Certainly for that part of the morning peak being committed to the main line meant a more timely arrival into Paddington.
1A72 and 1A04 both went ahead and my service only just nudged ahead of 1A05 because that one was stationary on the main near Maidenhead.
It's an imprecise art when deciding what the quickest course of action would be for a given train. Some trains had to go relief line otherwise there would have been huge delays on all of the
HSS▸ arrivals, but I can appreciate that must be frustrating when your train is adversely affected two days in a row.
It seems to me that either the new equipment IS working as intended, with the failure rate being normal and that this is "the new normal" in which case better get used to it.
Or perhaps the equipment is not working correctly. And might improve at least in theory. Who supplied and installed it ?
Axle counters seem to be working well in other areas of the network where they are increasingly being used (i.e. Reading, Banbury), so I'm not sure why the Maidenhead to Paddington is causing so many regular problems.
but with a typical delay of between 15-25 minutes, so would have be an ideal Delay Repay 15 claiming scenario for the passengers.
I'm still getting my head around all this delay repay stuff, so sorry if this is a daft question but:
Currently: Due to the ongoing delays of however many minutes, over however many days, the punctuality score is below the threshold, so when I renew my season ticket I automatically get my 5% off, is that correct (in basic terms) ? I presume that is all automated by computer when they put my customer number in, it knows I am renewing on a service affected by the
LTV▸ trigger etc.
Delay Repay 15: If the train I am on arrives at its destination 15 minutes or more later, I have to put in a claim, every day, to get a refund. This is then manually processed by the
TOC▸ and something (cheque ? vouchers ?) are issued back to me.
I know everyone keeps saying Delay Repay is the better option, which it may well be for some customers, but to me it just seems a whole load of extra grief for the customer!
Again, I do not fully understand the process, hence the questions, before someone comes along and tells me it's obvious, again...
It is a clumsier system to claim rather than the automatic charter renewal system, but it is much fairer and has a number of advantages. Jason on here with his Mortimer to Paddington season, gets no discount whereas you from Goring (or is it Pangbourne?) do. That's not fair on him as he suffers the same delays as you do.
Also, if you stop commuting for any reason, then the delays you've suffered in the last year count for nothing as there's no renewed ticket for you to get a discount on.
I would imagine in the longer term, technology will mean the claim system will become easier and easier over time and eventually automatic.