Oh and as an afterthought - what about a service via Cheltenham 5 times a day ? This would give many advantages :
* A 2 hour Worcester to London journey time
* Direct service to the capital from Ashchurch for Tewkesbury
* Limited station stops
* A half an hour reduction on journey time for Cheltenham to London
Just a thought....
How would you get a two-hour Worcester-London time via Cheltenham, and, in particular, cut 30 minutes off Cheltenham-London without running non-stop? And bypassing Gloucester, which is rather bigger than Worcester?
I wasnt suggesting cutting out Gloucester stops, these would be extra trains. On Sundays in March according to the
NR» Timetable, There are one or two direct Hereford - Worcester - Cheltenham - Swindon- London trains. The journey times are pretty quick on some - 17 minutes Worcester to Cheltenham and 40 minutes Cheltenham to Swindon. Add an hour to get to London and thats sub 2 hours Worcester to London, which is what Worcester commuters are looking for !
Could you actually give us the full detailed station by station timings for one of these trains please? The only train running through that I can find in
FGW▸ 's timetable alterations section for March is on the 29th, leaving London at 18.37 and calling everywhere you would expect along the way, including Gloucester, and taking three hours, 10 minutes to reach Shrub Hill. Change at Didcot and go via the Cotswold Line and you get there in 2hrs 39mins. Both, of course, inflated Sunday timings.
And for all those who think a two-hour timing will suddenly bring hundreds of extra passengers out of the woodwork in Worcester, a cousin of mine did, for a time, semi-commute at his employer's expense from York to London - a two-hour run - but gave up in the end, because it was just too wearing travelling four hours a day, even on non-stop expresses. Worcester isn't regular London commuting territory and never will be.
A two-hour London run may bring back a few of the 'drive somewhere else' business travel brigade but I refuse to believe they are so numerous, or such frequent travellers, to be able to support a series of limited-stop trains, all day, every day. If FGW, Thames and
BR▸ before them had thought there was such a rich vein of revenue out there in Worcester, they would have structured the entire timetable around it long ago and left the rest of the route with a 1970s level of service. The current timetable isn't an accident, it's the result of careful analysis of travel patterns over many years - not some conspiracy against Worcester.
Similarly, the current redoubling design is the result of careful analysis, one of the conclusions of which, not surprisingly, was that two sections of single line were better than having three, whatever their length, due to the obvious risks of added delay at each single section - not least between Honeybourne and Moreton, where an ailing Oxford-bound
HST▸ running on one engine will lose time hand over fist climbing Campden bank, holding up anything trying to go the other way and anything following it - one of the ways that a problem with a single train can destroy the entire morning peak timetable at present.
With more single sections, you would also almost certainly lose the ability to offer a 15-minute interval service and with it the option of running an extra fast train or two in the peaks. A lot of money was spent computer-modelling all sorts of service options before this one was chosen.
The project is meant to provide reliability and punctuality and allow you to remove 'Cotswold time' from your calculations, because it seems to me that reliability, punctuality - and frequency - are what you value in your journeys with Chiltern, Andy. Whether FGW can find enough trains, offering the right quality for the route, at the right frequency, is the factor that is outside Network Rail's control. They seem confident they can deliver the other two.