Have you ever heard of 'parliamentary trains'? This definition from Wikipedia: "A parliamentary train is a passenger service operated in the UK to comply with the Railway Regulation Act 1844 that required train companies to provide inexpensive and basic rail transport for less affluent passengers. The act required that at least one such service per day be run on every railway route in the UK. No longer a legal requirement, the term currently describes services that continue to be run to avoid the cost of formal closure of a route or station but are often reduced to just one train per week."
Since last December, one such parliamentary train has been running from West Ealing to High Wycombe, once a day during weekdays. Leaving West Ealing at 11:47, it is not an overcrowded service, particularly given that it is not advertised anywhere. Indeed, searching Trainline, you will be directed from West Ealing to Paddington, round the Circle Line to Marylebone, and on from there to High Wycombe for £18.80, journey time between one hour 15 mins and one and half hours. The direct train from West Ealing to High Wycombe takes just 38 minutes and is not shown on Trainline. But how much does this cost? One to work out with the guard... The train runs to High Wycombe with a stop at South Ruislip to change crews, but passengers cannot alight there.
Below: a strange sight befell me as I strolled down the platform to await my TfL Rail train to Heathrow. It's a Chiltern Rail train! Goodness - what's it doing here?
And then I remembered that in December the parliamentary (or 'ghost') train running from Paddington to High Wycombe had to be rerouted to start from West Ealing because of engineering works at Old Oak Common (to do with HS2). Chiltern Rail trains normally run in and out of Marylebone; this 'ghost train' is used to keep the line between Paddington and South Ruislip open to trains from that operator.
Below: three operators' trains at West Ealing; from the left, the TfL Rail service from Heathrow to Paddington; the Great West Railways shuttle service from Greenford to West Ealing, and the Chiltern Rail ghost train. TfL Rail's web page for West Ealing mentions GWR and acknowledges the presence of Chiltern at the station, but won't show you any timetables.
Below: bonus shot. I changed trains at Hayes & Harlington, where my off-peak TfL Rail train terminated. While I waited for the Heathrow train, I could see in the distance a Class 37 diesel loco hauling a rake of what looked like passenger coaches. "An enthusiasts' special," I thought at first. But no - this was a Great Northern electrical multiple unit that looked like it had broken down and was being loco-hauled on its way to the repair sheds.
This time last year:
Progress in Jakubowizna
This time two years ago:
Miedzianka by Filip Springer
This time four years ago:
Out of the third, into the fourth
This time five years ago:
Inverted reflections
This time six years ago:
Observations from London's WC1
and Observations from the City of London
This time seven years ago:
Civilising Jeziorki's wetlands
This time eight years ago:
Warsaw's Aleje Jerozolimskie
This time nine years ago:
Melancholy autumn mood in Ĺazienki
This time 11 years ago:
Autumn gold, Zamienie
This time 12 years ago:
Flamenco Sketches - Seville
That's the former parliamentary train to Paddington, which formerly ran via the now-severed 'Wycombe single' line branching off the GWML at Old Oak Common. The junction at OOC was removed recently as part of the HS2 preparatory works.
ReplyDeleteThe two-car unit fits into the bay at West Ealing, which is long enough for two units in order that a pair can run coupled together between Reading depot and West Ealing.
A number of EMUs pass through loco hauled, amongst them former Thameslink units for conversion to tri-mode operation for the North Downs Line, and 387s in Heathrow Express livery to be used when GWR starts to operate that service.
@ WHP:
ReplyDeleteMany thanks for your comment! In particular regarding loco-hauled EMUs; where does this conversion take place? Was the rake of GNER-liveried EMUs headed there too?
Ho-hej!
ReplyDeleteFrom the picture, the stock being hauled west through Hayes is Class 313 - these are being withdrawn now. This rake would have been headed for scrapping in Newport.
Hobbyist site refers:
https://rail-record.co.uk/first-great-northern-class-313s-for-scrap/
Horrible stock, which will be little mourned I suspect - the first in the UK where misalignment of (uncomfortable) seats and windows seems to have been made a guiding principle for modern rolling stock "design". We are only recently seeing some reversion from this.
Hej-ho,
Poloczek
@ Andrzej,
ReplyDeleteThanks for that useful info - amazing to think that Class 313s were starting service 43 years ago! First of the non-slam-door stock and all that.
I won't miss the 313s either!
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure where the ex-Thameslink EMUs will be converted (gen-sets added)however a number are currently shored in Reading depot. I gather that planning work on platform extensions between Reading and Redhill is underway, the 'new' stock being 4-car units rather than 3-car. The aim is also to go up to 3tph on the route.
Another reason for the parliamentary trains is maintaining driver route knowledge. Greenford to West Ealing will be a useful diversionary route (one day with Crossrail connections)when the line into Marylebone is closed for engineering work.