They will order more trains the further the wires get extended, replacing the HSTs▸ kept on.
I thought that the latest thinking was NOT to retain any HSTs.
Was not the ORIGINAL plan to retain a relatively small sub fleet of HSTs for far west services.
But that the CURRENT plan is to withdraw all the HSTs and to order more, mainly shorter,
DMUs▸ for the far west services. These being similar to those already ordered, but with uprated or more numerous underfloor engines in order to cope with the inclines.
I'm not sure what the ORIGINAL plan was, it has changed so many times. I think at one point the entire IC125 fleet was to be replaced with the
PAD» -Penzance route worked by new diesel-only stock with bi-modes on shorter routes. Later, electrification to Bristol and Swansea/Cardiff was approved and the diesel-only new trains were dropped, and at some point PAD-Penzance became an option for new trains rather than a core part of the proposal. The PAD-Penzance option under
IEP▸ was never taken up, so the current suitation is that FirstGW have proposed replacing the remaining IC125s with their own order of new Hitachi 'Sardine Midgets' (and a handful of 9-car bi-modes) but this is subject to
DfT» approval so is not yet the DEFINATE CURRENT PLAN.
The new FirstGW order does not have "uprated or more numerous underfloor engines in order to cope with the inclines". They are the same engines, and I believe in the same quantity per set, as under the IEP sets, but the engines on the IEP fleet are de-rated, the FirstGW order apparently will use the full power of the engines and will have larger fuel tanks.
If however more IEP vehicles ARE to be ordered, then I would hope that the priority would be to build more intermediate, non driving vehicles.
If say 25 vehicles are to be built, then IMO▸ rather than building another 5 half length trains it would be preferable to lengthen 5 or 6 existing half length trains into full length ones.
An intermediate non driving vehicle contains more seats than a driving vehicle, so 25 vehicles applied to lengthening existing trains to 9 or 10 car would provide more additional capacity than 10 driving vehicles and 15 intermediate vehicles formed into 5 short trains.
I agree, the huge number of short trains doesn't make sense to me at all. Maybe it is just the bean counters realised "Walmsley's law" that it makes more sense to use
LHCS▸ if the train length is 6 or more coaches but DfT said no-locos so we end up with short
MUs▸ that make no sense instead?
Not to say that I don't have concerns with capacity on certain routes and certain times of the day post-IEP, but there are at least plenty of
options going forward capacity wise. Many of these have already been suggested, but within the infrastructure that will exist post-IEP introduction you could:
- 1. Lengthen the 9-car Electric sets to 10-car
- 2. Lengthen some of the 5-car Bi-mode sets to anything up to 10-car with additional vehicles
- 3. Introduce more 5-car Bi-Mode sets to ensure that more trains run coupled together as 10-car sets
- 4. Introduce more seating by removing tables and turning them into higher-density trains
- 5. Remove first class accommodation entirely
- 6. Potentially run the odd extra peak 12-car service EMU▸ from Paddington to Swindon
I've added numbers to your
options for ease of reference.
(1.) is fair enough, but doesn't help passengers to/from off-wire destinations,
(2.) sounds reasonable enough expect that the planned use of mutliple-working means that, out of the 50 units ordered under IEP (so excluding) you would end up with more units than you have work for (I estimate 4-7 units) due to over-ordering driving vehicles.
(3-6.) all these options represent further downgrading of standard of service and as such are not in the passenger's best interests
Whether or not any of those will be taken, or need to be taken, is another matter of course. There's also an option for '30 additional sets' within the FGW▸ AT300 proposal for the Cornish services, though the exact details of that option I'm not aware of.
I think the option is a general First Group option, and possibly available to the rail industry as a whole (as with the Southern/GTR order for Thameslink interim units, First Great Western have exercised part of the option for additional sets), not specific to FirstGW.
I also think that summer weekend Pembroke Dock trains will be quietly dropped from the timetable.
I agree that the service will probably be dropped if the Cornish AT300 oder is approved by DfT (please DfT, if you're reading this, approve only the 9-car sets and make First retain a pool of full-length IC125s), unless it turns out the DfT/
NR» simply forgot to assess the Pembroke branch for clearance issues and it turns out to require little or no work. I highly doubt the latter is a possibility though. I'm not sure about 'quietly dropped' though. If it turns out to be axed without a decent replacment being put in place (4-car 156s on nearly all services on the branch might cover it) I hope that the London service doesn't go quietly.