Recent Public Posts - [guest]
| Re: Two East Midlands Railway trains collide near Bedford, 19th June 2026 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [376388/32151/51] Posted by a-driver at 17:36, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
"TPWS has been installed throughout much of Britain’s rail network. Unfortunately, TPWS had not been installed here. If TPWS had been installed, this accident would not have happened, the driver would not have died and no passengers would have been injured"
TPWS isn’t fitted to all signals, generally only to high risk signals.
Maybe this might be a recommendation of the RAIB given the known risk of crossovers.
Let's see. I do think that ASLEF are treating it as certain the TPWS would have prevented the accident. It probably would - almost certainly maybe, but I don't see how they can be dogmatic.
TPWS would have prevented it, but there’s also other questions needing answers, all or some of which could have contributed to the incident or even prevented it. The full RAIB report will answer those. You can’t pin the whole incident on a lack of TPWS.
| Re: Two East Midlands Railway trains collide near Bedford, 19th June 2026 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [376387/32151/51] Posted by grahame at 17:13, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
"TPWS has been installed throughout much of Britain’s rail network. Unfortunately, TPWS had not been installed here. If TPWS had been installed, this accident would not have happened, the driver would not have died and no passengers would have been injured"
TPWS isn’t fitted to all signals, generally only to high risk signals.
Maybe this might be a recommendation of the RAIB given the known risk of crossovers.
Let's see. I do think that ASLEF are treating it as certain the TPWS would have prevented the accident. It probably would - almost certainly maybe, but I don't see how they can be dogmatic.
16:23 Westbury to Swindon due 17:06
17:45 Swindon to Westbury due 18:26
18:37 Westbury to Swindon due 19:21
20:12 Swindon to Westbury due 20:56
21:16 Westbury to Swindon due 21:58
22:31 Swindon to Westbury due 23:12
22:31 Swindon to Westbury due 23:12 will be cancelled.
This is due to a fault on this train.
17:45 Swindon to Westbury due 18:26
18:37 Westbury to Swindon due 19:21
20:12 Swindon to Westbury due 20:56
21:16 Westbury to Swindon due 21:58
22:31 Swindon to Westbury due 23:12
22:31 Swindon to Westbury due 23:12 will be cancelled.
This is due to a fault on this train.
| Re: Andy Burnham elected to parliament, with a strong transport reputation In "Looking forward - the next 2, 5, 10 and 20 years" [376385/32149/40] Posted by Sixty3Closure at 17:01, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
As Mayor he was quite into devolution for the English regions. Moving funding and policy away from the centre which would probably be good for some areas. I suspect though once he's in power that will all be quietly forgotten as it means given up control.
| Re: Two East Midlands Railway trains collide near Bedford, 19th June 2026 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [376384/32151/51] Posted by a-driver at 16:29, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
"TPWS has been installed throughout much of Britain’s rail network. Unfortunately, TPWS had not been installed here. If TPWS had been installed, this accident would not have happened, the driver would not have died and no passengers would have been injured"
TPWS isn’t fitted to all signals, generally only to high risk signals.
Maybe this might be a recommendation of the RAIB given the known risk of crossovers.
| Re: "Cancellations on all routes" 24-26 June 2026 In "Across the West" [376383/32162/26] Posted by JohnM at 16:03, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
Ever so slightly sarcastic piece in the Daily Mash
https://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/britains-invincible-rail-networks-finally-defeated-by-heatwave-20260624267316
The indestructible train network that has made Britain famous since the days of Empire has finally been undone by today’s terrible heat.
The UK’s ever-reliable rail infrastructure and punctual rolling stock, which since Queen Victoria’s day has not lost so much as a second’s time in a century, has at last succumbed to the punishing temperature blanketing the country.
Commuter Martin Bishop said: “Mark this day, for at last we see the end of Britain’s era as a world power. The sun has set upon our greatness. The trains are late.
“Indeed, some are not only late but cancelled. For the first time in memory and the annals of history, a passenger may arrive at the station to find his service not running at all.
“Climate change we may disregard. The true tragedy here is that the last bastion of British prestige has crumbled. With no incumbent James Bond, Doctor Who or prime minister, our stalwart trains were all we had left.”
Fellow passenger Nikki Hollis said: “This is an omen comparable to the ravens leaving the Tower of London. If our dependable rail networks have fallen then it’s only a matter of time before these isles sink beneath the waves of the Atlantic.
“I know you’re thinking surely not Southern Rail? Surely their stalwart lines are still running with their renowned clockwork efficiency? Sadly, despite offering excellent value for money, even them.”
The UK’s ever-reliable rail infrastructure and punctual rolling stock, which since Queen Victoria’s day has not lost so much as a second’s time in a century, has at last succumbed to the punishing temperature blanketing the country.
Commuter Martin Bishop said: “Mark this day, for at last we see the end of Britain’s era as a world power. The sun has set upon our greatness. The trains are late.
“Indeed, some are not only late but cancelled. For the first time in memory and the annals of history, a passenger may arrive at the station to find his service not running at all.
“Climate change we may disregard. The true tragedy here is that the last bastion of British prestige has crumbled. With no incumbent James Bond, Doctor Who or prime minister, our stalwart trains were all we had left.”
Fellow passenger Nikki Hollis said: “This is an omen comparable to the ravens leaving the Tower of London. If our dependable rail networks have fallen then it’s only a matter of time before these isles sink beneath the waves of the Atlantic.
“I know you’re thinking surely not Southern Rail? Surely their stalwart lines are still running with their renowned clockwork efficiency? Sadly, despite offering excellent value for money, even them.”
| Re: Two East Midlands Railway trains collide near Bedford, 19th June 2026 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [376382/32151/51] Posted by ray951 at 15:49, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
No specific mention of TPWS in the RAIB initial report; possibly something they will look into in some detail if the area is fitted with TPWS
According to a statement put out by ASLEF, TPWS is not fitted in this area. https://x.com/ASLEFunion/status/2069752887970763214?s=20
"TPWS has been installed throughout much of Britain’s rail network. Unfortunately, TPWS had not been installed here. If TPWS had been installed, this accident would not have happened, the driver would not have died and no passengers would have been injured"
| Re: "Cancellations on all routes" 24-26 June 2026 In "Across the West" [376381/32162/26] Posted by Trowres at 15:23, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
It would have been helpful if public-facing information systems had given a fullsummary of the cancellations planned.
For example, all the Bristol-Salisbury services seem to be planned cancellations, but they don't appear on gwr.com or Journeycheck.com (or at least, not where I've searched for them.
Oh yeah, it's covered by "cancellations on all routes". Not very helpful and, one might observe, not all routes are equal when cancellations are decided.
| Re: Marlow Branch Line, Marlow Donkey - merged posts, ongoing discussion In "Thames Valley Branches" [376380/27661/13] Posted by Electric train at 14:54, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
24th. Ded again.
Mark
Mark
I think the service Maidenhead - Bourne End was suspended during the day, the GWR website says it resumes at 15:00, just in time for the zoo express ............. errr I mean the school chucking out time and then evening commute. The Donkey I suspect will be left out to pasture
| Re: German rail network "at complete halt" 23/06 late evening. In "The Wider Picture Overseas" [376379/32163/52] Posted by Electric train at 14:47, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
Reported as being due to IT issues rather than heat related.https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/crm0ek4z7ggo
It was our old friend GSM-R they same technology that cased problems on the UK National network a few months ago
| Re: Two East Midlands Railway trains collide near Bedford, 19th June 2026 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [376378/32151/51] Posted by Electric train at 14:45, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
No specific mention of TPWS in the RAIB initial report; possibly something they will look into in some detail if the area is fitted with TPWS
| Re: Cornish mainline and branch line delays - ongoing discussion In "Shorter journeys in Plymouth and Cornwall" [376377/28556/25] Posted by TaplowGreen at 14:29, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
And another one in Cornwall falls over................
Cancellations to services between Par and Newquay
Due to a points failure between Par and Newquay all lines are blocked.
Train services running to and from these stations may be cancelled or delayed. Disruption is expected until 15:30 23/06.
........also caused the direct Newquay-Paddington service to be started from Plymouth.
The London/Newquay train seems to have been capped at Plymouth quite a bit recently.Cancellations to services between Par and Newquay
Due to a points failure between Par and Newquay all lines are blocked.
Train services running to and from these stations may be cancelled or delayed. Disruption is expected until 15:30 23/06.
........also caused the direct Newquay-Paddington service to be started from Plymouth.
Yep
14:52 Newquay to London Paddington due 20:23
14:52 Newquay to London Paddington due 20:23 will be terminated at Plymouth.
It will no longer call at Ivybridge, Totnes, Newton Abbot, Exeter St Davids, Tiverton Parkway, Taunton, Castle Cary, Westbury, Pewsey, Newbury, Reading and London Paddington.
This is due to severe weather.
| Re: Musings from Italy ... In "Introductions and chat" [376376/32165/1] Posted by Mark A at 14:12, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
Had to look up Lamezia Terme Centrale and then found myself bristling at 'Centrale'. Road, more like.
It's good that going south has knocked just a few degrees off the thermometer. Somerset's a little warmer than where you are at the moment.
Mark
| Re: Cornish mainline and branch line delays - ongoing discussion In "Shorter journeys in Plymouth and Cornwall" [376375/28556/25] Posted by IndustryInsider at 14:08, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
I have read in another forum that a lot of these "more trains needing repair at the same time" issues are actually due to the drivers' cabs in the rolling stock being used being so hot that they can't be safely operated.
Yes, some of them will be. The older stock has mostly had cab cooling equipment retrospectively fitted, which is never ideal. There used to be a 'put up with it' mentality but now issues around fatigue management are better understood, drivers are encouraged to refuse to work them if the temperature is too high...with more than +38 Celsius being the guildeline I believe.
| Re: Two East Midlands Railway trains collide near Bedford, 19th June 2026 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [376374/32151/51] Posted by Mark A at 13:51, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
50mph impact. Ugh.
Mark
I find it astonishing how well the trains stood up to a 79km/h collision!
Remarkably well.
Still a lot of questions to hopefully be answered by the RAIB in due course though. Lessons to be learnt, changes to be made.
| Re: Two East Midlands Railway trains collide near Bedford, 19th June 2026 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [376372/32151/51] Posted by Red Squirrel at 13:48, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
I find it astonishing how well the trains stood up to a 79km/h collision!
| Re: Two East Midlands Railway trains collide near Bedford, 19th June 2026 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [376371/32151/51] Posted by a-driver at 13:21, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
Preliminary RAIB report released into the incident.
As we expected, driver of the EMR train passed a red signal….
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/collision-between-two-passenger-trains-near-elstow
| Re: Cornish mainline and branch line delays - ongoing discussion In "Shorter journeys in Plymouth and Cornwall" [376370/28556/25] Posted by old original at 12:53, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
Truro-Falmouth and Par-Newquay struggling again, as well as other Westcountry branches.
I have read in another forum that a lot of these "more trains needing repair at the same time" issues are actually due to the drivers' cabs in the rolling stock being used being so hot that they can't be safely operated.
I have read in another forum that a lot of these "more trains needing repair at the same time" issues are actually due to the drivers' cabs in the rolling stock being used being so hot that they can't be safely operated.
Newquay two hourly service, Falmouth no service maybe until 18.20 but probably the rest of the day
| Re: Musings from Italy ... In "Introductions and chat" [376369/32165/1] Posted by grahame at 12:41, 24th June 2026 Already liked by JohnM | ![]() |
Thoughts of Motherwell
I caught the direct train from Bristol to Motherwell once - and could have been an hour plus quicker had I changed at Birmingham. And I have stood at Motherwll impressed by multiple trains headed for (or via) Glasgow Central taking express routes and various routes around the houses. I am minded of that today, having departed Reggio de Calabria at 07:57 and arrived at Lamezia Terme Centrale at 12:30 via Siderno and Catanzero Lido when there are other (direct) trains that take between 75 and 90 minutes. Just that the one I'm on is the only one in the day that goes through to Brindisi, and only one of two in the day that links across from the toe to the heel.
Thoughts of Melksham
Sitting here wating for the single line through the Santomarco tunnel - around 15kms without a loop (not sure if there's an intermediate signal and we can be following. I do note that to get to the tunnel off the main coast line, there is a triangle and we were able to wait on the triangle, clear of the main line. And I note from the map that there's a traiangle at the other end of the tunnel too allowing us to head towards Sibari without a reversal. Map says "Limited service on curve" so perhaps this journey is one for the enthusiast?
We could - really - do with the triangle being restored at Thingley / Lacock and at Bradford Junctions. Mentioned before, but this trip through today has reminded by that such an arrangement re-instated would not only allow a significant time saving when Limpley Stoke bridge has been hit (how many times this month?) and / or when Box tunnel is not available, but ALSO in some circumstances it would allow trains to wait off the main line.
| Re: Cornish mainline and branch line delays - ongoing discussion In "Shorter journeys in Plymouth and Cornwall" [376368/28556/25] Posted by TaplowGreen at 12:38, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
Truro-Falmouth and Par-Newquay struggling again, as well as other Westcountry branches.
I have read in another forum that a lot of these "more trains needing repair at the same time" issues are actually due to the drivers' cabs in the rolling stock being used being so hot that they can't be safely operated.
| Re: German rail network "at complete halt" 23/06 late evening. In "The Wider Picture Overseas" [376367/32163/52] Posted by broadgage at 11:37, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
Normal operation was restored quickly. Reports state.
| Musings from Italy ... In "Introductions and chat" [376366/32165/1] Posted by grahame at 11:31, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
* On the future size and character of the UK rail network
* On Intercity and Cross Country provision
* On long distance travel by train
I am writing offline - on a train that left on time and is suppose to take 8 hours and 24 minute across the sole of Italy, but is now a nice, round, hour late and on a diversion. And I have reserved a "window" seat with no window, so catching up on a few thoughts generated from postings (I will add links here tonight when I have better access) over the last few days.
Moderators welcome to quote / link onto the threads - I cannot practically to that from this train. (it's post-and-run mode)
On future network size and services based on what the SoS had NOT said!
There are 2,600 stations on the UK rail network. The quietest half - 1,300 - account for just 3.5% of ticketed journeys - that's just 1 in 28 journeys. The other 1,300 account for the other 27 out of 28 journeys. Rail currently receives a very high subsidy, and it also fails to reach the reliability standards that people would wish. It has been suggested that there might be service reductions to reduce congestion, save the need to invest in more infrastructure, and save money.
The problem is that those 1,300 quieter stations account for 108 million station uses - not trivial, vital to the economy of their catchments. And that most of the journeys made will be to or from busier stations, so by reducing or removing their services you would be discarding not 3% but 7% of your business. Also consider that the savings may be minimal - running a station like Sandplace is much less expensive than running a station like Bristol Temple Meads, and if the smaller stops are removed, the train which is running anyway (unless all the stations on a line fall below the threshold) will simply be carrying a few more unused seats that people are no longer paying for.
The issue is not a new one. Dr Richard Beeching reported on a similar situation 60 years ago and his resulting report set the scene for around 2,500 of the 5,000 stations that were in use to be closed, with minor lines that served only those stations ripped up, and expresses travelling long distances through communities that the no longer served. Some trimming back did make sense, but it has generally been accepted that the report and results went too far - indeed some lines and stations that were closed in that era have been opened and where an appropriate service has been provided, they have blossomed.
Whilst times have changed and there might be very good reasons for closure in a handful of cases, that is just a handful. Community Rail did an excellent job for quarter of a century in helping the general communities served make use of their trains, though in my own area they have moved on now to their "four pillars". We should be encouraging the currently smaller stations and services to grow and to feed the network.
My own home station of Melksham is in the quieter segment - it was the 610th least busy station last year. The neighbouring town of Bradford-on-Avon, half the size, ranked as the 1752nd least busy - it's in the top 1000. The town of Devizes - intermediate in size between Melksham and Bradford-on-Avon has no station. It had one prior to the "Beeching Axe" but it and the line closed in 1966. What a perverse situation. Our area is considered "rural" which means that there are gaps between the towns - the majority of people live "urban" in these towns, and in most ways want and need to travel between them just as they would between the parts of a city.
So -
How should we promote use of the less used stations?
How can we get those stations better used?
Should the success of service boosts such as the Elizabeth line lessen the pecking order and handling for the others?
On the Cross Country discussions
With any public transport - it applies on buses and long distance coaches too - it is all too easy for the statistician and business operators to concentrate on the busy flows, peak and most profitable routes. You only need one driver whether the train is 2 or 10 carriages long, only one track for it, and only have one set of signals and stations. And you'll tend to concentrate on the journeys on those trunk routes that pay the most - which very typically is the InterCity routes to and from London. You'll find the "honeypot" routes are the East Coast main line from Kings Cross, the West Coast main line from Euston, and the line to the West and South Wales from Paddington.
It's no co-incidence, is it, that these honeypot lines are all attracting Open Access operators on which the shareholder - based companies hope to make a profit by providing fill-in services. Typically long distance, big flows, and at times that the trains will fill rather than at the times the people actually need them. The theory is that Open Access should not abstract too much traffic from the [franchised/contracted/public-sector] operation, but in practise they will often compete. We have, as we move from operations franchised to commercial companies to nationalised operation a whole load of senior people at companies like First, Arriva and Stagecoach who have train experience they want to continue to apply, and perhaps that's why you see interest in providing services like Carmarthen, Wrexham, Blackpool, Teeside, Bradford and Hull to London.
The view taken as we change from franchises which are based on a good network of services to a nationalised system of operators under which subsidy cost and reliability to timetable are trumpeted is going to be interesting. Will the HMG operator be inclined to cut services to cost save and make the remaining services less prone to congestion delays? And will that give the open access operators an opportunity - indeed are they already working towards that. Whilst in some ways the two operations compete, they could and should be able to work together, but as far as I'm concerned the jury's out on this. There is an opportunity to work together for a common good, but also an opportunity to screw things up royally.
Good example - when Virgin and Arriva trains were the operators of the North Wales line to Holyhead, trains were pretty much every hour - combed into a common timetable and with tickets for the most part the same / accepted on both
Bad example - when First and Faresaver buses both operated from Chippenham to Trowbridge, two buses an hour within a minute or two of each other. Tickets were not interchangeable so if you bought a return you had to come back on the right bus. And in the peak times / evenings the operations differed substansively.
Are we going to see our nationalised operator cutting out (or trying to cut out) services and stations that require the most subsidy? Or where they are persuaded that an open access operator may pick up the slack / invest in extra services needed while that nationalised operator provides either a "parliamentary" service of just enough trains to keep the line or station open. On the other hand, are we going to see the nationalised operator guided by what is socially necessary and guided by the local councils, members of parliament, and public? And if it's the local influence, does this give real hope for regional provision rather than long distance London-bound service? Does it become something of a postcode lottery?
On long distance travel by train
Many "longer distance trains that do not serve London" were bunched into an "others" franchise 30 years ago, called "Cross Country". Virgin made a good attempt to make a go of this and indeed their "Operation Princess" brought some really customer-thoughtful services. These routes had (and perhaps will always have) reliability issues with an issue - perhaps a lorry hitting a bridge near Arbroath delaying a train also used by local passengers later in the journey to get home after work from Exeter to Totnes. They were also less profitable routes - not the cash cows of London to Manchester, and as a separate franchise this one was noticeable amongst the English ones of needing more financial help. Loco and coach trains, then HSTs (7 or 8 cars) towards the end of their life were replaced by 4 and 5 car trains, occasionally coupled into pairs.
Then Virgin lost the franchise to lower subsidy cost and lesser provision bid from Arriva.
There is a very real train capacity / "how long should it be" on long distance service in the Cross Country franchise. These trains convey far more passengers over shorter distances than long ones. As an example, take the 06:20 Plymouth to Edinburgh. It will start quiet ... but then pick up loads of passengers at 07:46 at Taunton and be full and standing into Bristol at 08:33. Moderately busy thereafter - but almost certainly seats for all midweek from - for example - York at 12:36 to Newcastle at 13:40. And with fixed formation units, it's operationally expensive to carry fresh air around. And operationally impractical in the UK these days to add extra carriages from (say) Exeter to Birmingham. There are other trains from Taunton to Bristol at 07:11 and 08:19 but they take 66 and 62 minutes and passengers prefer the 07:46 which takes just 47 minutes.
I offer you no magic wand - just highlighting the issues and compromised that need to be reached. When considering what isn the "best" service to provide, the question is "best for whom". For the taxpayer? For the operator? For the short distance daily user? For the longer distance less frequent user? For the economies of the areas being served? For potential users who at present are put off by the cost/complexity of fares, or previous or shared experiences of overcrowded and perhaps delayed trains that seem to dawdle via many intermediate calls. Far better for the environment to take the train from Bristol to Edinburgh, far better with luggage, far better city centre to city centre, far better with an hourly service.
As an aside, these Cross Country issues are not unique to the UK. I am writing from on board the 07:57 Reggio de Calabria to Lecce service, travelling to Brindisi. It's a 4 carriage multiple unit - left on time, due at 15:51. We are now at Catanzano Lido, due to leave at 10:52 but it's now 11:21. We were delayed earlier waiting to pass another train that was out of path on the single line, then further delayed here due to a "technical issue", and we have just been told we are now waiting for the next single line. The train is *not* crowded. Goodness knows what the flow on and off will be at the 19 stations along the way, how much time we'll make up, what time we will arrive into Brindisi.
There is a coffee machine in coach 2 - but "Coffee Longe" here has me longing for a really much longer coffee. It's more like an espresso with a few drips of water added, looking pathetic in the bottom of a little plastic cup. Cold drink machine too, but no food. Glad I brought some with. Important announcements are in Italian and then English; others (and I believe there may be a trolley on a later part of the journey) are just in Italian.
Back to Cross Country and open access and service provision. There might be a passenger and environmental case for a long distance, limited stop, train from (say) Plymouth, Newton Abbott, Exeter, Taunton and Bristol to ... Crewe, Manchester, Huddersfield, Leeds, York, Sunderland, and Newcastle. And there might well be a similar case for a Southampton (and Winchester and Basingstoke and Oxford) service ... to Crewe, Preston, Oxenholme, Carlisle and Edinburgh.
We have just left Catanzano Lido - 11:45 (54 minutes late!) and following a diversion back and forth across the foot of Italy because the direct line along the sole close is closed for engineering until the end of this month. And we have just passed through Catanzano 'itself' with a narrow gauge connection, a station in the process of being rebuilt, and few passengers to seen around. In many parts I get the feeling of their being more staff than passengers but that might to some extent be because I'm choosing truly off-peak (I don't know when the peak might be!)
| Re: Marlow Branch Line, Marlow Donkey - merged posts, ongoing discussion In "Thames Valley Branches" [376365/27661/13] Posted by Mark A at 11:10, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
24th. Ded again.
Mark
| Re: "Cancellations on all routes" 24-26 June 2026 In "Across the West" [376364/32162/26] Posted by ChrisB at 09:28, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
Essential travel only on Wednesday 24 and Thursday 25 June into, through, or out of the red warning area.
So, normal service say from EXD to PNZ.....never in red area.
Dangerous statement.
And another one in Cornwall falls over................
Cancellations to services between Par and Newquay
Due to a points failure between Par and Newquay all lines are blocked.
Train services running to and from these stations may be cancelled or delayed. Disruption is expected until 15:30 23/06.
........also caused the direct Newquay-Paddington service to be started from Plymouth.
The London/Newquay train seems to have been capped at Plymouth quite a bit recently.Cancellations to services between Par and Newquay
Due to a points failure between Par and Newquay all lines are blocked.
Train services running to and from these stations may be cancelled or delayed. Disruption is expected until 15:30 23/06.
........also caused the direct Newquay-Paddington service to be started from Plymouth.
| Re: Night Riviera Sleeper train - between Paddington and Penzance - ongoing discussion In "London to the West" [376362/31911/12] Posted by TaplowGreen at 07:12, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
Suspect it would have caught up a bit........
23:46 London Paddington to Penzance due 07:55
23/06/26 23:46 London Paddington to Penzance due 07:55 was started from Reading.
It will no longer call at London Paddington.
It is being delayed between Reading and Taunton and is now expected to be 173 minutes late.
This is due to a fault on this train.
| Re: How would YOU solve CrossCountry ? In "Across the West" [376361/32138/26] Posted by Electric train at 07:01, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
X-country or formally known in BR days as inter-regional have always been a bit of Cinderella service. In BR days there was a large dwell time at places like Reading, 15 plus mins.
X-country did have 125's (HST's) which could be argued were over spec as most of the routes operated were 90 mph, but the 125's were at the time BR's standard intercity passenger train stock thereby reducing Driver training on different traction units also for maintenance spares and staff training.
There is no simple fix, as some parts of the x-country routes are heavy commuter use for example Reading - Basingstoke, Reading - Oxford, Coventry - Birmingham; just to name a few. So do you size the train set to suit these hot spots or for the cross country connectivity?
Perhaps in the new GBR world X-country should revert to inter- regional
| Re: How would YOU solve CrossCountry ? In "Across the West" [376360/32138/26] Posted by John D at 06:41, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
The biggest problem is short sets, and consequent crowding, too many trains just 4car or 5car at busy times (and there is a reason why end cars are labled A and F, because made provision to extend to 6car, but never did).
It doesn't help that XC cancels so many trains, that passengers get doubled up on next service. Their latest performance figures show 9.6% are cancelled, and 3.4% are shortformed (which I think they define as single set that should be double, rather than including 4car that should be 5car)
https://www.crosscountrytrains.co.uk/about-us/key-business-performance-indicators
Basically it is a network stuck with using 25 old diesel trains, that were designed for a high frequency service, in 3 classes (the premier standard never happened), so badly laid out for today's passenger flow. And of course operate huge mileages on diesel whilst on electrified lines.
I understand the units being refurbished have done about 5.5 million miles, and they do around 220,000 miles per year. Although for such intensive use are actually in fairly good condition, if not the correct product for today's (and going into 2030s) railway.
| Hotel etiquette In "The West - but NOT trains in the West" [376359/32164/31] Posted by grahame at 05:16, 24th June 2026 | ![]() |
From The BBC
What a British etiquette expert would never do in a hotel
From noisy corridors to thieving toiletries, William Hanson reveals the hotel habits that horrify him most.
People often behave differently in hotels than they do at home, and not always for the better.
Prominent British etiquette expert William Hanson, who directs The English Manner institute in Central London, puts bad hotel behaviour down to the "commercial" factor. "It's a transactional proposition, so some people wrongly feel they are entitled to behave in a way that they wouldn't at home. Whether that's leaving their room an absolute bomb site or being rude to the staff."
From noisy corridors to thieving toiletries, William Hanson reveals the hotel habits that horrify him most.
People often behave differently in hotels than they do at home, and not always for the better.
Prominent British etiquette expert William Hanson, who directs The English Manner institute in Central London, puts bad hotel behaviour down to the "commercial" factor. "It's a transactional proposition, so some people wrongly feel they are entitled to behave in a way that they wouldn't at home. Whether that's leaving their room an absolute bomb site or being rude to the staff."
Having spent a decade running a hotel, I can very much see some of what he gets at. But yet we seem to have had a charmed time for the most part. People and guests are typically lovely - especially people who visited us on business, be that as delegate for our own business or people working elsewhere it town.
I have (!!) some experience at staying in hotels too - respect the place, treat the team running the place (and other guests) humanely / as people, and if there are significant issues perhaps point them out gently. The article refers to a Faulty Towers sketch where everything goes wrong with a meal, but when Basil asks them they give a "very good, thank you" British answer.














