Newsflash

A new train speed record has been set on the Glasgow to London West Coast Main Line.

A Virgin Trains Pendolino made the 401 mile journey in 3 hours and 55 minutes - knocking 19 minutes off the record set 25 years ago.

It is the first sub-four hour journey from Glasgow to London and the operator said it showed what had been achieved by Pendolino trains and a line upgrade.

The £30,000 raised from ticket sales will go to a charity providing motorbikes for the delivery of healthcare in Africa.

The train left Glasgow Central station at 1237 BST precisely, carrying 400 passengers and arrived at Euston station in London at 1632 BST.

Speaking before he boarded the train, Virgin West Coast Trains Managing Director Charles Belcher said: "It's going to be a nail-biting event from beginning to end."

"We want to run this train at under four hours from here to London and demonstrate what can be done and then turn that into a reality on a regular basis."

Before setting off, the train was officially named Heaven's Angels by Nick Pigott of Railway Magazine.

Heaven's Angels is the name of the Virgin-supported charity which is receiving more than £30,000 as a result of the landmark journey.

The previous record was set by British Rail's ill-fated tilting Advanced Passenger Train in the early 1980s.

Billions of pounds have been spent on upgrading the West Coast Main Line.

The record attempt coincides with Virgin's announcement that its West Coast punctuality has improved from 80% of trains running on time in June 2005 to 88% in June 2006.

 

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Stagecoach retain South West Trains Franchise
Written by Engine Driver   
Friday, 22 September 2006
Stagecoach has retained the contract to run services on its South West Trains franchise.

The government said the Stagecoach group would pay £1.19bn for the right to run the routes for 10 years from February 2007.

The South Western Network will be made up of two existing franchises, South West Trains and Island Line, both of which are currently run by Stagecoach.

South West Trains runs services from London to destinations including Southampton, Bournemouth and Salisbury.

The South Western rail franchise, which is the UK's biggest commuter rail franchise, runs more than 1,600 trains a day.

Services in the new franchise include routes between London's Waterloo station and Portsmouth, Exeter, Bristol, Brighton and Plymouth.

Stagecoach said it expected the deal to generate annual profits of £15m to £20m during its early years. The group added it planned to boost capacity on rail routes by running longer trains and more services during peak times.

 
Welcome to Railfest 2004
Written by Web Master   
Friday, 22 September 2006
Welcome to the new look Railfest 2004 - soon to be a full resource for the rail industry and everyone with an interest in UK and European railways.

We are still building the new content, so in the meantime you can find our existing content by clicking here.
Last Updated ( Friday, 22 September 2006 )
 

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