Tightening up the schedules does not boost punctuality. As soon as anything goes wrong it takes longer to recover. Part of the reason FGW▸ 's performance has shot up is due to the padding - especially on a route like the Cotswold Line where with the old schedules once a train was delayed it stayed delayed and that delayed the next train and so on. With the current excessive padding, at least things get back to normal quicker.
Nonsense. Whilst FGW's punctuality is now up, it is not due to the excessive padding. Over the last few years as padding was added, punctuality got worse. The recent improvements are due to excellent work on FGW's part.
Furthermore, adding padding discourages tight running and allows slack operations, as I, and others, have seen on many occasions on various
TOCs▸ . The consequence of this is that the trains still run late.
I also think we should distinguish between adding padding at the end of journeys (a la Chiltern, where you'll stay on time, and then arrive 5-10 minutes early) and adding padding at every stop and junction (a la
XC▸ , where you seem to dwell for 5+ mins at every station; admittedly XC can't path perfectly throughout the country, but the padding is still unacceptable
IMO▸ ). The former is a lot better, as regular travellers know the real timings, and occasional travellers are extra happy with the TOC.
I know that when I travel Chiltern, I'll get in at least 5 mins early each time.
It's not nonsense my old mate. It's nonsense to suggest that you'll
always be on time on Chiltern though - having travelled on three of their trains today all were late, by less than 10 minutes in each case, but all late nonetheless. The
LTV▸ stats for FGW were actually better than Chilterns a couple of weeks ago - not bad considering the open route nature of the LTV routes compared with the largely self-contained Chiltern route. The challenge for FGW is to retain these figures which Chiltern has achieved year on year.
I'm pretty sure FGW's performance on the Cotswold Line is at record levels at the moment. Like it or not, that's partly down to the padding - if FGW removed all the padding you would see the figures tumble. That's due mostly due to the
HST▸ 's that are on the route needing that extra time to allow for silly problems like the
SDO▸ fault FallenAngel was talking about the other day.
Yes, there was similar amounts of padding in the latter days of the Forster years when HST's replaced the Adelantes, but that was when she was happy to see peak trains stand at Charlbury for 5 minutes every morning when everyone piled in the one set of doors that wasn't first class that was platformed. That was when bikes were loaded in power cars as a matter of routine, but unlocking the door and hanging the damn thing up could also take minutes. That was when the crew were new to the trains (driving a HST is a completely different technique to driving a turbo) and faults with the new SDO system were being ironed out. That was when ridiculously tight turn-rounds at Malvern were in the timetable. That was when more trains were HST's. That was when there was a tangible malaise affecting the staff and passengers alike. Enough differences for you?
Now, since those dark days, most of the major problems have been ironed out. The padding still stays because of the fragile nature of the route, and FGW's desperate need to climb back up the respectability table. Some of the padding will go when the re-doubling work is complete. It will be interesting to see how much...