While I absolutely commend the driver and staff for making up time, mostly it seems by cutting station dwells, when you look at the schedule, the various allowances do allow for a fair amount of recovery in addition to station dwells:Left King's Cross, 12 late on a tight 4h22m timing to Edinburgh. Lost more time and got as far back as 17 down by Huntington. It's just reached Edinburgh only 1 late. Very impressive.
I`m sure the HST was able to do the same, and with a nine car formation too.1 hour 49 for Kings Cross - York isn’t that impressive. 91s were regularly managing 1 hour 40 or 1 hour 41 right up until the end of 91s to Scotland in 2020. Fastest I’ve seen for an 80x to do it is, I think, 1 hour 43.
A 2+9 HST would have struggled to match 1 hour 40 if it were strictly adhering to all speed limits. A shorter formation probably could (just) however.I`m sure the HST was able to do the same, and with a nine car formation too.
1 hour 49 for Kings Cross - York isn’t that impressive. 91s were regularly managing 1 hour 40 or 1 hour 41 right up until the end of 91s to Scotland in 2020. Fastest I’ve seen for an 80x to do it is, I think, 1 hour 43.
The 1200 was booked to arrive in York at 1352 when last HST operated according to the LNER timetable.I`m sure the HST was able to do the same.
The Scottish Pullmans used to be booked 3h59 with York & Newcastle calls and only 1 min recovery time southbound only. Dwells were 2 mins at both stops IIRC.
Traction should be able to meet the WT schedule with recovery margins removed. According to the 2020 WTT, the 1200 King's Cross to Inverness had 8 mins of engineering and pathing allowances King's X to York. The WTT booked arrival was 1352, same as the public time. 1352 - 8 gives 1344, so 1h44 net (108.75mph average).A 2+9 HST would have struggled to match 1 hour 40 if it were strictly adhering to all speed limits. A shorter formation probably could (just) however.
Very true, GNER IIRC got rid of the down service and extended the up to 4h02 in the early 2000s because of performance issues. The did bring back the 3h59 timing each way in around 2004 or 2005 for a very brief period (possibly just one summer timetable) and then scrapped it again, after that I think the fastest timing went up to something like 4h07 or thereabouts and then we got Eureka which homogenised most trains at 4h25 (unless they went beyond Edinburgh, then it was 4h22) with the addition of the morning fast Flying Scotsman 4-hour schedule with just a 3 min Newcastle stop.Unfortunately it was once stated that these were only successful around 30% of the time with those schedules. That at a time before OTMR & TPWS when drivers could exercise their driving skills to make up time. Today sadly it all has to be by the book.
The RPS (Rail Performance Society) have the fastest KGX - York (Pre-2008) at 1hr 37min 10sec and post-2008 at 1hr 40min 10sec both with class 91s. 2008 is when the more defensive driving techniques started to be introduced.1 hour 49 for Kings Cross - York isn’t that impressive. 91s were regularly managing 1 hour 40 or 1 hour 41 right up until the end of 91s to Scotland in 2020. Fastest I’ve seen for an 80x to do it is, I think, 1 hour 43.
Left King's Cross, 12 late on a tight 4h22m timing to Edinburgh. Lost more time and got as far back as 17 down by Huntington. It's just reached Edinburgh only 1 late. Very impressive.
Left King's Cross, 12 late on a tight 4h22m timing to Edinburgh. Lost more time and got as far back as 17 down by Huntington. It's just reached Edinburgh only 1 late. Very impressive.
Its not the ATO, its the dwell time.4h22 isn’t tight for the 800s.
I think my most impressive recovery is a Thameslink train approaching London Bridge 7 mins late, RT from St Pancras. Gotta love ATO.
It’s not the ATO, it’s the dwell time.
The RPS (Rail Performance Society) have the fastest KGX - York (Pre-2008) at 1hr 37min 10sec and post-2008 at 1hr 40min 10sec both with class 91s. 2008 is when the more defensive driving techniques started to be introduced.
These minutes were saved before the ATO came in. Because Thameslink doesn't have a London Terminal, plenty of time is allowed in the core to make up time, as long as a late runner isn't put behind one that's on time. There's no need for the ATO now, as its not going up to the 24tph that was plannedThere’s a bit of dwell time, and a bit of timetable allowances, but it’s mostly the ATO. It saves nearly a minute a stop.
These minutes were saved before the ATO came in. Because Thameslink doesn't have a London Terminal, plenty of time is allowed in the core to make up time, as long as a late runner isn't put behind one that's on time. There's no need for the ATO now, as its not going up to the 24tph that was planned
Being very closely involved in this, I can assure you that ATO definitely makes a difference.
Then you will also know it’s barely used as hardly any drivers are trained and qualified to use it!
The March Modern Railways, which arrived this morning, mentions on page 3. "GTR reports that around one-quarter of all services through the core now use ETCS and ATO - of around 700 affected drivers, some 200 are trained so far, and it will take a couple more years until all are trained."about 50% of my trains have it on, including both of those I used yesterday. Bedford depot is further ahead in training than the others.
about 50% of my trains have it on, including both of those I used yesterday. Bedford depot is further ahead in training than the others.
Any idea why the training has taken quite so long? I assume Covid will have had an impact.
Covid training restrictions
Absence rate still double that of 2019
The dispute
Other training (still a backlog of route knowledge)
More leavers than expected
etc
There was also a seeming reluctance of those trained to use it, but a couple of SPADs in the core sorted that.
Covid training restrictions
Absence rate still double that of 2019
The dispute
Other training (still a backlog of route knowledge)
More leavers than expected
etc
There was also a seeming reluctance of those trained to use it, but a couple of SPADs in the core sorted that.
I don’t get the absence rate.
TLK drivers set the Gold standard for driver despatch and thats worth plenty of seconds as well4h22 isn’t tight for the 800s.
I think my most impressive recovery is a Thameslink train approaching London Bridge 7 mins late, RT from St Pancras. Gotta love ATO.
TLK drivers set the Gold standard for driver despatch and thats worth plenty of seconds as well