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31-08-2012, 09:35 | #1 |
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The possible market share of the coach competition is small as they don't have the capacity to actually take on Irish Rail's position
Looking at journey time reductions of 10-20 minutes on Dublin Cork in Dec/Jan Ignore the rubbish coming out of the Independent as it doesn't stack up, if everyone has defected to the bus, why are Bus Eireann's numbers also down? Baring in mind for most routes Bus Eireann has no private competition The fall in passenger numbers actually happened 3 years ago, before bus competition really arrived. Some routes the numbers are actually up.
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Unhappy with new timetable - let us know Last edited by Mark Gleeson : 31-08-2012 at 10:20. |
31-08-2012, 13:30 | #2 |
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I wish I could be as sanguine as you Mark. The forthcoming timetable revisions are likely to resemble a ship which cuts off its masts and rudder "because a light ship goes fast". While Gobe will cannibalise Aircoach and the X8 to some extent, their book-a-seat-get-a-seat model is closer to IE's.
I think IE need to look at making its own alliances with the private sector to expand the reach of its network and fill in timetable gaps. The option to select Dublin Airport as a destination on the website by integrating rail ticket and the 747 service at a discounted price should be a nobrainer. A pre-0845 arrival Dublin-Cork should at least be tried. Sitting on their hands, or appearing to, is not going to get them anywhere. |
31-08-2012, 13:39 | #3 |
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As mentioned in comcor's post I think that it's very important that a faster Dublin-Cork service is not viewed in isolation but as something that will deliver attendant time savings to other routes also.
For instance it would mean a journey time from Heuston to Tipperary town of 1 hour 44mins to 1 hour 54 mins. Whether it will also deliver time savings for passengers travelling to Cóbh, Midleton and Cork suburban locations probably will depend on how the new mainline timetable interfaces with the existing suburban schedule and whether adjustments are made to the suburban pattern. |
31-08-2012, 16:29 | #4 |
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We'll have to see if there even are services to Tipp town after this timetable! Accelerating Limerick and Kerry times should be seen from the UIC60 around Portlaoise, Lisduff and so on. Kerry in particular will be one of the last places to attract the privates so IE should keep them happy, maybe ditching the 2600 in favour of all 22K for Cork-Tralee in any services where that remains the case. If the N22 Macroom bypass goes ahead in full or in part (having finally gotten through ABP) yet another Sister Company Express might not be far behind.
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31-08-2012, 18:17 | #5 |
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Not sure if your point regarding Tipperary is in jest or serious - given the fact that most of the line is upgraded to continuous welded rail and that even now it offers a journey time broadly similar to the road journey (and notably faster for most sections than the Bus Éireann route 55 Expressway) it would be ridiculous if services on the Waterford-Clonmel-Limerick Jct. line cannot be accelerated.
Personally feel that the timetable on the line needs to be reconfigured to facilitate commuter traffic into Waterford as well as its current main purpose in feeding into the Dublin-Cork service at Limerick Junction. Plus run the trains to/from Limerick city. Some would say add a Clonmel to Dublin through train. If the powers that be are really thinking of ceasing the entire service on lines then it needs to be done fairly and transparently meaning that Ballybrophy-Nenagh-Limerick and Ennis-Athenry should be looked at before Limerick Jct. - Waterford. |
31-08-2012, 18:58 | #6 | ||
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Quote:
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31-08-2012, 20:12 | #7 |
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A Sunday service would be good.
Personally I wouldn't have an issue with any line closing if firstly all reasonable efforts to make it work came to nothing. Given the levels of negativity which sometimes surround rail matters it seems like decisions have already been made behind closed doors. If all the negativity could be chanelled in some way it might actually achieve something that benefits the country. Last edited by Traincustomer : 31-08-2012 at 20:17. Reason: addition |
01-09-2012, 11:14 | #8 | |
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Students are probably the most likely to defect to buses as they travel reasonably regularly and have limited budgets. The tendency to migrate to bus is obviously greater if modal journey times are little different, departure points are more convenient and comfort levels are reasonably comparable. The major competitor for the railway is not the bus, it is the private car - the motorist needs an excuse to leave his car behind - i.e. less stress, greater comfort, availability of catering, faster journey times, avoidance of rising fuel costs, avoiding city centre parking charges. |
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02-11-2012, 11:32 | #9 | |||
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Gobus and Aircoach regular scheduled capacity is 1,600 per day [2] That is 20%, hardly a fraction. However that is only half the story. Firstly nothing stopping Gobus/Aircoach putting on extra coaches when demand calls for it, just like Aircoach did last Monday evening ex-Cork when they were swapped with the bank holiday crowds. The were running full coaches and were bringing in hire-ins from Mallow coaches, etc. Also nothing stopping GoBus/Aircoach increasing their schedule, number of coaches (e.g. two per hour, etc.) and put on double deckers, as word of mouth spreads and their numbers increase, just like GoBus/Citylink do on their very successful Galway route. Second, as you know well, Irish Rail rarely comes close to filling their trains. The coach companies don't need the same capacity as Irish Rail. Even with only a fifth of the capacity of rail, if they fill the coaches with rail passengers, it could easily equate to a 50% drop in rail passenger numbers on the route. Quote:
A better comparison is the Galway route where GoBus/Citylink have been operating direct non stop services for a number of years. There the market split is 25/25 coach/train, versus the 10/40 last year on the Cork route. If Irish Rail was to lose 15% of the Cork market it would be devastating for them. Given that Cork is their busiest intercity route, a 15% reduction would equate to about a 25% drop in total intercity numbers. If I was Irish Rail, I would be very worried about these new competing services. They are likely to have a significant impact on passenger numbers and what you can charge for tickets. Quote:
Think about it, it costs about €60 return by car in fuel and tolls. A €80 train ticket certainly isn't going to attract you out of your car. Even a €47 advance ticket is a marginal saving. However a €18 (yes return!!) coach ticket might just well do the job. [1] Actually the capacity is a little less, this number is based on all Mark 4's, but as we know, a few 22k are used too. [2] The coach capacity range between 48 and 53, with most around 53, but I split the difference and said 50. This figure doesn't include the existing Bus Eireann service. BTW the number are only in one direction, double it for return. |
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06-11-2012, 23:03 | #10 |
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Except perhaps their licence, which restricts the ability to add services willy-nilly.
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07-11-2012, 09:50 | #11 |
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Standard Dublin Cork train
5 * 69 1 * 28 1 * 44 = 417 + 6 Wheelchair spaces *28 Friday capacity is 11676 Makes that less than 9% Approx 2.5 million journeys per annum. Plus bus licence is for ONE bus per service, anything extra is a breach of licence with the NTA
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Unhappy with new timetable - let us know Last edited by Mark Gleeson : 07-11-2012 at 10:06. |
07-11-2012, 10:39 | #12 |
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I often see the 9:30am arrival at Parnell Place Bus Station when on my way to work. I never see more than a couple of people on it.
I also saw the 2:30am departure go out just over a week ago and there was nobody on board. TBH I would imagine all the business is Cork-Dublin Airport as it easily beats the crappy 747 after you get off at Heuston. However, as Cork Airport has over 40 direct destinations, the demand isn't going to be the same as from places like Galway and Waterford. Last edited by comcor : 07-11-2012 at 10:45. |
07-11-2012, 13:26 | #13 | |
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1) About half the MK4 sets are now running in a reduced formation with only four standards. 2) If the Cork service is carrying 2.5 million per annum (Irish Rail up to recently were quoting around 3.5 million) then the approximate average number of trips generated per train (188 services per week) needs to be something around 255. 3) Given that Tralee and Limerick trips appear to be separately counted and there is nothing remotely approaching an avergae of 255 passengers arriving or departing from Cork, the intermediate business must be very healthy. I would imagine that the majority of intermediate trips are generated on Portlaoise locals as well as Galway, Westport, Limerick and Tralee services. Last edited by Inniskeen : 07-11-2012 at 19:17. |
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07-11-2012, 14:29 | #14 |
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There is very healthy passenger numbers at intermediate stops, Thurles in particular
Load factors are variable but we still get reports of standing room only
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07-11-2012, 14:36 | #15 |
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I often see the GoBe passing me on the M8 its never that full in fact the X8 carries a lot more passengers. Aircoach is the same you only see a few heads looking up at it passing you. As Mark says you cant believe everything the Independent publishes. Sloppy poorly researched journalism.
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07-11-2012, 19:31 | #16 | |
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I think I've used it twice and there would be a mix. I'm not certain, but I don't think the 3.5 million number is for trains departing from/to Cork. I suspect it is people boarding at any point between Cork and Dublin, on any train. It may exclude Portlaoise-Dublin passengers though.
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Last edited by Colm Moore : 07-11-2012 at 20:18. |
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08-11-2012, 03:04 | #17 | |||
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As I mentioned, both my Rail and Bus numbers where one direction only. If you want to do returns, then you have the double the coach capacity too, so it will still end up about 20% So again, I'm afraid your figures are wrong and misrepresent the reality. Quote:
No, I think you are find that all bus licenses allow for supplementary coaches, just as Bus Eireann have been doing on the Cork route on Fridays/Sundays for years and GoBus/Citylink have been doing in Galway. Also nothing stopping them putting on Double Deckers and also asking the NTA for more scheduled services. As for folks saying these services are very lightly used as they can't see heads in the buses as they pass. Well as someone who has actually been using these services almost weekly for the past few months, I can assure you that Aircoach buses are now regularly almost full. GoBE are lighter, but then it is a newer service and not as well known, but it is also picking up business very quickly. The thing is, I'm a Corkonian living in Dublin, with many similar friends. I and every single one of my friends have switched to Aircoach/GoBE. Last week, a large number of other friends living in Dublin (but from all over the world) went down to Cork for the Jazz weekend, every single one of them took Aircoach/GoBE. Sure this particular information maybe just one users observation, but I really can't see how IR numbers couldn't be going down with everything I'm actually seeing in person. I suppose time will tell when actual figures are published. Quote:
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08-11-2012, 03:28 | #18 |
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Crunching the numbers further.
According to the Aecom report, Irish Rail carry 2,434,000 passengers on the Cork route. So that works out at 6,668 passengers per day. GoBe/Aircoach (excluding BE) have a regular scheduled [1] capacity of 3,250 passengers per day. That means Irish Rail now face new competition that has the capacity to steal almost 50% of Irish Rails passengers on this route. This is capacity that simply didn't exist this time last year. There is certainly not a fraction of Irish Rails capacity as Mark claimed, this is a very large and dangerous new competitor to IR. [1] Again regular capacity, nothing stopping them using extra buses or increasing capacity significantly by using double deckers. |
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