Train GraphicClick on the map to explore geographics
 
I need help
FAQ
Emergency
About .
Travel & transport from BBC stories as at 17:15 09 May 2025
 
- Rediscovered Thomas & Friends pilot to be released
* Greater Anglia to be nationalised - rail operator
Read about the forum [here].
Register [here] - it's free.
What do I gain from registering? [here]
 tomorrow - BRTA Westbury
tomorrow - Model Railway Show, Calne
13/05/25 - Melksham TUG / AGM
14/05/25 - West Wiltshire RUG

On this day
9th May (1928)
Train of feathers delivered to Melksham (link)

Train RunningCancelled
16:23 London Paddington to Oxford
16:23 Westbury to Swindon
16:29 Gatwick Airport to Reading
16:50 Falmouth Docks to Truro
17:05 London Paddington to Newbury
17:32 London Paddington to Cheltenham Spa
17:35 Swindon to Westbury
17:38 Reading to Basingstoke
18:00 Oxford to London Paddington
18:17 Basingstoke to Reading
18:21 Reading to Gatwick Airport
18:27 Newbury to London Paddington
18:34 London Paddington to Cheltenham Spa
19:05 Reading to Basingstoke
19:36 London Paddington to Worcester Shrub Hill
19:37 Basingstoke to Reading
19:59 Gatwick Airport to Reading
20:21 Reading to Basingstoke
21:01 Basingstoke to Reading
22:26 Reading to Basingstoke
22:58 Basingstoke to Reading
Short Run
14:20 Carmarthen to London Paddington
16:07 London Paddington to Didcot Parkway
16:10 Didcot Parkway to London Paddington
16:31 Barnstaple to Axminster
16:41 Didcot Parkway to London Paddington
16:50 London Paddington to Didcot Parkway
16:59 Gatwick Airport to Reading
17:20 London Paddington to Didcot Parkway
17:24 Portsmouth Harbour to Cardiff Central
18:00 Newbury to London Paddington
18:04 Didcot Parkway to London Paddington
18:20 London Paddington to Didcot Parkway
18:38 Didcot Parkway to London Paddington
19:04 Didcot Parkway to London Paddington
19:20 London Paddington to Didcot Parkway
19:36 Didcot Parkway to London Paddington
19:38 London Paddington to Didcot Parkway
20:05 London Paddington to Newbury
20:08 Didcot Parkway to London Paddington
20:08 London Paddington to Didcot Parkway
20:38 London Paddington to Didcot Parkway
20:38 Didcot Parkway to London Paddington
21:04 Didcot Parkway to London Paddington
21:08 London Paddington to Didcot Parkway
21:23 Portsmouth Harbour to Bristol Temple Meads
21:36 London Paddington to Didcot Parkway
21:44 Didcot Parkway to London Paddington
21:56 Newbury to London Paddington
22:08 London Paddington to Didcot Parkway
22:36 London Paddington to Didcot Parkway
23:26 Didcot Parkway to London Paddington
23:34 London Paddington to Didcot Parkway
Delayed
16:50 Truro to Falmouth Docks
17:20 Falmouth Docks to Truro
17:52 London Paddington to Didcot Parkway
18:50 London Paddington to Didcot Parkway
etc
Abbreviation pageAcronymns and abbreviations
Stn ComparatorStation Comparator
Rail newsNews Now - live rail news feed
Site Style 1 2 3 4
Next departures • Bristol Temple MeadsBath SpaChippenhamSwindonDidcot ParkwayReadingLondon PaddingtonMelksham
Exeter St DavidsTauntonWestburyTrowbridgeBristol ParkwayCardiff CentralOxfordCheltenham SpaBirmingham New Street
May 09, 2025, 17:15:28 *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
Forgotten your username or password? - get a reminder
Most recently liked subjects
[69] Posting news items from the press / broadcast media on the Cof...
[56] trainee drivers will be allowed to drive trains from age 18
[53] Diary Of A Reasonably Frequent Rail User
[45] Trains on Salisbury Plain with nowhere to go
[44] Driving licences and tests - ongoing discussion, merged topics
[36] Where was I? 2nd May 2022.
 
News: A forum for passengers ... with input from rail professionals welcomed too
 
   Home   Help Search Calendar Login Register  
Pages: [1]
  Print  
Author Topic: Grand Central applies for Newcastle–Brighton via North Downs  (Read 1180 times)
Richard Fairhurst
Global Moderator
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 1286


View Profile Email
« on: April 25, 2025, 12:48:39 »

Arriva's Grand Central arm are apparently applying to run five trains daily each way between Newcastle and Brighton, via Banbury, Oxford, Reading and Gatwick:

https://news.arriva.co.uk/news/arriva-group-submits-open-access-rail-application-to-connect-newcastle-and-brighton-via-london-gatwick

Given that CrossCountry don't show any signs of bringing their own Newcastle–Reading service back up to full strength, good luck to them. Suspect it will be deemed too abstractive though.

(via the Oxford Clarion - https://bsky.app/profile/did:plc:sehe5pdc7ptfh5ayttdusqpp/post/3lnmxy7cfqk2x )
Logged
eightonedee
Transport Scholar
Hero Member
******
Posts: 1804



View Profile
« Reply #1 on: April 25, 2025, 13:51:10 »

That looks like it would be an attractive alternative for getting to Gatwick from Reading compared to the current GWR (Great Western Railway) Turbo service - assuming decent rolling stock. 
Logged
ChrisB
Transport Scholar
Hero Member
******
Posts: 13356


View Profile Email
« Reply #2 on: April 25, 2025, 13:52:34 »

Indeed - and maybe too extractive....I wonder what rolling stock they have identified?
Logged
The Tall Controller
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 365


View Profile
« Reply #3 on: April 25, 2025, 15:12:05 »

They're saying trains with 300 seats which puts it into 5-car Class 80x territory (302-326 seats), or perhaps the ex-TransPennine Mk5+loco (291 seats)?

Arriva's order of 9 new 'tri-mode' Hitachi units for their East Coast route might be part of the long-term plan, but even they aren't due in service until 2028.
« Last Edit: April 25, 2025, 15:19:00 by The Tall Controller » Logged
ChrisB
Transport Scholar
Hero Member
******
Posts: 13356


View Profile Email
« Reply #4 on: April 25, 2025, 15:31:07 »

Chiltern has/had its eyes on the ex-TPE (Trans Pennine Express) stock....
Logged
ray951
Transport Scholar
Hero Member
******
Posts: 517


View Profile
« Reply #5 on: April 25, 2025, 19:49:49 »

I saw someone say it was planned to use class 180 units.
Logged
JayMac
Data Manager
Hero Member
******
Posts: 19312



View Profile
« Reply #6 on: April 25, 2025, 21:52:17 »

Indeed - and maybe too extractive....I wonder what rolling stock they have identified?

For a lot of the route Arriva would be abstracting revenue from Arriva...
Logged

"Good news for regular users of Euston Station in London! One day they will die. Then they won't have to go to Euston Station ever again." - David Mitchell
eightonedee
Transport Scholar
Hero Member
******
Posts: 1804



View Profile
« Reply #7 on: April 25, 2025, 23:33:08 »

On the extraction point, there's plenty of local traffic between the stations missed out by this proposed service to keep the current GWR (Great Western Railway) service well used throughout its length. Indeed,  it might even encourage more who live along the North Downs route to use the train to get to Gatwick even if it means changing trains at one of the proposed service's stopping points.
Logged
grahame
Administrator
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 44021



View Profile WWW Email
« Reply #8 on: April 26, 2025, 06:39:34 »

Indeed - and maybe too extractive....I wonder what rolling stock they have identified?

For a lot of the route Arriva would be abstracting revenue from Arriva...

Which is excellent if your government XC (Cross Country Trains (franchise)) contract runs out in 202x and you want to continue to use your expertise in providing train services to a customer base with similar metrics - snd indeed the same customer base.

Brigthon snd Gatwick to the Midlands and north of England is a known / identified market from the past - noting the 1S76 - http://www.1s76.com

Quote
WELCOME to 1S76.com the rise and fall of cross country train services to and from Brighton.

May 1979 saw the re-introduction of through services from the Midlands to the Sussex Coast and brought daily locomotive haulage back to Brighton to break up the solid diet of EMU (Electric Multiple Unit)’s. The services have served various destinations over the years before the DfT» (Department for Transport - about) and Arriva killed them off in December 2008.

Fond memories of a summer day in 1997 or 1998 when I was on a narrow boat at Hatton with a gang of teenagers and Lisa flew in from there then-home of Florida with Freddy Laker to Gatwick and took the trains to join us at Hatton, where we had worked up the flight first thing in the morning snd were waiting on the Grand Union.
Logged

Coffee Shop Admin, Chair of Melksham Rail User Group, TravelWatch SouthWest Board Member
Mark A
Global Moderator
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 2008


View Profile
« Reply #9 on: April 26, 2025, 08:05:37 »

*Anecdote klaxon*

Dover, not Brighton, but, fond memories of pre-channel tunnel days and two American customers leaving a conference in Paris and needing to meet me in Oxford that evening - for good measure I was involved in an event at Greenwich.

At Dover, advised them to head for the late afternoon loco and carriages heading for... I can't remember. I left Greenwich and headed to Chatham, waited for said loco and carriages, met them on the train, and as it made its way across from South London to the GWML (Great Western Main Line), was able to include in the general conversation a briefing on how best to thrive during their forthcoming week's holiday.

The only fly in the ointment was that this was 1986, the UK (United Kingdom) government had just allowed America to fly from I think it was fairford to bomb Libya and on hearing my companions' accents there was a bit of a frisson in the railway carriage. Shortly after that, I took a bike ride in the Upper Thames Valley above Lechlade and local feelings were being forcibly expressed and not only in several of the churches there. Said bike ride was then somewhat curtailed when on minor country lanes, encounters with a series of rather cold police - this was summer, so, not cold in the physical sense - more in the sense of the reception they gave me.

Dragging this, screaming, back on topic, the Saturday train that ran the Dover - Oxford leg before heading off further north was at least eight carriages and possibly more and was very comfortably busy throughout. Forty years on, the network has changed and Eurostar will be carrying some of those people, but, turning to Brighton, the proposed service will surely find cheerful loadings to and from the south coast. Presumably it will be a fit with the capacity and current services between Reading and Redhill?

Mark
Logged
ChrisB
Transport Scholar
Hero Member
******
Posts: 13356


View Profile Email
« Reply #10 on: April 26, 2025, 15:27:24 »

Indeed - and maybe too extractive....I wonder what rolling stock they have identified?

For a lot of the route Arriva would be abstracting revenue from Arriva...

Rather.....the DfT» (Department for Transport - about)/taxman.....
Logged
Noggin
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 586


View Profile
« Reply #11 on: April 26, 2025, 18:08:17 »

Indeed - and maybe too extractive....I wonder what rolling stock they have identified?

For a lot of the route Arriva would be abstracting revenue from Arriva...

Which is excellent if your government XC (Cross Country Trains (franchise)) contract runs out in 202x and you want to continue to use your expertise in providing train services to a customer base with similar metrics - snd indeed the same customer base.

And if you're canny, your best members of staff too.
Logged
Do you have something you would like to add to this thread, or would you like to raise a new question at the Coffee Shop? Please [register] (it is free) if you have not done so before, or login (at the top of this page) if you already have an account - we would love to read what you have to say!

You can find out more about how this forum works [here] - that will link you to a copy of the forum agreement that you can read before you join, and tell you very much more about how we operate. We are an independent forum, provided and run by customers of Great Western Railway, for customers of Great Western Railway and we welcome railway professionals as members too, in either a personal or official capacity. Views expressed in posts are not necessarily the views of the operators of the forum.

As well as posting messages onto existing threads, and starting new subjects, members can communicate with each other through personal messages if they wish. And once members have made a certain number of posts, they will automatically be admitted to the "frequent posters club", where subjects not-for-public-domain are discussed; anything from the occasional rant to meetups we may be having ...

 
Pages: [1]
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.2 | SMF © 2006-2007, Simple Machines LLC Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!
This forum is provided by customers of Great Western Railway (formerly First Great Western), and the views expressed are those of the individual posters concerned. Visit www.gwr.com for the official Great Western Railway website. Please contact the administrators of this site if you feel that the content provided by one of our posters contravenes our posting rules via admin@railcustomer.info. Full legal statement (here).

Jump to top of pageJump to Forum Home Page