Well I hope a huge amount of investment will be going into the rest of the work on the Turbos - just very dubious that this is going to be the case when, unlike the
HSTs▸ and West dmus, the work is being done in house at Reading depot.
I'm sure the workforce there is more than capable, but it does make me sceptical about the scale of the work that will be done - especially when the few public pronouncements on it seem to have dried up months ago and those that there were seemed to be progressively less ambitious - there certainly won't be a new a/c system in the 166s - too difficult/expensive.
They may not be perfect, but actually I've said before that I think they're pretty good trains for reasonably short journeys (sub-one-hour). And much as people whinge about them now, at least FGW▸ keeps them in reasonable order internally: window etching dealt with promptly, no internal graffiti, seat covers generally in decent nick etc. Some people seem to have very short memories - you don't have to go back too far to when Thames Trains was in control and the bulk of Cotswold services used Turbos
No, they are not perfect and many journeys made on the Cotswold Line are well over an hour, including Oxford-Worcester, never mind going on to Reading or London. I have no problem with them for my own regular 30-35 min journey, so long as they are not grossly overcrowded and I can get a seat well away from the doors, so I don't freeze to death at every station stop for half the year. Unfortunately, when they are used on the first off-peak, Network/Cotswold railcards valid, train from Worcestershire, after a 75-minute gap in the southbound service, they are crowded and extremely unpleasant to travel on - and it would seem that those awful, uncomfortable seats are going to stay post-refresh.
While FGW may be better at keeping them basically tidy than Thames was in its dying days, the fact remains they are fundamentally the same train that was delivered to
NSE▸ and I'm afraid it looks like FGW is going to miss the chance to actually rework them in a serious way to make them best suited for the second half of their lives - how about some vestibule doors to help keep the heat in the passenger saloons during the winter? Dream on...
And my memory does stretch back quite long enough thank you, even further than 20 months in fact, all the way to December 2004, when a certain train operator launched its new timetable with great fanfare, promising the following:
"There are many improvements for customers, including the majority of services between London Paddington and the Cotswolds being operated by new 125mph Adelante trains delivering InterCity quality and comfort to the route throughout the day."
Five years on, with yet more Turbos supplanting HSTs in a couple of weeks' time, we seem to be going back to the future in these parts, with InterCity quality a distant dream. When train operators come out with this kind of stuff, they really ought to keep their side of the bargain. I'm not expecting a great fanfare from FGW next month...
If it were the case that we were getting heavily overhauled Turbos, with 2+2 seating, more tables and the kind of things Insider suggests - which all sounds rather like, er, an Adelante - people might be marginally less hostile to them in these parts, but of course we are getting nothing of the sort, just the same trains we thought we had seen the back of, in much the same state they were in back in 2004 - though at least FGW use a seating material which doesn't seem to work loose after a couple of days' use, unlike the stuff used for the Thames overhauls.