All the 180s have gone back, haven't they?
No, we still have four left until December.
The franchise contract said:
Four of the Class 180 units (20 vehicles) will be subject to a sub-lease arrangement from Grand Central after the lease expiry date shown pending withdrawal from service linked to the IEP▸ stock delivery.
But the timing of that withdrawal, and what "delivery" really means, raises a few questions (as I posted on the IEP thread last night). And the Wikipedia page on 180s says one of those four units went back in May, and even names it as 180108.
Presumably all the stock to be returned when 80xs replace them, under a lease, sublease, loan, or whatever, can only be kept longer by mutual agreement. If they would just go into sidings pending re-lease, there should be no problem with going back and saying "please sir can I have some more time?". Once a new operator has been lined up, then surely there is a cut-off point after which that's not possible, even with the
DfT» 's heavies behind you.
That seems to be where
GWR▸ find themselves, with what was to be little or no gap (between the last agreed withdrawal date for the first stock to go back and the 800s actually running) has opened up to several weeks. And by this late stage all they can do is try to cope, hoping the bright new dawn of sun-dappled pastures and gambolling fluffy 800s is not delayed even more.
I have a mental image of GWR (and DfT as well) huddled down behind a big wardrobe pulled across the door, with pillows over their heads, waiting for the screaming and shouting to die down. "It's not long now, and there's nothing we can do, so just keep quiet and pretend we're not here".
Which looks like a sort of survival strategy. Except ... why on Earth would you launch any kind of marketing campaign now, rather than more logically after your new trains are running about and it's safe to open the door again?