSL) has to be present but GWR are reluctant to upset the applecart by insisting that a Train Manager operates a 10 car without one with passengers on board.Saw today that a 2x5 IET had to have all passengers in the front unit as the second 5 car 800 was closed off due to crew shortages.
This is something the DfT were warned would happen and it has. But they knew best didn't they. More 9 cars should have ordered and not the 2x5 combo they went with.
there's nothing in the rule book that specifies that a Front Set Lead (FSL) has to be present but GWR are reluctant to upset the applecart by insisting that a Train Manager operates a 10 car without one with passengers on board.
I'd forgotten about all the messing about. Didn't the no buffet sets run as 2+7 for a while? Why didn't they put the off lease buffets back into traffic, swapping the first class seats for standard if required?I don’t buy all of that. FGW/GWR have been trying for years to go trolley only: they took the buffets out of a proportion of the HST fleet back in 2007, only to have to expensively convert some standard vehicles to small buffets when the trolleys were found to be sub-standard. Later still they took the buffets they had previously got rid of and converted them to standard vehicles, in what overall was a superb exercise in ****ing money up the wall.
You can tell that to Mick Cash. I bet he'll listen.Why? Almost all other TOCs that operate trains in multiple with guards have one set with the driver in and one with the guard in. Some even allow completely unstaffed sets (i.e. the driver and guard in the same one), e.g. TPE. All DOO operations allow a set with no staff in (any rear set). All TOCs with 12-car (3x4) guarded operation have at least one set completely unstaffed.
Nobody dies or gets injured as a result.
There is absolutely no sensible reason for this whatsoever.
The base spec, laid out by DfT, was for there to be no buffet car.
At the time the buffet debate began (2015), First was locked into a direct franchise award due to expire in September 2015. In March 2015, this was extended to April 2019 - on some sets (by the delivery programme of the day), this would give barely 6 months for First to recover the multi-million investment in buffet cars. Stagecoach/Virgin were awarded an 8 year franchise in March 2015, due to run until 2023 (4 years to recover the investment on its sets assuming all sets in service during 2019). Clearly these things need business cases - I can't imagine a pub landlord spending thousands on redecorating when he knew the brewery might kick him out a few months later.
Like it or loath it, this is what happens when you have short franchise awards.
They did run as 2+7 until the original buffets were converted to TS to go back in the sets.I'd forgotten about all the messing about. Didn't the no buffet sets run as 2+7 for a while? Why didn't they put the off lease buffets back into traffic, swapping the first class seats for standard if required?
Why do they need a business case? What does this have to do with buffet cars on the Penzance route?
As expected several trains on the Penzance route reported as not being able to provide a trolley service in part or all of the train today. Great advert for the railway.....