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Author Topic: Is the half hourly between Cardiff and Paddington really justified in todays eco  (Read 15221 times)
woody
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« on: July 05, 2009, 10:09:39 »

The use of HST (High Speed Train) sets taken from the Paddington/Cardiff off peak service to provide for Glastonbury folk raises the question is a half hourly service between Cardiff and Paddington really justified in todays economic climate especially when HST services are particularly overcrowded on say the Paddington/Penzance route at this time of year.
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eightf48544
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« Reply #1 on: July 05, 2009, 11:40:55 »

My answer would be yes. Having got a half hourly service it is in my view counterproductive to reduce it in an downturn because when the economy recovers and people start travelling again it will not necessarily be reinstated immediately due to the long lead time to revamp the timetable and work out stock diagrams.

If as you say the stock was used on the West of England line then the West Country would get very upset if their services were then cut to reinstate the half hourly Cardiff's.

No the old adage of investing in a recession to be ready for the upturn applies. Don't forget a lot of improvemnts like the Westbury and Frome bypasses and the four tracking South from Tysley (since foolishly been removed) were carried out by the GWR (Great Western Railway) in the middle of the 30s recession.

6% Network rail 20 year bonds for electrifcation.
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Jez
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« Reply #2 on: July 05, 2009, 12:15:57 »

How long has the half hourly CDF» (Cardiff - next trains)-PAD» (Paddington (London) - next trains) service run? It hasnt always been half hourly.
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matt473
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« Reply #3 on: July 05, 2009, 13:55:25 »

It needs to be remembered that the service not only serves Cardiff but Bristol Parkway as well. Does Bristol Parkway also deserve a half hourly service? I think the half hourly service should remain as when things pick up, there will no doubt be the number between Cardiff, Bristol and London to justify the service levels.
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vacman
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« Reply #4 on: July 05, 2009, 16:27:44 »

It could remain half hourl peak and hourly off-peak, could free up a couple of sets, we could then have an hourly pnz-pad service!
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woody
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« Reply #5 on: July 05, 2009, 16:53:22 »

It could remain half hourl peak and hourly off-peak, could free up a couple of sets, we could then have an hourly pnz-pad service!
Thats what I thought,surely a better use of scarce resources.
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The Grecian
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« Reply #6 on: July 05, 2009, 18:31:36 »

In theory you could always stop the Cardiff service and run one of the London - Bristol TM(resolve) services on to Bristol Parkway, Newport and Cardiff, freeing up an extra HST (High Speed Train) for Cornish services or anywhere else as needed. The Cardiff trains might be extended by about 20 minutes but there's always the faster Swansea service every hour anyway.

On the other hand it might not be that easy - a reversal at Bristol Parkway, services to Weston would be affected (especially in the peak) plus finding an extra path on the cross-Bristol section. Plus as noted above, the Welsh Assembly would not be delighted.
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vacman
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« Reply #7 on: July 05, 2009, 18:38:16 »

If running via Temple meads then surely no need for a stop at Parkway? may aswell just continue via Patchway.
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Steve Bray
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« Reply #8 on: July 05, 2009, 20:16:43 »

Also when the Cheltenham National Hunt Festival takes place in March, several Cardiff trains are diverted to Cheltenham.
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John R
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« Reply #9 on: July 05, 2009, 22:55:23 »

It could remain half hourl peak and hourly off-peak, could free up a couple of sets, we could then have an hourly pnz-pad service!

Don't quite work that out. If it's half hourly in the peaks, then the only time any units are free is between 1000 and 1600, which is hardly enough to get a unit one way between Padd and Penzance.

 
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grahame
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« Reply #10 on: July 05, 2009, 23:10:16 »

To be fair, the daytime half-hourlies to Bristol Temple Meads are as quiet, and nobody is saying they should be cut!

I'm sure that some service frequencies are in place based on "quiet but will grow through the franchise." 

I can find you a certain service (!) that was quiet in Autumn on 2001 but had grown to busy by Autumn of 2006 - growth rate compound 10% to 35% depending on what measure was taken! A huge mistake was made in taking that service off (to all intents and purposes) in December 2006, based on the usage figures for the old times when the service had been quiet, and with an assumed growth rate on 0.8% So although the half-hourlies are quiet at present, it may well be that they are there for planned growth and by 2014 they too will be "nesting" (Nearly Every Seat Taken). 

Now - I'm sure that FGW (First Great Western) and the DfT» (Department for Transport - about) will be looking at / revising estimates based on the economic situation changes (and also the negative effect that reducing a service to hourly would cause).  There is some sense in borrowing the alternate trains at times that other lines have excpetional loadings when the 2nd Cardiff / Bristols don't;  Gold cup and Glastobury, yes - but perhaps also high summer.  And someone should be analysing the unthinkable to see if it has any merit in it ... "Paddington, Reading, Didcot, Swindon, Chippenham, Bath, Lawrence Hill, Abbey Wood, Severn Tunnel Junction, Newport and Cardiff" hourly, together with an hourly Weston and an hourly Swansea.   What a shame about the double reversal to take in Temple Meads and Parkway in place of Lawrence Hill and Abbey Wood. How long would that take if there was an extra driver who simply took the other cab for that short section up and down every day?



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eightf48544
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« Reply #11 on: July 06, 2009, 10:22:01 »


And someone should be analysing the unthinkable to see if it has any merit in it ... "Paddington, Reading, Didcot, Swindon, Chippenham, Bath, Lawrence Hill, Abbey Wood, Severn Tunnel Junction, Newport and Cardiff" hourly, together with an hourly Weston and an hourly Swansea.   What a shame about the double reversal to take in Temple Meads and Parkway in place of Lawrence Hill and Abbey Wood. How long would that take if there was an extra driver who simply took the other cab for that short section up and down every day?

An interesting idea, but if you added frequent tram/trains from Portishead through the town centre to Severn Beach/Yate using the extra pair lines up the bank Lawrence Hill would be an ideal interchange station to relieve Temple Meads.

The trouble is the "bean counters" lack the vision, every public trnsport scheme has to be self sufficient. "Cross subsidy" is frowned upon although in practice every transport system in the world relies  on "cross subsidies" of some form or other to survive.

Even our "highly efficient" road transport industry has to "cross subsidise" empty runs if there is no return load for a particular traffic flow.
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bemmy
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« Reply #12 on: July 06, 2009, 11:22:46 »

I don't see any point having a half hourly service to Cardiff if the trains that terminate there arrive just a few minutes before the Swansea services, which would be the result of the suggested detour through Bristol. A reversal at Parkway would be ridiculous; substituting Filton or Patchway for Parkway would be detrimental, as people travelling to and from the north Bristol area aren't going to want to be alternating between stations.

I see no prospect of millions being spent converting Lawrence Hill, Filton or Patchway into a major station -- I don't see millions being spent on any rail projects in the greater Bristol area, but if they were, I'd rather see it go on increasing capacity or re-opening Portishead. I feel it's a simple choice between keeping the half hourly Cardiff services, or reverting to hourly as it was a few years ago. And who's to say that if the extra trains were withdrawn that FGW (First Great Western) would re-deploy them? maybe they would just take the opportunity to reduce their leasing costs.

There won't ever be an hourly London-Penzance service either (at the moment they can't quite manage to give Plymouth an hourly service). It seems to me that what Cornwall needs most is a half hourly local service on the mainline -- more intercity services would be nice, especially XC (Cross Country Trains (franchise)) ones, but the economics of it just don't work. There's a reason why Cornwall is England's poorest county: remote regions can only have the sort of services that more central areas have if the government provides hefty subsidies, but Cornwall is not in Wales or Scotland or the "north" so however poor it gets it will go largely unnoticed by governments.
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matt473
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« Reply #13 on: July 06, 2009, 16:07:32 »

I don't see any point having a half hourly service to Cardiff if the trains that terminate there arrive just a few minutes before the Swansea services,

I think you may be confused as no Cardiff service terminates a few minutes before the service to Swansea. During peak hours, there is an hourly service to Swansea with an hourly service to Cardiff creating the half hourly frequencies for Cardiff-London. And surprisingly, whenever I am in Cardiff, there always seems to be a large number of people boarding the HST (High Speed Train) towards London so obviously there is demand.

I think what also needs to be taken into account is that the London-Cardiff service is the only regular intercity service that Cardiff recieves which is pretty poor considering the city of its size and the fact it is th capital of Wales. The only other intercity service is the token Crosscountry service which runs one service each way most days. If the half hourly frequency was withdrawn then it would be a PR (Public Relations) and politcal nightmare.
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Tim
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« Reply #14 on: July 06, 2009, 16:37:18 »

I don't see any point having a half hourly service to Cardiff if the trains that terminate there arrive just a few minutes before the Swansea services,

I think you may be confused as no Cardiff service terminates a few minutes before the service to Swansea. During peak hours, there is an hourly service to Swansea with an hourly service to Cardiff creating the half hourly frequencies for Cardiff-London. And surprisingly, whenever I am in Cardiff, there always seems to be a large number of people boarding the HST (High Speed Train) towards London so obviously there is demand.

I think what also needs to be taken into account is that the London-Cardiff service is the only regular intercity service that Cardiff recieves which is pretty poor considering the city of its size and the fact it is th capital of Wales. The only other intercity service is the token Crosscountry service which runs one service each way most days. If the half hourly frequency was withdrawn then it would be a PR (Public Relations) and politcal nightmare.

I think Bemmy's comment about services arriving any a few minutes apart applies to what would happen if half the paddington-parkway-cardiff servcies were axed and half of the BTM (Bristol Temple Meads (strictly, it should be BRI)) services extended to Paddington.  They would take longer to get to Cardiff and consequntly would not be too far behind the next direct service.

Cardiff is smaller than Sheffield which only gets an hourly service to London.
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