this journey is close to Three hours
And exactly how many people do actually sit on a 150 for two or three hours all the way across Devon and Cornwall? Not many, I'll warrant. They are operating a local stopping service on a line shared with hourly
XC▸ Voyagers/
HSTs▸ out to Plymouth, plus assorted
FGW▸ HSTs. For large chunks of the day, for large chunks of the week on the Cotswold Line it's just Turbos.
dog box's point is a good one, there are many other examples all over the national network of DMUs▸ which are (debatably) inferior to Turbo stock operating services of a similar length.
None of which are operating nominally express services to and from London on routes which were promised - and let's just say it again, since it was a cornerstone of FGW's bid dislodging Thames Trains in 2004 - "InterCity quality and comfort throughout the day" as a step up from the previous service dominated by Turbos.
The rot set in when BR▸ decided to operate the Cotswold line more or less entirely using the Thames Turbo fleet in the 1990s, nothing at all to do with FGW.
Maybe this is meant to be ironic, but I'm not really sure. What actually happened in 1993 was that BR scrapped the old timetable where everything except the two Hereford peak trains (plus the old off-peak Malvern and back HST which often gets overlooked, even though it was the first HST service on the route) stopped at Oxford by extending most services through to and from Paddington.
There wasn't the money at that stage to produce a more bespoke train than a 166 (a cut-price conversion of a basic suburban dmu design), nor to justify four cars, as the new timetable was bit of a shot in the dark, but based on some educated hunches by
NSE▸ , which proved to be entirely correct, as traffic took off.
Long before the end of Thames, the inadequacy of the 166s on a number of services, due to ever growing passenger numbers, was plain to see but with a short franchise they had no incentive to do anything about it. Come 2004, FGW's ability to offer 180s, with the far better passenger environment they had, plus a handy few extra seats, which were normal human-sized, tipped the balance when set against two more years of the same from Thames.
every time i make this point
And every time you make it, there are fewer HSTs running on the route. Yes, there are more than at the start of 2004 but FGW moved over the next couple of years to a position where there were HSTs or 180s on pretty much everything that moved, bar the halts trains (and associated workings such as the last London-Worcester of the day) and a pair of out and back off-peak Turbo workings, one in the morning and one in the afternoon. The late-evening services out of London today are HSTs for stock positioning purposes and the first couple of trains towards London in the morning are HSTs because of the loadings from Oxford, not because there are huge numbers of insomniac commuters living in Worcestershire.
you can stick a Turbo on a service rather than cancelling it
But so many duties have gone back to Turbos now that it's just a Turbo, full stop. Substitutions are all but unknown because there's precious little left to substitute. You can't substitute the evening trains running west because you would have a riot on your hands if a Turbo rolled into Oxford of a morning.
the current situation has arisen because of a confluence of lots of different events
What? FGW decided they didn't want to pay the running costs of 180s and told us they would get more HSTs instead, despite people telling them they were far too big for off-peak duties, even if FGW put some effort into marketing off-peak travel on the line, which it never has. Then they realised what they had been told was true and decided they didn't want to foot the running costs for the HSTs either. So what was left, oh yes, the Turbos, which FGW had branded inadequate for the route when bidding for the Thames Valley services in 2003-4.
Hardly a confluence of events. More a series of volte-faces by FGW's managers, leaving the quality of service most of the time off-peak and at weekends back where it was under Thames. And yet you still seem to suggest that we have nothing to complain about, despite all the things FGW said - openly and unprompted - in 2004 about the quality of service we could expect.
Some geographic illiterate decided that the Thames franchise extended to Worcester / Malvern
While I agree with much of what you say here Andy, what was wrong with taking a decision to align the management of the line with where the main passenger flows are headed? Ie to Oxford and London. Rather more logical than it being run from Birmingham, as it was before NSE took over.
Insider, I will delve into my
CD▸ of back issues of Cotswold and Malvern Line News to see if I can find some timetable details from the 80s but it may have to wait a while as work will be pretty hectic in the run-up to Christmas. Certainly there were just eight trains each way in the 1978-9 service (Terry Worrall quoted in John Boynton's
OWW▸ book from 2003). I think off-peak then was a mix of dmus west of Oxford and a loco-hauled Paddington-Worcester or two.