Why is there only one train an hour? Every other major city (some considerably smaller than Liverpool) have at least two. Leicester has four!
Leicester is a lot closer to London - by the same logic you should complain that Croydon has significantly more trains!
Also this.
Reading's only a town yet gets a minimum of 12tph to London.
Arguably the hourly Chester 221 forms part of the catchment area.
Im not sure many people from Merseyside would be keen on changing at Crewe even less so Manchester (going the wrong direction) for London. 2 tph would be nice to see, I thought London Midland had designs to operate a Liverpool/London service, they certainly advertise fare from London to Liverpool. I thinki their maybe some truth in Manchester capital of the north idea, Liverpool has suffered from loss of direct rail services in recent years.
I think that is the crucial factor. Merseyside has suffered more urban decline than other places due to a number of factors. Thus the opportunities to gouge on fares is less; more than in other places there will be a high number of discounted fares and very few walk-on first class fares. Many pax rammed in but little profit....
Maybe also Virgin Trains have a say regarding pathing and stock allocation, and they can make more money by sending another set elsewhere. ...
If not, change at Birmingham instead. There's not the demand for 2tph.
...All down to the ITT due next month and how the bids go, and then the ambitions of open access operators on top of that. Nothing to stop an OA operator adding services from April 2012 - but nobody has proposed any.
I suspect there would be demand for 2tph. I wouldn't want to advocate taking a 100 minute journey just to change for London, but it is the only way!
Actually NR says that the other option is to change at Crewe. I don't think it really matter whether it's a 100 minute journey to change for London.
Odd that, isn't it. Here are GC etc proposing services to just about every town in the north, yet they never mention Liverpool - Euston...
That would require a new chord (or a reverse) somewhere.If they could run Birkenhead - London via Ellesmere Port it could work, although there can't be much spare capacity on Merseyrail to allow a London service.
That would require a new chord (or a reverse) somewhere.
There would be demand for Hooton - London via Chester.
Not necessarily. You could do
Birkenhead - Hooton - Ellesmere Port - (Mouldsworth) - Greenbank - Sandbach - Crewe - London !! [ I assume Helsby - Mouldsworth is still mothballed ]
Another problem is stopping pattern.
The VHF service omits Nuneaton (much to their rage) and Crewe to give a fast service.
It still stops at Stafford, but Stafford also has 2tph LM service to Liverpool - overkill.
A second service would have to call at (say) Rugby and Nuneaton to flesh out the load, but this would then damage the LM Trent Valley service.
The London-Warrington-Liverpool route (post-electrification) would allow Glasgow services to be speeded up by omitting its Warrington call.
No intermediate calls Warrington-Liverpool unless they extend platforms.
My guess is that the Liverpool/Glasgow services will stay basically at 1tph (2tph in the peak) but with 11-car 390s to boost capacity, while the 3tph services (Manchester/Birmingham) stay 9-car.
Could be wrong of course...
Mouldsworth-Helsby is dismantled.
Lastly, any LM service from London to Liverpool would be around three and a half hours in duration (on a 350), versus around two hours on a 390 for the Virgin service. Maybe you can flog a few £5 tickets to the student market, but it wouldn't be much use for 95% of London - Liverpool passengers
Yes, but the formation is intact, isn't it ? (i.e. it's not been built on)
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You would be surprised how many people travel by LM all the way from Liverpool to London. Whenever I get off at Stafford (from Crewe) there's always a good few transferring to the xx21 LM to Euston.