tbtc
Veteran Member
Rather than derail another thread further, I thought I'd set up a specific one to try to determine what people think InterCity (or INTERCITY/ Inter-City/ Inter City/ Intercity etc) meant in 2013.
There's been a lot of debate about whether certain services qualify for this "gold standard" (e.g. "you can't put EMUs on London - Norwich as this is an InterCity route"), but where do you draw the line?
Are Voyagers true InterCity trains? 444s? What about 185s? Is a 350/1 InterCity but not a 350/2?
Since the simple days of BR (when there was a clear division between InterCity and Provincial/ Regional/ NSE), there are a lot of grey areas nowadays.
Does it need to be loco hauled to qualify as InterCity? (that'd rule a 390 out)
Are "end doors" necessary or can you have an InterCity train with "middle" doors?
I've seen claim on here that units with corridor connections cannot qualify as "InterCity".
Presumably an InterCity service requires some First Class, but can that be with 2+2 seats, or are 2+1 required for InterCity? If it has sufficient First Class then can it have some 3+2 seating in Standard and still qualify? Can you have an InterCity train that splits a coach between First and Standard (like the EMT 222s)?
Do InterCity trains need to have tables throughout? Or a certain number of tables per coach?
I imagine that one determinant is going to be the food - anything with a Restaurant is InterCity, but is a buffet sufficient to qualify? Are services with (just) a trolley not actual IC ones?
Can you have an InterCity train with underfloor engines? What about bi-mode IEP (will this be InterCity from London to Edinburgh but not InterCity from Edinburgh to Aberdeen)?
What about vestibules/ luggage racks?
(am focussing this on the actual physical trains and not aiming for an argument about whether a link between two certain cities justifies InterCity status as there are always going to be contradictions and exceptions to any such debate - e.g. Diss vs Salford)
There's been a lot of debate about whether certain services qualify for this "gold standard" (e.g. "you can't put EMUs on London - Norwich as this is an InterCity route"), but where do you draw the line?
Are Voyagers true InterCity trains? 444s? What about 185s? Is a 350/1 InterCity but not a 350/2?
Since the simple days of BR (when there was a clear division between InterCity and Provincial/ Regional/ NSE), there are a lot of grey areas nowadays.
Does it need to be loco hauled to qualify as InterCity? (that'd rule a 390 out)
Are "end doors" necessary or can you have an InterCity train with "middle" doors?
I've seen claim on here that units with corridor connections cannot qualify as "InterCity".
Presumably an InterCity service requires some First Class, but can that be with 2+2 seats, or are 2+1 required for InterCity? If it has sufficient First Class then can it have some 3+2 seating in Standard and still qualify? Can you have an InterCity train that splits a coach between First and Standard (like the EMT 222s)?
Do InterCity trains need to have tables throughout? Or a certain number of tables per coach?
I imagine that one determinant is going to be the food - anything with a Restaurant is InterCity, but is a buffet sufficient to qualify? Are services with (just) a trolley not actual IC ones?
Can you have an InterCity train with underfloor engines? What about bi-mode IEP (will this be InterCity from London to Edinburgh but not InterCity from Edinburgh to Aberdeen)?
What about vestibules/ luggage racks?
(am focussing this on the actual physical trains and not aiming for an argument about whether a link between two certain cities justifies InterCity status as there are always going to be contradictions and exceptions to any such debate - e.g. Diss vs Salford)