When I said the 180s were ideal for the Cotswold Line, I meant in terms of seating capacity and comfort, for all but the busiest trains, in line with
FGW▸ 's pledge in 2004 to provide "InterCity quality and comfort" throughout the day. Plug sockets weren't uppermost in my mind.
And the absence of sockets is hardly bad design - just that First Group presumably didn't ask for them to be fitted when the trains were ordered.
If the five 180s that will be free once Northern gets its 142s back and Hull and Grand Central finish overhauls were to return to FGW as a pre-electrification stopgap, they might have to wait get a heavy-duty facelift, depending on what happens over the franchise, with the seven-year break point looming in 2013. But Old Oak Common is certainly getting improved reliability out of the Hull Trains sets which they look after, according to figures in Modern Railways, though they still have a way to go to match Voyagers/Meridians.
The 180s would certainly help, given FGW's leading spot in the overcrowding league, noted here
http://www.firstgreatwestern.info/coffeeshop/index.php?topic=8288.0 and the fact that according to the latest issue of the
ORR» 's National Rail Trends, FGW leads the way for PIXC (passengers in excess of capacity) around London in the peaks, and the problem got worse in FGW-land between 2008 and 2009 (the latest figures they have.
From the introduction to the new Chapter 2 of National Rail Trends, issued on Monday
PiXC
^ The PiXC data shows that within the sample collected, 2.2% of passengers were travelling in excess of capacity in 2009, a decline from 3.0% in 2008.
^ During peak morning and peak afternoon hours, First Great Western operated 8.2% above capacity during 2009, an increase from 6.5% in 2008. London Overground, London Midland and Southern services also increased their proportion of passenger in excess of capacity. Six
TOCs▸ had reduced levels of crowding in 2009 compared to 2008 (c2c, Chiltern, First Capital Connect, National Express East Anglia, Southeastern and South West Trains).
Full chapter is here
http://www.rail-reg.gov.uk/upload/pdf/nrt-ch2-railperformance.pdfThe only other operator that came close to FGW's percentage was
LM▸ at 5.9 per cent.
So Chris, I accept FGW do need lots of
HSTs▸ heading towards London but they also need to lose the collective corporate amnesia about things they promised their passengers up here back in 2004, which was not overcrowded Turbos with uncomfortable inner-suburban 3+2 seats.
Five 180s would come in very handy, releasing two Turbos to strengthen Thames Valley services from the 05.48 and 06.48 departures from
PAD» and providing a coupled pair of 180s for the 07.09 (07.59 from Maidenhead) or 07.33 from Oxford, both services where even an HST is short of seats much of the time. Which would give you something over 1,000 extra seats heading towards Paddington in the peak. But probably far too sensible for DafT to authorise it.