Xenophon PCDGS
Veteran Member
Yeah, I am not sure how the third largest airport in the UK can be considered small within the context of UK transport policy!
At least Manchester Airport does have two runways, unlike some other ones.
Yeah, I am not sure how the third largest airport in the UK can be considered small within the context of UK transport policy!
Absolutely! Just look at the performance recently on the Piccadilly - Nottingham leg. And that's after some have missed out Sheffield altogether by using the Dore curve, or been diverted off their booked route via Beighton to the east of Shefield onto the mainline to Chesterfield to pick up time. They're averaging more than 10 minutes late. Maybe now that Lime Street is getting back to normal things will start to improve.
Unfortunately, Manchester's rulers, while demanding that vast sums be spent to get people to and from their shiny metropolis, don't seem very worried about the people who have to travel through it.
You're not wrong, but why should they be? People just passing through on a train are neither their constituents, nor generating any financial activity for the benefit of their constituents. It's a case for a wider strategic approach to transport issues in the north of England perhaps, but it's unreasonable to criticise Manchester's rulers for being primarily interested in Manchester.
Trouble is that we don't have any sort of long-term planning for railways (or roads) that identifies routes for growth that may need more facilities and then protects the corridor and certainly no procedures to give adequate protection to railway rights of way that have become disused but might be needed once again. And when we do build something, we build just for the needs of today, with no future-proofing — the Ordsall Chord being a good example of something that can't even deliver on the needs for today!However, all of this is pure fantasy, as the north's railway links were concentrated decades ago on 2 lines through central Manchester. These are to.Manchester's benefit as it improves the city's transport links. The least the city can do is safeguard a bit of land for improvements, rather than throwing up flats on every postage stamp-sized plot of land. After all, travel out a mile or two and you will find acres of wasteland for new residential property to be built on
Yes, all the moaning about the Ordsall Chord being a failure does forget the extra capacity and reduced conflicts for platforms 1-12. The chord has been blamed for problems that are partly occuring due to increasing the frequency of service on the Castlefield corridor from 8/10tph to 12/15tph.
But the Chord is itself the reason for those additional services on the Castlefield corridor.
That removed one of four crossing movements (Liverpool - Scarborough). Airport-Newcastle/York and Airport-Middlesbrough conflicting moves have been resolved by the chord, leaving only Airport-Cleethorpes services crossing the station throat.
Trouble is that we don't have any sort of long-term planning for railways (or roads) that identifies routes for growth that may need more facilities and then protects the corridor and certainly no procedures to give adequate protection to railway rights of way that have become disused but might be needed once again. And when we do build something, we build just for the needs of today, with no future-proofing — the Ordsall Chord being a good example of something that can't even deliver on the needs for today!
Sadly some people are so entrenched in their view they cannot comprehend the notion that someone travelling from Yorkshire or the North East change trains when travelling to a relatively small airport.
Some of us are fully aware that the issues at the Piccadilly throat (caused by the two Liverpool Trains crossing over and the Middlesborough train reversing) could have been solved, for zero cost, simply by diverting them via Victoria and sending the Middlesborough service through to Chester.
Access to the airport would still have been maintained by a single interchange at Manchester Piccadilly. And would be significantly more reliable than the current mangle of services passing through the Castlefield corridor. Reliability which is an order of magnitude more important than direct connectivity when you are trying to catch that important flight.
However someone decided it was more important to be seen spending money on Infrastrucutre in the North (something I fully agree with) than it was to actually spend it on the right things.
Terminating at Piccadilly 1/2 would destroy the frequent Transpennine service, clearly contrary to any aims for connecting the North. This could be solved of course - by withdrawing TPE services to Liverpool. Alternatively you could terminate the trains currently heading to the Airport at Victoria, but dumping TPE at the arse end of the city with no onward rail connections to anywhere anyone wants to go isn't going to increase usage.
In this regard they quite self evidently didn't.
By not doing 15/16 first it clearly was.
So Victoria is good enough for Liverpool's 2 trains an hour, but not for any of the 6 an hour to Leeds, despite passenger flows from Manchester to Liverpool being far heavier than passenger flows across the Pennines ? Yet it is the latter that is somehow more important, despite experience showing that it is completely unworkable. And when numerous people point out the obvious alternative to wrecking the whole network to over-serve Manchester Airport, your suggestion is to cut off rail services to a region of over 1.5 million people instead.
The worst capacity killer under the old timetable was the Liverpool to Scarborough service, which weaved across the entire throat from Ardwick to P14, stopping all movements in and out of other platforms. That could have gone via Victoria, as it now does, without any effect on direct services from the Airport to anywhere. But without the Ordsall Chord that would have left Leeds services inconveniently split 3tph from Piccadilly and 2tph from Victoria.The only reason why those services had to cross the throat is because of the insistence of certain people that Manchester Airport must have direct services to everywhere, even from large cities 100 miles away with their own internationally served airports. Those services could have been diverted to Victoria and carried on to terminate somewhere west of Manchester.
The worst capacity killer under the old timetable was the Liverpool to Scarborough service, which weaved across the entire throat from Ardwick to P14, stopping all movements in and out of other platforms. That could have gone via Victoria, as it now does, without any effect on direct services from the Airport to anywhere. But without the Ordsall Chord that would have left Leeds services inconveniently split 3tph from Piccadilly and 2tph from Victoria.
If the Middlesbrough and Newcastle to Airport services were diverted to terminate "somewhere west of Manchester", instead of going round the Chord, passengers between Leeds and any destination south of Manchester city centre (not just the Airport) would be faced with the choice of trekking between Victoria and Piccadilly by tram, bus or on foot, or taking the 2tph semi-fast/stopper service to/from Piccadilly. But of course Liverpool would be sitting pretty, still with its 3tph service to Piccadilly, including 2tph direct to the Airport and 1tph direct to Sheffield/Nottingham. Plus at least 2tph to Victoria and Leeds (or 4tph if the diverted TPEs both went to Lime Street), with the Northern Connect to Leeds via Bradford due to be added next year.
Eh? When the Liverpool TPEs switched over to Vic, a Class 319 substitute service was added at Picc. OK, not as posh, but I'll take a Class 319 with a seat over anything else without one.
There are only 4 fast trains an hour between Leeds and Manchester. The Hull - Piccadilly is now semi-fast, making 6 stops and taking an hour between Leeds and Manchester. The extra Leeds - Piccadilly makes 10 stops and is overtaken by one of the fasts in each direction. If you want to include slow services, there are currently 7tph between Liverpool and Manchester. The CLC Lime Street - Oxford Road stoppers are not normally overtaken en route, nor is the Chat Moss Lime Street - Airport - Crewe stopper.Imagine my distress that Leeds passengers might have to check which station the next train goes from, as Liverpool passengers already have to. I mean, when you only have 6 fast trains an hour from Manchester, as opposed to the 4 Liverpool gets, that must make life oh so hard.
Note that I did not suggest that every train that reached Victoria went to Liverpool. Chester / North Wales and Preston / Blackpool are also alternatives.
4tph is over the top anyway. If we were a proper European railway we'd be operating 2tph but the trains would be something like 260m long. And we wouldn't have half the problems we do.
There is no point upping frequencies beyond 2tph on regional express routes until you've reached the maximum practical length. All it does is reduce reliability.
There are only 4 fast trains an hour between Leeds and Manchester. The Hull - Piccadilly is now semi-fast, making 6 stops and taking an hour between Leeds and Manchester. The extra Leeds - Piccadilly makes 10 stops and is overtaken by one of the fasts in each direction. If you want to include slow services, there are currently 7tph between Liverpool and Manchester. The CLC Lime Street - Oxford Road stoppers are not normally overtaken en route, nor is the Chat Moss Lime Street - Airport - Crewe stopper.
Chester and Liverpool are both planned to get hourly Northern Connect services to Victoria and Bradford/Leeds via the Calder Valley next year. I doubt there is capacity on the eastern Chat Moss line for additional TPE services as well as these. Linking Northern Preston/Blackpool services through Victoria to TPE Middlesbrough/Newcastle services would involve a major timetable recast, franchise remapping and additional TPE rolling stock. Such services would link paths in the ECML and WCML timetables, posing an increased risk to reliability/resilience. They would replace EMUs on the Manchester - Bolton - Preston - Blackpool line with diesels/bi-modes, partly negating the benefits of the new wires.
4tph is over the top anyway. If we were a proper European railway we'd be operating 2tph but the trains would be something like 260m long. And we wouldn't have half the problems we do.
There is no point upping frequencies beyond 2tph on regional express routes until you've reached the maximum practical length. All it does is reduce reliability.
There's no point running long trains if the demand isn't there to fill them. We currently complain the frequent trains are very crowded, but there's nowhere near enough passengers on them to justify a 260m train, and reducing the frequency will only further reduce demand, however long the trains are.
How does that work?Is there any basis whatsoever for thinking that people would preder to stand on a train which runs every 15 minutes, rather than sit on one which runs every half an hour ?
The only reason why those services had to cross the throat is because of the insistence of certain people that Manchester Airport must have direct services to everywhere, even from large cities 100 miles away with their own internationally served airports. Those services could have been diverted to Victoria and carried on to terminate somewhere west of Manchester.
The only reason why those services had to cross the throat is because of the insistence of certain people that Manchester Airport must have direct services to everywhere, even from large cities 100 miles away with their own internationally served airports. Those services could have been diverted to Victoria and carried on to terminate somewhere west of Manchester.
I can't express strongly enough how important direct trains to the airport are. As a regular user of TPE trains, I get into conversations with people from Leeds, York, Newcastle, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Preston, etc., etc. and unfailingly they are extremely grateful for the direct services to the Airport.Imagine my distress that Leeds passengers might have to check which station the next train goes from, as Liverpool passengers already have to. I mean, when you only have 6 fast trains an hour from Manchester, as opposed to the 4 Liverpool gets, that must make life oh so hard.
Note that I did not suggest that every train that reached Victoria went to Liverpool. Chester / North Wales and Preston / Blackpool are also alternatives.
There's no point running long trains if the demand isn't there to fill them. We currently complain the frequent trains are very crowded, but there's nowhere near enough passengers on them to justify a 260m train, and reducing the frequency will only further reduce demand, however long the trains are.
I can't express strongly enough how important direct trains to the airport are. As a regular user of TPE trains, I get into conversations with people from Leeds, York, Newcastle, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Preston, etc., etc. and unfailingly they are extremely grateful for the direct services to the Airport.
When you see the amount of suitcases/hand luggage they have, you can understand that crossing Manchester or even just trying to get from 13/14 at Piccadilly to one of the terminal platforms often with two kids in tow is stressful and can be the difference between driving and getting the train.
Given the considerable distance between Manchester Airport station and the airport's terminal buildings (10 minute walk), with little escalators, the slow lifts, the confusing layouts and the long corridors, what part of a less than 2 minute numbered platform interchange at Manchester Piccadilly do you think would confound most members of the public heading there?...I can't express strongly enough how important direct trains to the airport are. As a regular user of TPE trains, I get into conversations with people from Leeds, York, Newcastle, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Preston, etc., etc. and unfailingly they are extremely grateful for the direct services to the Airport.
When you see the amount of suitcases/hand luggage they have, you can understand that crossing Manchester or even just trying to get from 13/14 at Piccadilly to one of the terminal platforms often with two kids in tow is stressful and can be the difference between driving and getting the train.