civdef wrote: I'm thinking particularly of the stuck doors on the Mk III carriages
civdef wrote: Corollary - why do so many train carriages have faulty PA speakers - surely this is a safety requirement?QUOTE] Yes it can be difficult to decode. I think some staff have a tendency to speak to close to the microphone which gives a muffled effect. There is also a tendency to press the PTS button and speak simultaneously instead of pausing for a second and a tendency to release the button before the last word or two are transmitted. But it's a hell of a lot better that the New York subway onboard announcements- virtually impossible to decipher!
civdef wrote: As for the passenger group, that has promise. If there was any rope lying around last night on the platform at Portarlington (train failure passngers offloaded to wait for following train) - it might have resulted in dire consequences for any member of IE in the vicinity - people were pretty friggin angry!
MarkoP11 wrote: The platform gate issue in Heuston is quite strange, now there are legitimate reasons for not opening the gates such as the train being cleaned or the train be shunted. The key issue have spent many long hours in Heuston is getting the member of staff to show up on time to open the gate.
AndrewMc wrote: Quibble: why is the shunting of trains a reason to not check tickets and let people onto the platform (and get them out of the station hall)?
MarkoP11 wrote: If you take the case of the 15:30 Cork Dublin, it arrives just before 18:30, it empties, locomotive uncouples, the cleaning crew do a quick run through, passenger gate opens about 18:40-18:45 train loads departs 19:00, can't fault that
MarkoP11 wrote: Exact train rosters are for IE internal use and are not available outside the company if they where they would expose some inefficent operation where extra services could be provided, such as why IE need 5 sets to run Dublin Cork every 2 hours but only 7 to run it hourly ??
MarkoP11 wrote: I'm fully aware of why you only get 1.5 round trips out of each city gold set a day, they could provide more city gold coaches Thats just one example, the rostering could be tighter provide more city gold services and provide more seats
trainuser wrote: Where are these additional CityGold coaches going to magically appear from?
MarkoP11 wrote: IE rebuilt only 3 coaches to city gold standard, they where 3 first class coaches. The plan was to provide more and to roll the service out to Limerick and Galway that didn't happen. There are 3 other full first class coaches, one normal, one which is part of the executive train (IE used taxpayers money to build 2 coaches the public can't use, 144 seats less) and one in the Galway set. The Galway set also has a first class coach but its used as a standard class coach. The executive train ties up a lot of resources, 2 coaches are dedicated plus a resturant coach and at least one other MK3 coach, thats basically one extra train which spends most of its time idle. Well I can't afford to pay to 3 figure sum on those extremely rare occasion where tickets are publicly available End of the day if IE had been serious about city-gold it would have been on all Cork services 10 years ago, what is putting business people off is the fact if they finished earlier or later you have to travel in a second class coach with curtains with a 1 in the window If Iarnrod Eireann where bothered you could get 4 city gold departures each way 7:00/10:30/14:30/18:30 ex Cork 7:00/11:00/14:00/18:00 ex Dublin
trainuser wrote: With all due respect Marko, you seem to be delving significantly back through the sands of time to pick holes here. We are dealing with the current situation, not that of when CityGold was introduced. The fact remains is that the service IS improving - we now have the concept of clockface departures being implemented and it is far better to have a regular two-hourly service than a mix of times. We should be glad that there is a changing attitude in IE that is seeing sensible decisions such as replacing the Mark 2 set on the Cork route with a Mark 3 set being implemented. This will enable the additional Waterford service to commence next month. Dick Fearn and his new team are in situ for less than two years, and I think it is fair to give credit to them. He and his team are changing attitudes in the organisation, which certainly needed to happen as IE failed to recognise that the customer is number 1. The proof is there to be seen - extra services on virtually all routes together with a gradual move to clockface patterns. Whether any of this could or should have happened years ago is really irrelevant now - the fact is it IS happening. Also, as a businessman who does regularly travel throughout the country for my job, if you think that most of us who get up at 5.30 to get the 7am service want to wait until 18.30 to return then you are seriously mistaken. I say again that the optimum time is around 5pm, as most business meetings will be concluded by 4pm at the latest. I can say this with over 10 years travelling experience in several organisations. I certainly would not want to be getting home after 9pm, having been up that early. And yes I know that the main trains to Tralee and Waterford are later, but I would expect that to change. As for maintenance, all Mark 3 sets have to visit the Valeting Plant every few days (and certainly not once a week as you suggest) for a maintenance check - there are no similar facilities in Cork. Contrary to what Marko posted above, there IS an additional Mark 3 set in operation in this timetable. The set that operated to/from Tralee is, as you point out, in operation on the Cork route, but another Mark 3 set replaced the Mark 2 set that operated on the route. If he had bothered to check the facts carefully he would know that the twelfth Mark 3 set has been formed using maintenance spares along with most of the executive train. Only coach number 7161 of the executive train has not been in public service since the new timetable was introduced due to its particular layout (it's fitted with a horseshoe bar). I would also suggest that a clockface timetable, i.e. trains departing at set minutes past the hour, for all destinations out of Heuston will be a necessity when the hourly Cork service commences and that will be (hopefully) in December 2006, and not 2007 as you suggest. Turning to the benefits of 1st Class, without full catering? To be honest, a guaranteed seat along with some peace and quiet can be heaven after a long day at work. In the morning, for that matter, it can offer somewhere to do some preparatory work before hitting a meeting! In summary, yes there are a large number of faults that need to be rectified, but I think that there are subtle changes in attitude taking place, and I'd like to think that this will become more apparent as time passes. We are always very quick to spot things that go wrong, and not necessarily that quick to recognise that things do, for the most part, actually work in the way that they are supposed to! Finally, I reiterate that I am making these comments as a regular rail user who is not an employee of IE nor associated with it in any way, but who has always had an interest in the railways.
Metrobest wrote: What are benchmarking improvement against? Have you used other rail operators in Europe (apart from the UK) and how would you compare them to Irish Rail? Last time I was on the Cork line I had to stand all the way to Portlaoise. It was 3pm on a weekday. Nobody should ever have to stand for so long on an intercity train, at least not when paying fares that would make a TGV blush!