Two rolling stock companies seem to have a vice-like grip on Britain, something I experienced in miniature the other day on a single journey. First up, the London Overground:
These "CityStar" Class 378s are a variant of Bombardier's hugely successful Electrostar family. They have longitudinal-only bench seating which makes them not very comfortable, but the air-conditioning has been a God-send over the last few weeks.
The 378s have been in operation for less than a year. Although they'll almost all become 4-car units, they were initially introduced as 3-car sets to enable the old trains to be removed as fast possible. Now all the sets have been delivered, they're being taken out one at a time to have an extra carriage inserted.
Which is just as well because those on the West London Extension lines are hideously over-crowded, something caused at least in part by the vast (and vile) shopping complex that opened at Shepherd's Bush a year or so back.
Bombardier also won the contract for the Southern company, whose Clapham Junction--Milton Keynes service I picked-up at West Brompton, squeezed between Overground services.
These Electrostars have been around for a while now, and the livery on some of them is looking a bit faded. It's nothing compared to how tired the interiors now look:
That was Standard Class although you wouldn't necessarily notice any difference from 1st Class since that's identical in almost every respect, save for some vile thin anti-maccassars and a proliferation of penalty fare warning notices:
Very restful.
But I suppose we shouldn't complain too loudly...
... the Electrostars are, of course, electric multiple units, and we should be grateful that there is sufficient catenary in this backward country for them to operate under.
And at least they have air-conditioning, even if it does make a noise like a hurricane.
But I started off banging-on about the two rolling stock companies that have a stranglehold on the UK market, so let's turn our attention to the second -- Siemens.
Siemens was a bit of a late-starter and it looked like Bombardier and Alsthom had stitched-up the market. But Alsthom made a complete hash of introducing their trains and, having been the preferred supplier of the biggest commuter company, South West Trains, they lost everything and SWT bought two variations of Siemens' Desiro family to replace almost every single train on their system.
With that success, Siemens have sold the diesel multiple unit variant to Trans-Pennine, for heavy-duty long-haul cross-country services, commuter variants to Great Eastern, the delightful Class 360 Heathrow Connect that has featured on here before, and another fleet to London Midland, to operate outer suburban and shorter-range inter-city services.
I have a soft spot for this family of trains: they are the most comfortable of the new generation, but they also have some faint echoes of style, as if an industrial designer had some involvement at some stage in their production:
They seem more solid than the Electrostars, too. More like a quality product.
As I was waiting for my return train on the West Coast Mainline, I was pleasantly surprised to see significant numbers of freight trains running through -- all container traffic, of course:
What I find utterly mystifying is that we permit diesel locomotives to operate for mile after mile under electric wiring.
Although, truth be told, I remain fearful that the rather ambitious programme of railway electrification unveiled by the last Government -- one of the few useful interventions made by Brown -- is on course for scrapping this Autumn. Maybe I should get used to the sight of diesel power.
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5 comments:
You are clearly both passionate and knowledgeable about our train infrastructure (as passionate as you are about men with small willies).
Anyway, surely it's got better in recent years? We seem to have spent billions.
I'm as in to cars, as you are in to trains. I'm also men with small ones.
This business of end-to-end wired track being served by diesels is bizarre: Edinburgh - Birmingham services seem to be the exclusive preserve of Voyagers (or are they Super Voyagers?) yet every inch of the route is wired to 25kV AC. How on earth do they try to explain it away? I'm sure they're not the only ones. Are there Manchester - Glasgow services similarly mounted? And maybe others???
Anyway, surely it's got better in recent years? We seem to have spent billions.
That's the sad thing -- it turns out that much reviled British Rail was among the most efficient railway operators in Europe. Even though they were starved of cash they managed to electrify the West and East Coast mainlines, most of the Great Eastern system, and swathes of long-distance track in the south.
We currently spend FIVE TIMES as much with our dynamic and efficient private-sector operators every year as British Rail cost. But I don't think our railway is five times better. It turns out that every capital investment in our dynamic private-sector railway costs two, three or four times what it costs inefficient state-owned continental railway companies.
And, in some instances, it is markedly worse: London-Southampton journey times are 15% longer, and there are 25% fewer trains. The fastest London-Edinburgh trains are also about 15% longer now than they used to be.
Still, we'll see what emerges from the 25% cuts we've got coming.
The voyagers / super voyagers were mostly introduced by virgin XC to replace their class 86s 87s 90s and HSTs. The obvioud downside being that with the old electric locos they could couple/decouple to the rolling stock at the points where the electrification started/ended, whereas the new DEMUs can't do that and burn diesel all the way.
Why Virgin chose to take this approach I do not know.
As for the frieghts though, I have no idea why they are mostly diesel hauled on the WCML when we have large numbers of class 90 and 92 locomotive sitting idle in dry storage!
When can we expect your article on the cancelled hitachi SETS Mr Leduc?
Niall: The Hitachi Super Express Train... Oh, Lord, I've been drafting that post for ages (and had another go at it this morning), but the independent review is full of such vast quantities of nuggets that the draft post has now grown to 2,000 words. Which is absurd: no-one will read it.
I might try and post a couple of extracts tomorrow, to give a flavour, but tonight I don't have the energy.
Oh, and completely agree with you about those 90s and 92s -- what a ridiculous waste.
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