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Can we see this proposed timetable please
Its not in the public domain yet, basically because it isnt finished.Can we see this proposed timetable please
Decision was meant to be made today by ministers I heard?
MK gets a Liverpool stop now though. Loses the Chester as well.
I appreciate that and I don't dispute that, but the information currently available says they are 125mph not 140mph. Unless that's just reflecting the in-service speed but other 80x were advertised as being 140 capable.805s and 807s are effectively the same as 802s and 803s respectively from a technical point of view.
The existing 80xs are all "stenciled" for 125mph despite being 140mph capable, as 125mph is the max they're permitted to do in regular traffic. Believe the 91s and 390s are the same too. I assume it would be the same with the 805s and 807s?I appreciate that and I don't dispute that, but the information currently available says they are 125mph not 140mph. Unless that's just reflecting the in-service speed but other 80x were advertised as being 140 capable.
I guess we'll see when they enter service what they are "stencilled" for.
Well as Ministers were involved I assumed there would be no decision. Smoke sometime next week perhaps. But if they couldn’t get comfortable with it up until now, I don’t see how they’d suddenly get there.Decision was meant to be made today by ministers I heard?
MK gets a Liverpool stop now though. Loses the Chester as well.
Essentially a swap between the Liverpool and Chester - Liverpool gets the MK, Chester gets the Stafford.Does Liverpool keep Crewe? If not this is going to make connecting to Scotland very bad too.
A very good move in my opinion, it makes sense to have a 9/11 carriage Pendolino or in the future 7 carriage 807 serve the station with the higher demand of the two stations rather than a 5 carriage 221/805.Essentially a swap between the Liverpool and Chester - Liverpool gets the MK, Chester gets the Stafford.
Almost certainly not. The likes of Coventry and Stoke will lose out in a big way once HS2 service patterns are fully introduced, both in terms of frequency and journey time.Will Coventry keep its 2tph non-stop service to Euston post HS2?
I have sensed a "phobia" over the past fifteen years of anything non Tass fitted but capable of 125mph, being allowed anywhere near the WCML. This is gradually being eroded but is there a ban on anything 125mph capable being allowed at more han 110mph without operating Tass ?Since when have they been a 110mph train? I thought the 805/807 were going to be 125mph?
And it’s always been said they would have to slow for the corners, and the acceleration is improved based on a 390 so wouldn’t have much impact.
So based on that comment in magazine, to me, that’s nothing new, and has been known about since they were ordered.
Effectively yes - in that the only sections of the WCML passed for greater than 110mph have TASS differentials, so no TASS, no going over 110mph (other than the aforementioned Stafford - Wolverhampton section which has a 125 MU/EPS differential).I have sensed a "phobia" over the past fifteen years of anything non Tass fitted but capable of 125mph, being allowed anywhere near the WCML. This is gradually being eroded but is there a ban on anything 125mph capable being allowed at more han 110mph without operating Tass ?
The article also talks about different stopping patterns for other Avanti services, so there may be compensation for MK there (and for Trent Valley stations).It is indeed being withdrawn, the through train will be non-stop south of Coventry. Though smart money is on Dec 22 not happening at the moment, so you may have a little longer to enjoy it.
The latter.2. How will the Birmingham (and beyond) to Euston services be spread? Will it be every 20 minutes departing Birmingham or arriving into Euston, or will the non-stop Coventry to Euston run on a clock face half-hourly frequency, with the ‘stopper’ pathed in between the two?
Actually quite a smart way of doing it, as the GJT increase of 5 minutes is offset by the decrease in journey time, whilst still providing improved connectivity between Coventry/Rugby/MK/Watford.The latter.
91s/Mk4s are all stencilled for 140mph though, so are 390sThe existing 80xs are all "stenciled" for 125mph despite being 140mph capable, as 125mph is the max they're permitted to do in regular traffic. Believe the 91s and 390s are the same too. I assume it would be the same with the 805s and 807s?
It is far from a tweak. Manchester stay as 20 minute intervals.Interesting, I always understood the proposals to be a tweak of VHF but this sounds more fundamental.
What happens to the Manchesters? I can't mentally reconcile a 20 minute pattern with the introduction of the slower Birmignham path.
Who knows? Nothing seems to have been decided.Sorry for not reading whole thread, buf are the Voyagers destined for CrossCountry?
Effectively yes - in that the only sections of the WCML passed for greater than 110mph have TASS differentials, so no TASS, no going over 110mph (other than the aforementioned Stafford - Wolverhampton section which has a 125 HST differential).
Ah yes, I always forget about that rather odd section of line.The Rugby-Coventry section also is 125 mph max for high speed Multiple Units, the funny thing being that, along with Bushbury-Stafford, a non-tilt Pendolino can only do 100 or 90 respectively, as not classed as a Multiple Unit.
Indeed, and I wonder if it's worth the mods creating a separate thread to discuss the ins and outs of the recast?The article also talks about different stopping patterns for other Avanti services, so there may be compensation for MK there (and for Trent Valley stations).
But that is more about the general Dec 22 timetable recast and is going off-the Avanti 80x topic...
It is far from a tweak. Manchester stay as 20 minute intervals.
In the current proposed timetable that’s exactly where it is, so you have evenly spaced connectivity as far as Rugby. Unfortunately the Watford call in the Birmingham via Northampton had to swap to the other, so Watford get their calls about 5 mins apart. But MK and Rugby both benefit.
It is indeed being withdrawn, the through train will be non-stop south of Coventry. Though smart money is on Dec 22 not happening at the moment, so you may have a little longer to enjoy it.
Given how broad a time those extras would need to cover, is it really worth dropping to 2tph for part of the day and losing the Takt? Especially when you consider it either mean Stoke losing 1tph to both Manchester and London (on top of the current loss of the Bristol - Manchester XC service) or the loss of the service via Crewe, with the reduced connectivity that would cause.Interesting, as I've long thought 2tph all day (using 11 car sets) with peak extras ("peak" not necessarily coinciding with Anytime fares) slotted in as necessary would make more sense.
Given how broad a time those extras would need to cover, is it really worth dropping to 2tph for part of the day and losing the Takt?
And I see yours to be fair - I was thinking that the busy period was potentially so long that you'd have as much time 3tph as 2tph, if not even more, so the question would become which timetable is actually Takt? But yes, I guess it wouldn't actually be all that different from the West Midlands.Is it losing the Takt? The idea would be a clockface 2tph all day, and peak "point to point" off pattern extras slotted between those without changing them, potentially looking at 4tph at the busiest times, very similar to what is being looked at for Brum. I do see your point, though.
My biggest fear though would be the implications of losing 1tph out of Euston if Manchester dropped to 2tph. Given the implications of that would have Milton Keynes most at risk I'm surprised you'd be supportive of it?
No, I'm sure it wouldn't lose in that respect. But it would be a lot busier with passengers from further north.The 2tph COVID timetable didn't miss MKC out of the Manchesters (not even the 1tph one did), and if the one that does call is cancelled they near-always stick the stop in another one, so I doubt going to 2tph Manchester would result in loss of the MKC stop.
The single track section between Coventry and Leamington Spa is a huge constricter of capacity, with it already having to handle an hourly XC and WMR service, along with the occasional freight train.Does the proposed December 2022 WCML timetable changes to the west midlands services allow for the potential rerouting of the XC Newcastle to Reading service via Coventry, or are they other constraints preventing this?
The single track section between Coventry and Leamington Spa is a huge constricter of capacity, with it already having to handle an hourly XC and WMR service, along with the occasional freight train.