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![]() [uk.transport.london added] On Sat, 24 Jun 2006 13:30:14 +0100, Matt Wheeler wrote: There are proposals to cut peak services to Amersham by Chiltern from the December 2006 timetable. If anyone is interested, there is a discussion at http://www.amersham.org.uk/forum/ipb...?showtopic=224 From the discussion on the link above, there is a feeling that Chiltern are making these proposals as they want to concentrate on services where they are the only provider, i.e. north of Amersham and on the Wycombe line. Maybe so, but having read the discussion myself, it appears to only be a few peak hour journies affected. I think it's far more significant than you make out. These are the most-used trains of the day, and it's scarcely an exaggeration to say that some people's lives revolve around them (did you read the whole thread?). The number of Chiltern trains from Amersham arriving in London between 0800 and 0900 is being reduced from 3 to 1. The number leaving London between 1700 and 1800 is being reduced from 2 to 1. It's a major cut in service. Chiltern have made a big thing of providing more capacity at Marylebone, but it seems none will be made available to passengers on the Met section of the line they serve. How So ? it only appears to be certain peak hour journies affected (and the short sunday runs between Aylesbury and Amersham), there will still be the other peak and off-peak services you can use. I think he meant none of the *additional* capacity... Does anyone know details of the current arrangements for revenue / cost sharing on the Aylesbury via Amersham line, or any suggestions on how to find this out? If you read the discussion you posted a link for it states that the arrangement is such that Chiltern get "free" usage of the LU tracks between Mantles Wood Junction and Harrow on the Hill in return, TfL/LU keep all the fare revenue. It also seems from the discussion that the only reason Chiltern stop these trains at Amersham at all is that LU require them to as part of the track access agreement. Considering Chiltern have little other reason to stop these trains there, and in fact have a large financial reason not to, perhaps all this campaigning to Chiltern is misguided. Perhaps LU should be targetted instead, as it seems to be up to them whether Chiltern reduce their level of service at Amersham or not. If there is an issue about Chiltern receiving an appropriate share of the revenue for the service they provide, then this needs to be resolved in the interests of the passengers. They appear to be the ones who suffer, cutting these trains at Amersham will cause them problems. Indeed. Times have changed and Chiltern are now by far the main service provider between Amersham and London.[1] Perhaps the agreement is out-dated if it discourages the main service provider from actually providing a service. Amersham must be one of the few stations to receive a relatively poor peak service compared to off peak. You're right - the only others I can think of off the top of my head are Rickmansworth and Cambridge. Some have suggested that Chiltern should be allowed to charge a premium to Met passengers. This perhaps could be achieved by the Oyster system. If they were allowed to do that, perhaps other national rail companies would be more in favour of Oyster This would surely be very difficult to achieve, and could only really successfully be done on met line passengers using Marylebone. At all other stations there would be no guaranteed way to determine what train someone used to get there, whereas if you've started at or arrived at Marylebone you've clearly used Chiltern. It would also be the end of interavailable ticketing, which wouldn't be a good thing for the passenger. [1] Chiltern's DMUs can travel at line speed whereas the Met stock is restricted to 50mph in its old age. Chiltern's trains are air-conditioned while LU's aren't. And there seems to be ever more disruption on the Met since the advent of PPP. Anyone with an old timetable able to compare today's journey times with those of, say, 20 years ago? Perhaps when the new S Stock is introduced, with air-con, faster acceleration, and higher top speed, the pendulum will swing back the other way. |
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