Will we see some Stadler GW2/6, those with the short power car in the middle of the train, probably too inovative for the DfT» even if they've been running successfully in Europe since 1995?
Otherwise how about Siemans 186s, Bombardier 173s, or Alstrom 176s?
Personally, I'm not sure I care who builds what, as long as some orders keep the Derby plant running, and they have CrossRail
EMUs▸ to build at the moment. So, for this off-wire stock order I just hope it is something regional expressy like a 158 or 175 with end doors and seats with plenty of legroom and good window alignment. Possibly one for the rumour mill, but I think I read somewhere that Stadler were one of the firms in the running (presumably with a different design to fit our loading gauge). Also don't forget CAF are going to build the new ScotRail sleeper stock, do they make
DMUs▸ ?
Thanks Stuving.
Interesting that it says 120 carriages but doesn't specify number of units. Is that 60 2 car, 40 3 car or 30 4 car or a mixture of each. I suppose that's what makes bidding for a rail franchise such fun having to guess what the Dft actually require
Four 2-car units operating every 15 minutes will potentially carry the same number of pax as 2 four-car units running half-hourly. DfT is concerned with capacity before it is concerned with frequency, leaving the latter for
NR» and the
TOC▸ to decide.
Not sure about that. I think Four 2-car units operating every 15 minutes will carry MORE passengers than 2 four-car units running half-hourly. Same capacity yes, in theroy*, but more passengers attracted because of the higher frequency and thus potentially overcrowding (although it depends how busy the service is to start with).
If you have infrequent almost empty 4-car trains, then running 2-car trains more frequently will help use the available capacity. If you have infrequent long trains which are full, running half-length trains at double the frequency would be a big mistake.
* in practice any of kitchens/buffets/toilets/crumple-zones, will need to be duplicated in which case shorter, more frequent trains would be less capacity