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#1 |
Regular Poster
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 71
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![]() Not sure if this is just co-incidence but twice this week have seen northbound trains at Clontarf Road at around 5.20pm with low passenger numbers ie no one standing and plenty of seats, meanwhile the traffic along the coast road is solid.
I know poeple like their cars but what's the missing link to get people out of the cars and into trains. Seems to be no shortage of trains at peak times on Dart. Is part of the challenge for people working & living relatively near a station getting them from their homes to the station and then from the station to work. As being discussed on the Lusk Station scenario there doesn't seem to be a proper link between bus services and the trains. Would having the city imp style buses running around the housing estates within 2 mile radius of station help? That said they would then need priority getting out of the station to ensure they're not just sitting in traffic. |
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#2 | |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 541
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![]() Quote:
If you want a deeper answer, it's probably because the transport network in dublin is quite poor. Some individual links (Dart, Luas, 46B) can be quite good but they don't cover enough of the city and interchange is poor. Feeder buses with decent bus priority along the route would help. |
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#3 |
Regular Poster
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 71
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![]() The other funny thing was the 32X passed by along the sea front less than half full aswell.
It must be lack of consumer confidence in the product, in fairness the buses and trains are clean, relatively reliable to timetable but guess lack of integration from ticketing to connecting services doesnt' help. |
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#4 |
Really Regular Poster
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 372
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![]() I commute by DART from Killester to Blackrock every day. So far this year the average daily delay I've experienced is over six minutes. In four and a half months, I've lost nine and a half hours due to late DARTs. At this rate, I'll effectively have to work 3 extra days this year to make up for time lost due to unreliable trains. Of course, 90% of these aren't counted as late by IE
I used to think I was just unlucky with the particular train I get (which IE assured me two years ago had been identified as a problem train and would be solved in the next timetable change), but anytime I get a different one that seems to be delayed too. Maybe I'm just cursed. If there was any way of driving there that didn't involve going through the city centre, I'd never take a DART again. |
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#5 |
Really Regular Poster
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 873
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![]() No way man, only 1% of commuter trains are late during the first quarter of this year. FACT!
I saw it on a poster on a train this morning. Were these DARTs or Commuter trains? 17:07 first stop is Donabate and the next commuter's first stop is Skerries so these may have had lower loadings. Last edited by Colm Donoghue : 17-05-2007 at 15:16. Reason: added info in commuter services at the time mentioned. |
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#6 |
Regular Poster
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 71
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![]() The train in question was Dart not sure if it was Malahide or Howth bound.
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