I'd say something like a 159 is up to Intercity standard. They were built to a fairly high comfort standard and in the case of SWT their refurbs have kept them decent. For example a 159 has the same seating in First as EC and FGW, standard is comfortable if a little tight on legroom (then so are XC and EC standard seats)
If you gave me a choice between a 159 or a 221 to travel from Penzance to Inverness it would take me approximately 1 second to make that choice.
Goatboy said:If you gave me a choice between a 159 or a 221 to travel from Penzance to Inverness it would take me approximately 1 second to make that choice.
You'd go for the Voyager, right?
Although of course the Chiltern line (or parts of it!) was where 'InterCity' began with the 0900 Paddington to Wolverhampton - 'The Inter-City' named express train! Somewhat ironic that Chiltern are now making it a mainline again after BR ran it right down.
If you gave me a choice between a 159 or a 221 to travel from Penzance to Inverness it would take me approximately 1 second to make that choice.
This is an interesting topic, but some of the arguments are fundamentally flawed because all INTERCITY or Inter-City was was a brand. A successful one, but it sold a concept.
It served some very obscure locations. As an example to take the East-Coast route, some services called at Huntingdon or Hichin, which are not served by today's services.
.This is a topic which will never be answered, because everyone will have different ideas.
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On the Continent, they classify each train, so it's obvious which is Intercity (TGV, ICE, AVE, RJ etc) and which is not (RE etc).
It also comes through in the fare structure and on-board facilities, with supplements or special fares being the order of the day for IC-type services.
Some take this to extremes with far too many categories (eg in Italy with their Freccia-whatnot).
Meanwhile, we seem to have a mish-mash of trains and services, and don't bother to identify different categories of service.
The GB fare structure is still based on "a train is a train" whatever stock actually turns up.
I know the TOCs have individual deals as well, but basically a Pacer and a Pendolino are the same animal to us, with the same fare (eg between Wigan and Preston).
Attempts to categorise our trains like "Alphaline" didn't work out as they were largely incomprehensible to the public.
Even "Sprinter" lost its point when all DMUs became sprinters.
I've always felt that Intercity stands for the quickest route between 2 cities.
I know in the old BR days of the late 1960's even the Sheffield Victoria - Manchester Piccadilly services were classed as Inter-City
Did the Inter-City brand start around 1967/8 ?
I wouldn't call TPE an InterCity TOC, it just so happens they've found themselves operating an InterCity route (Manchester - Scotland) with regional trains, a route that should have gone to XC. Their other routes were 158 or 175 operated before 2004, and call at multiple stations, they're long routes, not InterCity routes.
Oh no, more routes for crowded Voyagers to run on![]()
I'd say something like a 159 is up to Intercity standard. They were built to a fairly high comfort standard and in the case of SWT their refurbs have kept them decent. For example a 159 has the same seating in First as EC and FGW, standard is comfortable if a little tight on legroom (then so are XC and EC standard seats)
it also employed some slow stock - as an example, would a Class 47 and 6 mark 2 coaches running between Manchester and Glasgow, with a top speed of 95 miles per hour and without a buffet car be any more Inter-City than a 100 MPH class 185 is today on the same route?
Then you have the Cambridge Flier. Never an Intercity Service, but arguably more of one than a Class 90 and MkIII coaches between London and Norwich, it certainly has a much higher average speed...
Its interesting that people complaining about Voyagers not being good enough for an InterCity service forget that a lot of the time it was Mk2s that they replaced
Using the borderline Cambridge Cruiser as an example, I can definitely imagine that a change of stock on the line might warrant the InterCity mantle and while different stock might seem like a triviality, it would definitely give the line a different feel.
So these two posts suggest that it goes back to stock again?I wouldn't call TPE an InterCity TOC, it just so happens they've found themselves operating an InterCity route (Manchester - Scotland) with regional trains, a route that should have gone to XC.
Ah, but the Mk2's were comfortable and had a buffet car (even if they were a little raggedy round the edges !).
So these two posts suggest that it goes back to stock again?
While London - Cambridge is maybe an Inter-City route (arguably similar to London - Ipswich), and maybe isn't - despite using high speed stock (100 MPH) and having a very high average speed between the two cities on account of running non-stop. If Class 91 and Mk IV's could be cascaded onto King's Cross - King's Lynn services however, it would be comparable to Liverpool Street - Norwich which clearly is Inter-City?
We agree that Manchester to Scotland is an Inter-City route, but is it a 3 car 100 MPH DMU which is not suitable to be an Inter-City Train? Is it the length of the train? XC Voyagers are only one carriage longer. Is it the speed? Well under BR days the services only ran at 95 MPH under Inter-City? Or is it the operator, that TPE isn't an Inter-City operator? Well then in that case neither is FGW for operating from Plymouth to Gunnislake, and EMT which operate from Skegness to Nottingham!
Which brings us back to there not being a hard and fast rule
By "comfortable" do you just mean the seats? Since you can have the same seats in any train then that suggests that the speed (etc) of the stock doesn't determine InterCity status.
So these two posts suggest that it goes back to stock again?
While London - Cambridge is maybe an Inter-City route (arguably similar to London - Ipswich), and maybe isn't - despite using high speed stock (100 MPH) and having a very high average speed between the two cities on account of running non-stop. If Class 91 and Mk IV's could be cascaded onto King's Cross - King's Lynn services however, it would be comparable to Liverpool Street - Norwich which clearly is Inter-City?
We agree that Manchester to Scotland is an Inter-City route, but is it a 3 car 100 MPH DMU which is not suitable to be an Inter-City Train? Is it the length of the train? XC Voyagers are only one carriage longer. Is it the speed? Well under BR days the services only ran at 95 MPH under Inter-City? Or is it the operator, that TPE isn't an Inter-City operator? Well then in that case neither is FGW for operating from Plymouth to Gunnislake, and EMT which operate from Skegness to Nottingham!
Which brings us back to there not being a hard and fast rule.
But then compare with Continental Europe. Denmark's Intercity trains are 3 car 180 km/h (112 mph) Bombardier DMU'S.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...800px-DSB_train_Denmark_Aalborg_2003_ubt.jpeg Not too dissimilar from a 3 car 185!
Then we still haven't placed where a 110 MPH London Midland 4 car set falls... Intercity, or not?!
So, I think that rolling stock is part of the bigger picture. If you were to run LHCS with buffet cars on a Liverpool Street stopper, you couldn't call it InterCity. (You'd call it inappropriate allocation of resources, which is kind of why I find it risible that Cambridge - King's Lynn would have InterCity stock, I just can't imagine a 91 or an IEP stopping at the concrete slabs that constitute Waterbeach, or any of the other small villages on the line, I mean, maybe one of the fast Ely extensions, but I digress). I think that the marginal point that is stopping Cambridge Fliers being InterCity is stock, but that there are situations where the IC stock used for a service does not make said service InterCity (GatEx, Bournemouth - Weymouth stoppers).
Hmmm.So, I think that rolling stock is part of the bigger picture [...] I find it risible that Cambridge - King's Lynn would have InterCity stock. I just can't imagine a 91 or an IEP stopping at the concrete slabs that constitute Waterbeach, or any of the other small villages on the line, I mean, maybe one of the fast Ely extensions, but I digress. I think that the marginal point that is stopping Cambridge Fliers being InterCity is stock, but that there are situations where the IC stock used for a service does not make said service InterCity (GatEx, Bournemouth - Weymouth stoppers).
125mph isn't needed all the way to King's Lynn, but then a Sprinter can match a Paddington HST through Cornwall and nobody suggests that these are a waste of resources. Well, almost nobody.
A sprinter would beat a HST through Cornwall - the reason why nobody suggests that they are a waste of resources is because they are needed. The 150s through Cornwall are regularly full and standing, so the idea of having no through trains and terminating all HSTs at say Plymouth to make sure they're used where they can use their speed wouldn't work and would just turn off passengers from using the train to make long distance journeys.
In fact, FGW are probably more desperate for spare units than HSTs at the moment, so I don't think anyone is too concerned by them being used on through trains down to Penzance & Newquay.