The through services to beyond Oxford, mostly being 165/166s, could probably be cut back (by requiring a change at Oxford, except on the IC▸ services) to allow a loco swap or EMU▸ drag on the remaining services, the ones currently using IC125s (I guess that's mainly the Hereford services).
Spare us the guesswork. If your approach was adopted, you would kill the nearly 20 years of growing traffic on the Cotswold Line at one fell swoop - and completely waste the investment in redoubling. That growth has been built on the back of through trains to and from Reading and London, which now constitute almost the entire service on the route, whatever type of train is working them. Rather more important and lucrative than the odd train west of Swansea. If the Valleys lines are electrified, then Swansea and Maesteg will surely follow sooner, rather than later, but just doing the main line west of Cardiff on its own makes no sense, operationally or financially - even if it is a nice idea.
If bi-mode is what's needed to retain the Cotswold Line's through trains, then so be it - we already have under-floor dmus anyway and would welcome back 180s should they return, so what is the problem? For passengers here, having a comfortable train, with an interior layout suitable for long-distance services, is the priority, not whether there's a diesel engine or a transformer under the floor, and outside the peaks, peak shoulders and the busiest weekend trains, something the size of an
HST▸ is not needed.
As for diesel locos, I well remember all the time that was taken at Wolverhampton attaching/detaching diesels and electric locos on Shrewsbury services in the 1980s (10 minutes was allowed for this) and wouldn't want to see that kind of carry-on return, never mind that Oxford station's layout is utterly unsuitable for it - and it's a lousy place to change trains as well.
Ok, I'll hold my hands up and admit that I don't have the local knowlage etc. to know for sure where you can get away with reducing the number of through services (NOTE: I mean reduce, not remove) or where you can swap locos easily. Since swapping one loco for another wouldn't work, would Oxford's station layout allow for an EMU drag means of operation instead, perhaps with the wires extending a short distance beyond the station and slipping the diesel off in-motion on approach to the station?
The 5 car bi-mode MU▸ concept brings the possibility of some out of the box train planing. It would be possible for example to run more frequent IC 5 car trains from West Wales and couple / split them at Cardiff and run as a 10 to London.
Nope, that wouldn't be possible. In this case it is not the bi-mode but the 26m issue, which apparently would prevent the
IEP▸ trains running into West Wales. willC complained that
reducing through services to Paddington in one neck of the woods would be a bad idea, but 26m coaches would, after IC125 expiry, make
any and all through services to West Wales
completly impossible (except for using my IC225 loco-swap plan). You are all completly within your rights to try to protect your patch by objecting to service reductions and I'm completly within my rights to protect mine, and the enviromental advantages of rail, by campaigning against a 26m bi-mode IEP.
I hope we can discuss this together and arrive at a workable solution which retains a very good level of service to all the areas concerned while minimising the enviromental impacts.
I can't help but think the 125mph diesel element should be reviewed in the light of electrification of the GWML▸ . After all, there'll be precious little non-electrified track on the GWML (or anywhere else the IEP will operate) with speeds of over 100mph, so I'd have thought it would be better all round to gear it to a 100mph top speed or 110mph at most. We'll see what the boffins can come up with though!
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However, a question for those with more technical knowledge than me - would a Bi-Mode train with such a variable speed limit be able to be geared for a 100mph top speed in diesel mode without compromising the performance with a 125-140mph top speed in an electrically powered mode?
I'd be interested to know this too. Perhaps if bi-mode really is the only option for Worcester (and beyond) trains, gearing the units to run on diesel at 100mph and electric at 140mph, if it's possible, might fix some of the enviromental concerns. Building on this, and going from a suggestion elsewhere that 1/3 and 2/3 doors might be better on this route, a bi-mode version of the Javelins (designed so all the diesel equipment can be removed to cut the weight down to that of an equivelent EMU) could be ordered just for this route, with true INTERCITY (end vestible door) EMU stock ordered for the
PAD» - Bristol Temple Meads/Cheltenham and
ECML▸ routes and the IC225s put on the PAD - Swansea/West Wales workings (as their 23m coaches might just squeese into West Wales).
From what Matthew Golton said yesterday, this campaign will go nowhere now.
What did he say?
The original technical specifications available
here show no difference in acceleration whatever method of power.
Either:
- All the claims electrics accelerate faster than diesels are lies or
- The electric IEPs are being severly constrained to let the diesels keep up and the 20 odd mins journey time savings are lies or
- The IEPs on diesel mode would have a crasy amount of horsepower and therefore will drink fuel like there's no tomorrow, making my point about them being an enviromentaly desasturous desision take on an even greater magnitude (I think Voyager fuel consumpsion figures are bad, this could be much worse). If you can gear the diesel for 100mph without impacting on the electric mode, you might get the acceleration with a more reasonable fuel consupsion.