Just a thought, but
maybe one reason why the Whitby timetable isn’t based around convenient connections from Wakefield (a place approx seventy five miles away from Middlesbrough) is that maybe Wakefield isn’t quite as important a flow as the OP’s personal opinion?
Maybe the passenger data might suggest that’s significant number of passengers are doing journeys that go no further west than Middlesbrough, and that the more significant “longer distance” flows are places like Newcastle and Sunderland, rather that Wakefield?
Because if you start your thread with the premise that “the Whitby branch has an inadequate timetable because connections from Wakefield are suboptimal” then it feels like there’s a lot of huge assumptions already baked in, which makes it harder for others to treat this as the “priority” that the OP clearly feels that it is
And then what about Wakefield to Bridlington? Or Colwyn Bay? Or… why is Whitby such a focus for people in Wakefield? Or, maybe, it isn’t?
I believe that (re)building a line from Whitby to Scarborough would be economically viable
Economically viable?
Profitable, you mean?
Given the tens of millions of pounds needed for around twenty miles of railway, over what timescale do you think we’d pay off the infrastructure investment?
The passenger statistics say that there were 120,000 entries and exits at Whitby station in April 2021 - March 2022.
This works out as 328 per day, or 33 per train (there are currently 10 trains per day)
Going on a weekday, the train is comfortable but travelling on a weekend the four coach 156 is rammed
We’ve had this argument a few times on here but the Whitby line seems to have some
individual trains that carry more people than the average *daily* ridership on the branch (a full and standing four coach DMU)
Maybe that’s an argument for six coach trains on the most “obvious” service for day trippers on weekends during the school summer holidays (skip the minor intermediate stations by all means), leave the surplus carriages at Whitby during the daytime, maybe even focus on this being a through train from Tyneside down the Durham Coast…
…but such a heavily skewed demand pattern doesn’t seem much of an argument for increasing services during the middle of the day… people clearly aren’t travelling in balanced numbers during the daytime, there’s obviously a “Peak” flow in each direction and running more trains at times when people aren’t travelling would be a bigger waste of resources
Rejigging timetables is not a big deal as you make out
It is, on a long branch line with lots of single track, plus the complication of reversal at Battersby and the paths allocated to the NYRM east of Grosmont
(Rejigging the ECML services to prioritise the Wakefield to Whitby market would bring “taking a sledgehammer to crack a nut” to a whole new level)