Are people here really seriously suggesting they promised to make the Cotswold Line's service worse, two years after improving it to loud fanfares, yet still won the Greater Western franchise?
All the spin in 2007 was that bringing in more
HSTs▸ was as a result of the tremendous successes enjoyed under
FGW▸ Link, which meant that the 180s were struggling to cope with demand between Oxford and London much of the day. It was presented as a straightforward swap of one train type for the other and another improvement in FGW's service offer, with yet more seats in nice trains.
And let's get away from the notion that FGW Link was in some way a separate entity from the wider FGW operation. It wasn't, its invention merely reflected the short-term, stop-gap nature of the two-year franchise. Your average passenger never understood the difference anyway - it all said First Great Western on the tin. Changing the names of subsidiary companies along the way is not a substantial or meaningful change, and the same faces were in place in FGW management across the franchise change.
I would refer people to the famous (here at least) December 2004 press release for a bit of a memory refresher, which, apart from a certain pledge, talked proudly about integrating the two operations' timetables and quotes Alison Forster, the "managing director of First Great Western and First Great Western Link". It presents the whole operation as a seamless, integrated package. See
http://www.firstgreatwestern.co.uk/NewsItem.aspx?id=203The removal of 125mph InterCity stock from Cotswold Line services did not start until January 2009, after a year when HSTs had gradually supplanted 180s, with just a few 180 trips lingering on until that spring. Making a change of rolling stock one month into a timetable hardly suggests an organised policy decided years previously, does it? Never mind the underhand way in which it was implemented, with a few posters stuck up at stations days before and nothing being said to the
CLPG» until the deed was done. And at pretty much every timetable change since, a few more HSTs have gone.
I accept FGW aren't in breach of the strict letter of the franchise, because they are using specified stock, but that specification is widely drawn, allowing them as it does to use 67s plus coaches pretty much anywhere on the network, should the mood take them. And it doesn't make what they have done right.
As for
some kind of high-quality 170-, 175- or 185-like DMU▸
we had something better, it was called a 180. A four-car anything else with 2+2 seats would offer better comfort but no improvement in seating numbers on a 166, where a 180 gives 284, though I expect a high-density refresh could push that up to 300-plus. And what we need off-peak here is something with more seats than a 166 but fewer than an HST and which can go like stink on the fast lines east of Didcot. Remind you of anything?
It is not within a TOCs▸ ability to take them [ie 180s] on
Give the leasing company a big enough cheque and you could do what you like with them. If an operator, even a franchised one, wanted to take them on at its own commercial risk, I don't think the government would or could stand in their way. Can you imagine the headlines? The 180s are not the property of the
DfT» . Just as the HSTs that First Group owns are not the property of the DfT.
Who called the FGW robber barons? They do not promote 'special fares' in the way either Chiltern or Virgin do hence they make no effort to fill seats.
How on earth do you expect a passenger to come up with those figures? What I can tell you is that of the people I know fewer than half of those who use the train to go to London use FGW.
Non existant travel time benefits? - Look at the full journey time which often includes waiting for a train in the first place. The maximum wait for a Virgin train is 20 mins, for Chiltern 30 mins, now look at the timetable from Paddington. Should you get to Paddington at 13:30 to return to Pershore how long do you have to wait?
The robber barons bit was a joke, though you were quite clearly asking people to compare and contrast the costs involved among the options you had.
Why shouldn't I ask a passenger who tells us lots of people go to catch trains in Warwickshire? I wasn't expecting precision, just something more than an oft-repeated assertion.
What time benefits? Your journey options involved leaving within a 15-minute window and arriving in a five-minute window. Hardly substantial differences - and what happens if the M42 is a mess?
And are you really suggesting that the Cotswold Line and Worcester should get the frequency of service that the West Midlands conurbation and the places along the way from London can sustain? The last draft post-redoubling timetable I saw shows the 13.21 would end at Moreton-in-Marsh, with the 14.21 extended to Worcester instead. Definitely not ideal, though spreading services out more, and definitely a Turbo.
I can't find any mention of this offering but do notice that the off-peak return from Honeybourne/Evesham/Pershore to Worcester is ^3.70
It's the same thing - it's just described as a super off-peak return so that it has a name that the gobbledegook ticketing system can understand. Its time validity in no way matches that normally used for a super off-peak.
The reasons why FGW doesn't offer advance fares on the Cotswold Line are pretty straightforward - the fares are already low by comparison with journeys over similar distances, the Network Card is valid all the way out to Worcester, backed up by the Cotswold Line Railcard for local trips, you don't need the help of advance fares to fill the peak services (unless you wanted to encourage contra-peak travel and a Saver/off peak return is already valid from Paddington on the 05.48 and 06.48 for journeys on to the Cotswold Line) and you wouldn't want to completely fill up off-peak Turbos off the Cotswold Line with people travelling at rock-bottom prices, as people boarding at Oxford might struggle for a seat, especially when they do offer rock-bottom off-peak advance fares (down to ^4 single) from Oxford as part of their fight with the M40 coach operators.
Cotswold Line passengers can benefit from these tickets if they use them in conjunction with a Cotswold Line Railcard fare west of Oxford, especially for a one-way journey in the evening peak out of London. You can find ^8 singles on the 17.22 and 18.22 and sometimes down to ^6.50 on the 17.50, which, used with a Cotswold Line Railcard single past Oxford would give, for example, a London-Moreton fare of ^12.05, compared with a peak single of ^30.50.
On a return trip to London, a Network (or Senior, etc) Railcard return fare, especially if a London Travelcard is factored in, probably has the edge, unless you do strike lucky with those ^4 fares, though these seem to be mainly confined to HST services that start at Oxford