The Railway Magazine

CONCRETE AND CHINA CLAY

The introduction of Great Western Railway’s 2+4 HST formations reminded train timers belonging to the appropriate age group of the April 1965 No. 1 hit Concrete and Clay recorded by a group called Unit 4 plus 2.

GWR is not yet quite so profligate as to provide 4+2 formations, but who knows what the future might hold? A 2+3 has been provided on at least one occasion so perhaps moves in that direction are “blowin’ in the wind”.

Few would have predicted any such developments when the HSTs were introduced more than 40 years ago.

Those who are accustomed to using West Country oxymoronic long-distance locals such as the 06.00 Penzance-Cardiff Central, often formed of a cascaded Class 150/1 deemed no longer fit to tootle across North London tertiary lines, will have been surprised and delighted in equal measures last April to find their motive power replaced by a refurbished 2+4 HST set with automatic doors, air-conditioning and retention toilets – even though the 06.00 is now ‘change Exeter St David’s for Cardiff’.

Improvement

A word of warning to West Country readers – consider dieting, because 2+4 set toilet door/ fixture clearance is not to Brunelian proportions. In fact the operation was also devoid of an ‘accessible’ toilet waiting for the right combination of vehicles to be received from a stuttering and possibly over-burdened production line.

We might as well get the jibes out of the way all at once. The dot matrix on-board information screens were also still urging passengers to consult the Christmas 2016 engineering alterations, although the warning also effectively said the railway would be messed up at Cardiff and Paddington, which could probably be applied with impunity to any Christmas.

These sets represent a real improvement on those they replace, in both comfort and speed – a rare combination these days. Agreed, there

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