I actually wrote to Rowland Pittard of Railfuture Wales for a second time a week ago asking for his comments, having not had a reply from my first e-mail a few weeks earlier. I've still not had a reply; is he still at Railfuture Wales?
Yep, he's your guy there.
I was with him only two days ago. If you can drop me your real name by IM, I can drop him a line & chase up a reply, if that would help?
Thank you for the offer ChrisB. That won't be required at this point as I have now had a reply from him (unfortunately right at the start of a very busy fortnight at work (I was helping with the company's move to new premises over the Easter weekend), so I've only just found time to get back to him). He confirmed my belief that construction of the new trains will
not commence this year. I've now asked him at what point he expects the deadline for changes to the design.
I could foresee a situation where the 2 car from Pwllheli and the 2 car from Aberystwyth are NOT combined at Macynelleth but rather people are moved from one train to the other - onward 2 car not 4 via Welshpool. The suggestion that this isn't happening tends to suggest adequate stock levels
That does happen from time to time at present with the class 158s; one hopes there will be enough slack in the new fleet to cover for 'more trains than normal needing repairs' but unfortunately it doesn't look that way. I wouldn't be surprised if the full hourly service to Aberystwyth increases demand on that route to the point that portion would benefit from 3-car units year-round (and perhaps the Pwllheli portion in the summer) but with most of the new 3-car units expected to be deployed on Manchester - South Wales services it does look as if the ratio of 2-car to 3-car units could do with being revised in favour of the latter.
Community rail seems to be very patchy ... strong in the South West, weak in the east end of GWR▸ territory and in South Wales. I'm not (yet?) all that well informed of the relative strengths of RailFuture branches for contact links (connecting individual campaigns) and I don't know of a TravelWatch SouthWales type organisation that does what TravelWatch SouthWest does (being involved in that latter, I could help oil introductions). I was surprised the other day to find the lack of stations friends and user groups in the valleys - not the exact area we're talking about, but perhaps that lack also extends to West Wales??
There are a number of 'adopted' stations on the routes west of Carmarthen, plus two transport-user groups (North Pembrokeshire Transport Forum and Pembrokeshire Rail Traveller's Association) that I'm aware of; but no Community Rail Partnership anymore (to be re-established under the new franchise we're told).
If you were the only person (or even one of a handful) to raise the issue then I think quite reasonably the reviewers would decide it's not an issue that is of great importance to people. And of course it may be that more people responding said they wanted 1/3 2/3 doors (highly unlikely, but the point is that in a consultation your view may not be in the majority). Or maybe it was considered and advisors pointed out that the advantages of mid carriage doors were x, y, and z, so on balance it was the best design to go for.
I wouldn't be surprised if nobody else mentioned door layout, either way, in their responses; my recollection is that the questions regarding train design/quality were very superficial. To try and make my views on the different types of train required for different service groups known I had to make a bespoke submission outside the 'questionnaire' forms provided.
One final thought - are you sure that this layout is definitely proposed, and that TfW or the manufacturer haven't just used a stock image of a new train, whilst the detail is still to be finalised?
Transport for Wales have claimed that the images are, to a certain extent, placeholder designs (specifically they argued that the seats ('ironing-boards' were pictured) have not yet been selected). However, sadly they have confirmed that the wide 'doors at thirds' are intentional and are resisting changes to that aspect of the design.