2. Make the right connections
He's got a point here, but better still make the timetable work so these rediculously short non-conections become proper connections (e.g. Changes at Parkway from
XC▸ to
FGW▸ to Swindon)
His suggestion is that a minute should be enough to change trainsYou'll need to increase running-on-time from some of the current figures (we were seeing
NR» figures at TravelWatch yesterday hovering around the 90% mark for many travel groups)
AND need to hold connections. And remember, that the industry considers "on time" to be "not very late at final destination" for many evaluated factors.
I tightly timed my journey yesterday to see how many services arrived at my key points on time, as I was rather interested in following up this idea / taking a fresh look. As I go to B-o-A, the 07:47 towards Portsmouth was still due, and it left at 09:09. Not a good start - lets look at significant timings on the trains I caught:
08:14 to
BRI» , left on time.
Left
BTH» at 08:36 (6 minutes late)
Arrived BRI at 08:48
08:56 to Taunton left on time (from the exteme end of Platform 10 - 1 minute would NOT have been enough)
09:09 at Nailsea (6 minutes late)
09:28 into WsM, or 09:32 by the analog station clock. (5 minutes late)
10:04 into Taunton (2 minutes early)
16:07 Taunton to BRI left on time
17:15 into BRI (4 minutes late)
Change NOT helped by on-train announcement as we came into BRI that the PMH train would be on 11 - and it turned out to be on 917:22 to Portsmouth left on time
17:49 at B-o-A (2 minutes late)
5. Erase the false peaks
Generally agree but this will add complexity to the fares. How about colour coding trains on the timetable to indicate the scale of fares?
The
DfT» fare consultation looked at this - adding in more grades so that the step over becomes smaller, but there are more of them. So - High peak, Low peak, off Peak, super offPeak.
I agree with colour coding; issue is that some trains are peak for park of their journey and offpeak later on. Take 17:40 Cheltenham to Southampton. Hardly "peak" south of Salisbury!
6. All you need is one click
I never found it that complicated to book myself. Certainly not more difficult than an airline. Amazon does not need your to know when you want to read the book!
Ellundene - PLEASE tell me where I could have got all the information and book for my multimodal journey from SN12 6QL to TA1 5AX yesterday
(Car to B-o-A, so suggested time and car park ticket for station ... train to
TAU» , so train fare to pay ... choice of walk, so map needed, or bus, so time needed and fare to be paid)
8. Get serious with rail cards
Agree. Why do you have to be under 26 or over 60 to get a railcard?
Agreed. Totally.
9. Meet the driver
DOO▸ with the driver also selling fares? It would make the stops at stations longer. Would definately slow the trains down and on lines shared with other services this might eb a problem.
There may be some sense here on extreme rural lines, once people routinely have prepaid fares and just swipe onto the train as they pass the driver. But I'm minded of my Melksham to Bristol trip last Saturday. 7 people got on the train without tickets, but the conductor was only able to sell 2 tickets prior to Chippenham because of the complexity of the system. Had we had to wait at the driver's cab, the train would have been rather held up.