dowlingm wrote: » same here with the needless reprinting of GO Transit's fleet from green to "snot green", so in any given consist you have either green, faded green in need of repaint, or snot. Desperate looking.
GarIT wrote: » I want these http://irishrailwaymodeller.com/uploads/monthly_2012_08/Orange03.jpg.b39c73fa2357b5f009c2c78d223c221b.jpg
cython wrote: » You wish it'd only be a year of mismatches! The 29k repaint kicked off a few years ago at this point and they're still not all done!
GM228 wrote: » There was no money to "come up with" the original DART livery. The livery was based on the Bombardier designed two-tone green livery they supplied the CIE KD buses in, the green represented CIE(')s Dublin operations and from 1987 when Dublin Bus was set up they adopted the two-tone green livery (with an added orange stripe) as their corporate livery.
MGWR wrote: » Even coming up with "DART" was an expense (versus "Dublin District"). Would have been cheaper to stick with the broken wheel CIE logo, which is what the 8100/8300 class were delivered with; and it was even extra money to come up with the original two-tone green scheme versus the standard (at the time) orange and black, and even then not all of the fleet was converted from the "black and tan" with the white stripe on top from the 1960s, with the Park Royals and the 6100-class push-pulls retired still wearing it. Lots of money on paint jobs on the Irish railways over the past half century but not enough on the railways themselves.
Del.Monte wrote: » Yes, but a shop keeper doesn't spend a fortune rebranding his shop pointlessly. Who are the other railway companies operating in Ireland that IE need to stand out from - the RPSI or Belmond? Plus a shopkeeper has to pay for his own rebranding not the taxpayer.
gooddarts10 wrote: » So a shopkeeper should never waste money painting his shopfront as it doesn't affect the running of his shop ? Trains are Irish rails shopfront. You could run a design competition and pick a livery from that , something like the NTA did when they were deciding the livery for the newly privatised bus routes.
MGWR wrote: » You want the government to waste more money on things that ought to be spent on more important things (e.g. infrastructure, expansion)? A coat of paint does not affect how well the train runs, and it merely sends more money out to consultants, graphic designers and the paint shop so there can be one year of mismatches on the fleet for no reason. And how many times has IE changed its paint schemes in the past decade anyhow? Even coming up with "DART" was an expense (versus "Dublin District"). Would have been cheaper to stick with the broken wheel CIE logo, which is what the 8100/8300 class were delivered with; and it was even extra money to come up with the original two-tone green scheme versus the standard (at the time) orange and black, and even then not all of the fleet was converted from the "black and tan" with the white stripe on top from the 1960s, with the Park Royals and the 6100-class push-pulls retired still wearing it. Lots of money on paint jobs on the Irish railways over the past half century but not enough on the railways themselves.
Del.Monte wrote: The original Linke-Hofmann-Busch EMUS are by far the most comfortable DART vehicles - decent cushions on the seats and opening windows. They even look the most pleasing externally.
tabbey wrote: » Black & Tan was the norm for twenty years before the DART green and was always boring. I am convinced that the green livery and clean, neat appearance was one of the reasons why DART became so popular almost instantly in 1984. The DART scheme is fine, let us hold onto something good for a change.
Del.Monte wrote: » The original Linke-Hofmann-Busch EMUs are by far the most comfortable DART vehicles - decent cushions on the seats and opening windows. They even look the most pleasing externally. Why change the livery when it's one of the few decent liveries on Irish Rail?
gooddarts10 wrote: » With the current livery basically the same since the DART's introduction in the 80s is it time for a change?
tabbey wrote: » Certainly no worse than the insipid current ICR livery. The real problem with black + tan was the unwillingness or inability of CIE / IR to keep it clean. PS - the full buffer/ jumper cover reveals the train to have been when new. Is it a computer generated livery image or did Rotem actually paint it for evaluation?
Jamie2k9 wrote: » Think the DART could do with a freshen up (particularly with future expansion) , the only paint job that's old but still good is the MarkIV. I liked the new 2900 and think the ICRs need a freshen up but I guess it would be a case of going like 2900 or tweak the silver. Are the ICRs sparyed or stickers applied?
tabbey wrote: » Is it a computer generated livery image or did Rotem actually paint it for evaluation?
tabbey wrote: » Why change something that is fine? Black & Tan was the norm for twenty years before the DART green and was always boring. I am convinced that the green livery and clean, neat appearance was one of the reasons why DART became so popular almost instantly in 1984. The DART scheme is fine, let us hold onto something good for a change.
Del.Monte wrote: » The UTA carriage pictured on this link is a good example of an unfussy, serviceable livery.https://akehoe.smugmug.com/PreservedIrishRailwaysGroups/Downpatrick-Co-Down-Railway/Carriages-and-Wagons/i-G5p6Z5q/A
SEPT 23 1989 wrote: » It should be blue