I have thoroughly enjoyed this series. A well deserved 3rd for the class 397 too, rode them for the first time just before and after Christmas to visit family and was very pleased with the experience, great trains
444s are some of my favourite trains in the uk so it's nice to see them place 1st (honestly all the classic desiros deserved the high ranking they've gotten, they're just very good trains). they're so perfect for what they do and they are REALLY good looking. taking one from clapham junction to weymouth was a very pleasant experience.
The 140mph speed limit of the 80x IEP trains is only their potential top speed. In practice, they are limited to 125mph due to the lack of in-cab signalling, and physical track restrictions that should've been fixed with British Rail's modernisation plan many decades ago. However their top speed is still a big factor in acceleration, as a vehicle will accelerate faster at the same speed if it has a higher potential top speed, as the acceleration curve tends to flatten off closer to the top speed.
140mph is not feasible. They tried it with the class 91s but the extra speed only allows them to catch up with slower services more quickly then follow behind. Expensive upgrades just to achieve this was considered a waste. The only answer is to build more lines so the fast trains have exclusive use to them. The chosen solution for this is HS2.
The simple solution is to increase the speeds of other trains. Better use of the fast lines AND increasing acceleration of trains that stop more frequently will avoid the problem of fast trains catching up with slower trains
@@BritishTrainspotting There is not a simple solution at all. Local trains accelerate pretty rapidly now. Trains geared for faster running accelerate more slowly. Their gearing is already optimised for the services they are designed for. But local trains still have to stop. That is their purpose & they cannot all be shoved on to the slow lines, which do not even exist everywhere. Most fast lines are already at their safe limit between trains. Faster trains require bigger gaps. Other countries have faster services on dedicated high speed lines.
Yes they can accelerate pretty rapidly, but so many trains on the network are old and DONT accelerate quickly nor do they have great top speeds. Mixing different trains on the same line is absolutely not an efficient solution, but the government will never bother putting the money in to making dedicated lines for trains so we need to find solutions that the government would stubbornly agree to, such as improving acceleration of slower trains. While yes modern trains have very impressive acceleration, I do not believe they are at their limit.
444s are perfect imo, they don’t need to be flashy or overly fast, they are simple and get the job done and when you’re in Portsmouth it’s quite literally the only class (other than 450) they use because as said “ they just work”. I’m gonna try and build a 5” gauge model of one at some point because I find them to be so under appreciated by some people.
Yes, this unit should've really been introduced elsewhere on the network (I believe like its suburban cousins it has the pantograph well on one of the roofs for dual or AC conversion?), to places like Norwich, Birmingham etc. But in this country, politics overrides common sense.
7:17 well, we have a ton of these in regular high speed rail service in germany. they are almost the exact same thing (some electrical systems are different, and the german units only have 8 coaches/unit), and have a really nice ride quality, especially because the newer units have things like tablet/phone holders and large tables at every seat. the buffet car looks a bit different, and the passenger information system is different, but they are really nice trains.
Loved the 379, took it all the time when heading to college at Stansted, very comfortable to the point where i fell asleep and ended up late as i went back in the other direction a few times
If this video had been made 50 years ago, well, over 50 years ago, it would have been the ten best British trains not the best ten trains in Britain...
More and more new trains and rolling stocks are coming into service next year. Including Avanti West Coast Class 805 and Class 807 AT300. East Midlands Railway Class 810 “Aurora” AT300. Transport for Wales Class 231, Class 398 Tram-train and Class 756. Tyne and Wear Metro Class 555. New Glasgow Subway stocks. South Western Railway Class 701 “Arterio”. c2c Class 720/6 and many more new trains coming into service from 2023. Also I do think that the Class 379s should go to ScotRail to replace the Class 318 and Class 320 used on the Strathclyde suburban routes around Glasgow as they are at storage and are like 12 years old.
Siemens electric trains are the best in my oppinion regardless the interiors configuration. Second place goes directly for Bombardier Derby familly of trains specially Turbo and Electrostar units that ar the predecessors of Aventras. Thank you for sharing your very interesting work.
Great list! I've been on I think nearly all of these apart from the electrostar. I think I'd say my top 5 were: 1. Class 801 (specifically 801215. Best rail journey I've done from York to London) 2. Class 374 3. Class 390 4. Class 350 (its an electric 185 so whats not to love) 5. Class 331 (right this is not because its actually my 5th best but because the acceleration is so good, it makes the journey 10x better than a boring 319 etc)
I more or less agree with this! Great video by the way. The only points of disagreement I have are (surprise surprise) with the Class 80Xs. They look really good in my opinion, but they're incredibly underwhelming. The interior ambience and passenger comfort are my biggest gripe (looking at you GWR). Now, LNER does dilute the infamy of the horrid interiors a smidge but honestly not by much. I'm certainly not giving passenger comfort a 7/10 but probably a 6/10 instead. The first-class seats aren't bad, but definitely, a big step down, and the standard class seats (ones that aren't by GWR) are mediocre but still a slight step down too. I certainly prefer the Mark 3 and 4 coaches more, but the Class 801 and 803 are still decent trains. The Class 800s and 802s are appalling and race their way down to the worst 10 EMUs in modern history. Build quality on them is poor, and passenger comfort is close to being nonexistent. GWR should really snap up those retired Mark 4s and bring back a touch of nostalgia. The Class 390 and 397 rightly bag the top spots as they're superb EMUs, in my opinion, 125mph on a Pendolino feels a lot faster than 125mph on any other train capable of that. Props to the buttery smooth performance, and tilting function I suppose.
I agree with you on the 800/802s, but this list was purely on EMUs, hence I only included 801s which I think are rather good. Thank you for the kind words though!
@GWVillager Mulled over my thoughts on the 80Xs, and having now ridden with LNER all the way to Inverness in first class - my comment on them aged poorly. They are frankly DREADFUL. Mind you still better than standard class but dreadful nonetheless - doesn't help that the headrest never seems to be present on LNER's Azumas.
How did you work out 7 for passenger comfort on the 450? I'd give it a 4, and first class is lucky to get a 2 (yes, the SWR 450 must be the only units where standard class is more comfortable than first). Even combining the comfort scores only adds up to 6. Add a point just for tha sake of it. Ah, now I see how you came up with 7.
@@GWVillager The 450s are everything a Desiro should be - about 2000 times better than the godawful 700s. Shame that SWR have tried their best to ruin the 444s though, even though they're still great trains. South West Trains had 1-2 in First Class but SWR have made it 2-2 for no reason.
Agreed, the rating for the 450 needs to be a smidge lower. Thing is, there is a distinctive difference between the 450s and 444s. The combination of the 444's (single) doors being express-train style at either end of the carriage with doors to separate the vestibule area from rest, significantly more leg-room (very important for taller people like myself, the leg-room in 444s is very good, in 450s you're cramped) and 2+2 seating make them a considerable upgrade to the 450s. The 450s are very good for what they do (i.e. slow & high-capacity stopping service), but then the 444s are nicer all-around. However, what I've really been waiting for is for Siemens to release a replacement to the 444s (as they said they would). Seriously, the 444s are ridiculously good and for sort-of regional-express services, which covers a lot of the UK outside the "high-speed" trunks of the GWR, ECML, WCML, HS1 and (future) HS2, they would be ideal.
I watched the whole video....then got to your #1. Are you mental? I used to love 442 journeys from London to Weymouth. I did one on a 444 and swore I'd never do so again. Hideously uncomfortable. Why are you giving 8/10 score for seats that wouldn't be out of place in the Tower of London!?
We don't get many electric trains in my part of the west Midlands but I will say I have a top 3 from the hanfull I've road on, the class 390, 232 & 350s
While I appreciate the benefits of the tilting functionality on the West Coast mainline, it does have a habit of making people feel a little nauseous. At least that was my experience when I took them as a kid.
But the tracks are & always have been tilted anyway. The APT compensated completely & this caused sickness because the physical sensation of staying flat while the eyes could see you were tilting confused the brain.
Sorry but give me a comfortable HST or class 91 with their longer journey times everyday of the week over tha 800 series. History has shown thay rail trav e l is becoming more and more uncofortable with every new generation of train. The same thing goes for air travel where the seats are shite ans they cram more and more in creating a toxic travel environment that makes things worst when a passanger snaps and becomes abusive.
That LNER 800 1st looks lovely. I believe that we are one of the few countries that have carpets in their trains. I wonder if the 1st Class Universal bog is anything like the one on the GWR 800s, poshest train bog that I've been in anywhere in the world. Worst was russia or Thailand which is basically a hole in the floor 😮
Class374 .each of my journeys the😊😊oscillating has been so bad the pantograph has almost ripped the overhead down.i suggest you travel towards the rear of a 374 to get a true idea of the ride quality.
Wait I've got a story. I was spotting a class 777 in lime street underground and we went on the Manchester Train on a 323. We went out of Liverpool. We went to wavertree. And the train stalled. Then we went broad green fine. Then roby. Stalled. Stalled again. We were still at Roby after 10 munites with the speaker saying. This is broad green this Is huyton even know it was Roby. Then we were there for another 15 munites and then the driver said the train was now cancelled and we had to go at Helens Central on the different line. Then the next week we got the 777 out of new Brighton and that train broke down too. Specificly the 777004
Unfortunately, me personally would rank the 450 lower. Passenger comfort should deserve a 5 and purpose a 6, because some journeys they operate are quite long and something comfortable would be better for that. As with the 700s and other desiros, I am also not a fan of their sounds. Everything else about them however, is really fantastic and I would love to rank them near here.
01:11 LNER Azuma's won't regularly travel at 140 in service - there's no decent train protection system in place until ETCS gets fully rolled out 02:47 you forget GNER ran a 373 to Leeds ? 07:56 no it isn't
I think, as far as EMUs go, the long distance, high speed express units such as 800, 373, 390 need to be considered separately from regional and local trains - they're just not competing at the same game. Having said that, I'm surprised you can give 7/10 to the 801 for comfort! I agree they're great in many respects, particularly performance and looks, but they are the absolute most uncomfortable long-distance train around and are almost universally hated for that. While the first class is bearable, standard is horrid and I avoid it at all costs.
801: Completely agree that they're underrated, I personally find the seats comfortable. They just shouldn't have done 5 carriage IETs, they could do with all being 10 or 11 cars. 379: Fantastic trains but tragically underused. 450: Good trains but wouldn't rate them that high 350: Fantastic trains 803: love them but again could do with being longer 390: Completely disagree, I'm not a fan at all. The seats are comfortable and ride quality is amazing but they just feel so cramped and I hate the seating layout. 397: Transpennine have some of my favourite trains in the UK in terms of ambience, shame they're useless at actually operating them. 444: Good trains but the lack of luggage storage is a major issue.
Having recently been on both the Class 373 and 374, I would swap them around. The ride quality let's the 374 down, you really feel every bump (that seems to be a recurring theme with new vs old stock) the 373 is better and I would say the other categories would be the same for both classes. I wish I gone to look at the 374's buffet in person since it looks amazing, but the train was busy and I had food with me so I didn't bother.
I would be inclined to agree - I prefer travelling on 373s - however other factors that are less obvious such as acceleration, spaciousness, flexibility, reliability and cost push the 374s up in the grand scheme of things.
personally have to disagree with the eurostars, I much much much prefer the 373s to the 374s for the safety features, the ability to run when spilt, in half for the euro tunnel, and the comfort, just my thoughts
I personally prefer the 373s yes, though I think in the grand scheme of things the 374s are better trains. I don't see the point in having trains comply with the UK loading gauge if they're not to be operating off HS1.
@@GWVillager certainly, the ideal would be the best of both, width and body of the velaro (I think that's how it's spelt) of which the 374 is based with the ability to be easily spilt and seats of the 373, if that were to happen we'd be onto a winner
Class 374s should not be on this ranking as they are not designed to run on British Rail Metals compared to their company mates 373s that sadly no more run out of their internationsl routes after HS1 construction and East Coast mainline trial failure. But 374s look and sound great. Further more is not a single production requirement to British Rail Network making them a purely Continental train. Thei are wider than british trains and many continental trains though!
Class 397s are for me the most beautiful trains in the Northwests of England but...is always a but and their riding quality is as poor as their sister classes 195,196,197 and 331 units. Furthermore if you notice a huge mistake, the only i can find on their very good interiors with panoramic windows, is the continuous overhead luggage rack under the lower roof sections of Pantograph Trainler coaches where obviously no items can at all be stored although those tiny inches of hight still there for no purpose but aesthetic, and that is very bad, or else i would just rate as bad feature riding quality. You channel says more of this trains should run if more lines were electrified and i say that no more orders of this trains should be placed under this conditions i mentioned, rather prefer much more class 350s as propper trains the latter are although heavier and more power consumers.
WHAT!!! 444 (and 450) Disastros ride horribly. They've got the suspension of a donkey cart. I was a guard on the Pigs - 442s when they were introduced in 1988; you could run through them whilst they were at top speed 100mph. How on earth you find the seats comfortable too is beyond me, do you not have any nerve endings in your body? Try that with a Disastro donkey cart suspension and you'll rip your knees out. Even at low speed you're chucked all over the place. As for the driving experience I would rather drive an old 400 slam door (can't beat the 159s though at my other depot Salisbury). It would have been interesting to see where 442s would have come, certainly far more comfortable than a Disastro with a far superior ride quality, better to drive too. The only real niggle I had with them, sitting over some bogies there was a constant tinny rattle as if something was loose. Well liked by the punters though (the trains not the rattle). Last trains with compartments too of course.
No train that flies a connecting door through the landscape, often even offensively painted yellow, can be called "good looking". Marks for aesthetics: 0.
I have thoroughly enjoyed this series. A well deserved 3rd for the class 397 too, rode them for the first time just before and after Christmas to visit family and was very pleased with the experience, great trains
The 450s are usually under appreciated, they are my local trains. As you said, “they tick off all the boxes.” I couldn’t agree more.
444s are some of my favourite trains in the uk so it's nice to see them place 1st (honestly all the classic desiros deserved the high ranking they've gotten, they're just very good trains). they're so perfect for what they do and they are REALLY good looking. taking one from clapham junction to weymouth was a very pleasant experience.
This is a great series I'm sure we all loved it. Great work as always GW!
444s are my favourite train and i love seeing and riding on them. Everything about them is amazing!
The 140mph speed limit of the 80x IEP trains is only their potential top speed. In practice, they are limited to 125mph due to the lack of in-cab signalling, and physical track restrictions that should've been fixed with British Rail's modernisation plan many decades ago.
However their top speed is still a big factor in acceleration, as a vehicle will accelerate faster at the same speed if it has a higher potential top speed, as the acceleration curve tends to flatten off closer to the top speed.
They do have the capability of in cab signalling but its the infrastructure as usual that doesn't allow it 🙄
140mph is not feasible. They tried it with the class 91s but the extra speed only allows them to catch up with slower services more quickly then follow behind. Expensive upgrades just to achieve this was considered a waste.
The only answer is to build more lines so the fast trains have exclusive use to them. The chosen solution for this is HS2.
The simple solution is to increase the speeds of other trains. Better use of the fast lines AND increasing acceleration of trains that stop more frequently will avoid the problem of fast trains catching up with slower trains
@@BritishTrainspotting There is not a simple solution at all.
Local trains accelerate pretty rapidly now. Trains geared for faster running accelerate more slowly. Their gearing is already optimised for the services they are designed for.
But local trains still have to stop. That is their purpose & they cannot all be shoved on to the slow lines, which do not even exist everywhere.
Most fast lines are already at their safe limit between trains. Faster trains require bigger gaps.
Other countries have faster services on dedicated high speed lines.
Yes they can accelerate pretty rapidly, but so many trains on the network are old and DONT accelerate quickly nor do they have great top speeds. Mixing different trains on the same line is absolutely not an efficient solution, but the government will never bother putting the money in to making dedicated lines for trains so we need to find solutions that the government would stubbornly agree to, such as improving acceleration of slower trains.
While yes modern trains have very impressive acceleration, I do not believe they are at their limit.
An interesting video series could be a ranking of all the private operators past and present since BR privatisation.
I have considered that actually, I'll probably make it one day.
@The Train Enthusiast Unfortunately they've been withdrawn.
Odd I disliked your take on the 313 so much yet 100% agree on the 444, amazing class of trains. love them
444s are perfect imo, they don’t need to be flashy or overly fast, they are simple and get the job done and when you’re in Portsmouth it’s quite literally the only class (other than 450) they use because as said “ they just work”. I’m gonna try and build a 5” gauge model of one at some point because I find them to be so under appreciated by some people.
Yes, this unit should've really been introduced elsewhere on the network (I believe like its suburban cousins it has the pantograph well on one of the roofs for dual or AC conversion?), to places like Norwich, Birmingham etc. But in this country, politics overrides common sense.
@Lee_303 none are actually equipped with pantographs but they all have spaces on the roof where one could be fitted in.
7:17 well, we have a ton of these in regular high speed rail service in germany. they are almost the exact same thing (some electrical systems are different, and the german units only have 8 coaches/unit), and have a really nice ride quality, especially because the newer units have things like tablet/phone holders and large tables at every seat. the buffet car looks a bit different, and the passenger information system is different, but they are really nice trains.
The ICE 3 Neos! Yes, I was on one the other day and they are superb. Some of the best trains of the past decade.
i love the class 397 and i hope 1 day they come through stalybridge
Loved the 379, took it all the time when heading to college at Stansted, very comfortable to the point where i fell asleep and ended up late as i went back in the other direction a few times
They are great trains, it's such a shame they no longer have any use.
Next do sets of locomotive + coaches video
Possibly one day, though I have other plans for the moment.
@@GWVillager I can understand these videos must be really boring to make.
@@oldtechnobodycaresabout They are a little, I much prefer the analysis stuff.
If this video had been made 50 years ago, well, over 50 years ago, it would have been the ten best British trains not the best ten trains in Britain...
I don't think anyone understands how happy I am that the 444 is top 🤣
More and more new trains and rolling stocks are coming into service next year. Including Avanti West Coast Class 805 and Class 807 AT300. East Midlands Railway Class 810 “Aurora” AT300. Transport for Wales Class 231, Class 398 Tram-train and Class 756. Tyne and Wear Metro Class 555. New Glasgow Subway stocks. South Western Railway Class 701 “Arterio”. c2c Class 720/6 and many more new trains coming into service from 2023.
Also I do think that the Class 379s should go to ScotRail to replace the Class 318 and Class 320 used on the Strathclyde suburban routes around Glasgow as they are at storage and are like 12 years old.
you know, if they got shortened to 3 coaches, it might actually work.
Indeed
Siemens electric trains are the best in my oppinion regardless the interiors configuration. Second place goes directly for Bombardier Derby familly of trains specially Turbo and Electrostar units that ar the predecessors of Aventras. Thank you for sharing your very interesting work.
In my personal opinion the Class 390 is at the top, but apart from that I can pretty much agree with what you said in the video
Great list! I've been on I think nearly all of these apart from the electrostar.
I think I'd say my top 5 were:
1. Class 801 (specifically 801215. Best rail journey I've done from York to London)
2. Class 374
3. Class 390
4. Class 350 (its an electric 185 so whats not to love)
5. Class 331 (right this is not because its actually my 5th best but because the acceleration is so good, it makes the journey 10x better than a boring 319 etc)
Although i think the 444 should be lower ranked, great video
I more or less agree with this! Great video by the way. The only points of disagreement I have are (surprise surprise) with the Class 80Xs. They look really good in my opinion, but they're incredibly underwhelming. The interior ambience and passenger comfort are my biggest gripe (looking at you GWR). Now, LNER does dilute the infamy of the horrid interiors a smidge but honestly not by much. I'm certainly not giving passenger comfort a 7/10 but probably a 6/10 instead. The first-class seats aren't bad, but definitely, a big step down, and the standard class seats (ones that aren't by GWR) are mediocre but still a slight step down too. I certainly prefer the Mark 3 and 4 coaches more, but the Class 801 and 803 are still decent trains. The Class 800s and 802s are appalling and race their way down to the worst 10 EMUs in modern history. Build quality on them is poor, and passenger comfort is close to being nonexistent. GWR should really snap up those retired Mark 4s and bring back a touch of nostalgia. The Class 390 and 397 rightly bag the top spots as they're superb EMUs, in my opinion, 125mph on a Pendolino feels a lot faster than 125mph on any other train capable of that. Props to the buttery smooth performance, and tilting function I suppose.
I agree with you on the 800/802s, but this list was purely on EMUs, hence I only included 801s which I think are rather good. Thank you for the kind words though!
@@GWVillager 800/802s with a seat and lighting refurbishment would make them better than hstss
@GWVillager Mulled over my thoughts on the 80Xs, and having now ridden with LNER all the way to Inverness in first class - my comment on them aged poorly. They are frankly DREADFUL. Mind you still better than standard class but dreadful nonetheless - doesn't help that the headrest never seems to be present on LNER's Azumas.
Could you one day do a ranking on bi-mode trains?
Possibly one day, but there aren't really enough for me to make one any time soon.
YESSSS, Class 444 is my favourite
DO A LOCOS ONE!
Hi @GWVillager I really enjoyed this series. Maybe one day I'll replicate it from the point of view of a wheelchair user...
I agree the 444 is my fav train I love it
How did you work out 7 for passenger comfort on the 450? I'd give it a 4, and first class is lucky to get a 2 (yes, the SWR 450 must be the only units where standard class is more comfortable than first). Even combining the comfort scores only adds up to 6. Add a point just for tha sake of it. Ah, now I see how you came up with 7.
Yeah in retrospect 7 feels a little high. I gave it that as I thoroughly enjoy travelling on them, and the spaciousness is notable.
@@GWVillager The 450s are everything a Desiro should be - about 2000 times better than the godawful 700s. Shame that SWR have tried their best to ruin the 444s though, even though they're still great trains. South West Trains had 1-2 in First Class but SWR have made it 2-2 for no reason.
Agreed, the rating for the 450 needs to be a smidge lower. Thing is, there is a distinctive difference between the 450s and 444s. The combination of the 444's (single) doors being express-train style at either end of the carriage with doors to separate the vestibule area from rest, significantly more leg-room (very important for taller people like myself, the leg-room in 444s is very good, in 450s you're cramped) and 2+2 seating make them a considerable upgrade to the 450s. The 450s are very good for what they do (i.e. slow & high-capacity stopping service), but then the 444s are nicer all-around. However, what I've really been waiting for is for Siemens to release a replacement to the 444s (as they said they would). Seriously, the 444s are ridiculously good and for sort-of regional-express services, which covers a lot of the UK outside the "high-speed" trunks of the GWR, ECML, WCML, HS1 and (future) HS2, they would be ideal.
I watched the whole video....then got to your #1. Are you mental? I used to love 442 journeys from London to Weymouth. I did one on a 444 and swore I'd never do so again. Hideously uncomfortable. Why are you giving 8/10 score for seats that wouldn't be out of place in the Tower of London!?
You must be mistaken - the 444 seats are fantastic and usually considered amongst the best in the country.
@@GWVillager have they changed since 15 years ago?
@@mburland No, but they will have softened up considerably.
@@GWVillager I'll take your word for it. Have you had a chance to try the FLIRT 745's?
@@mburland No, not yet. But I have tried the similar Class 231s.
444 is really good as well
For the class 350 you forgot to add that they go 110mph and the /1 has DC, so it is practically better in everyday to the 450s
We don't get many electric trains in my part of the west Midlands but I will say I have a top 3 from the hanfull I've road on, the class 390, 232 & 350s
While I appreciate the benefits of the tilting functionality on the West Coast mainline, it does have a habit of making people feel a little nauseous. At least that was my experience when I took them as a kid.
But the tracks are & always have been tilted anyway. The APT compensated completely & this caused sickness because the physical sensation of staying flat while the eyes could see you were tilting confused the brain.
Sorry but give me a comfortable HST or class 91 with their longer journey times everyday of the week over tha 800 series. History has shown thay rail trav e l is becoming more and more uncofortable with every new generation of train. The same thing goes for air travel where the seats are shite ans they cram more and more in creating a toxic travel environment that makes things worst when a passanger snaps and becomes abusive.
444 044 is my favourite of all! Upwey for the win!
That LNER 800 1st looks lovely. I believe that we are one of the few countries that have carpets in their trains. I wonder if the 1st Class Universal bog is anything like the one on the GWR 800s, poshest train bog that I've been in anywhere in the world. Worst was russia or Thailand which is basically a hole in the floor 😮
If you wish the class 397s should be rolled out on the rest of the network, maybe you should look at LNER’s new trains. 👀
Class374 .each of my journeys the😊😊oscillating
has been so bad the pantograph has almost ripped the overhead down.i suggest you travel towards the rear of a 374 to get a true idea of the ride quality.
Any guess what my favourite EMU is
No
is it just me who thinks the 444 is the 442 + 450
How the hell did bro only give 8 points with sound to the 373? Bro didn’t hear them at speed.😭
Wait I've got a story. I was spotting a class 777 in lime street underground and we went on the Manchester Train on a 323. We went out of Liverpool. We went to wavertree. And the train stalled. Then we went broad green fine. Then roby. Stalled. Stalled again. We were still at Roby after 10 munites with the speaker saying. This is broad green this Is huyton even know it was Roby. Then we were there for another 15 munites and then the driver said the train was now cancelled and we had to go at Helens Central on the different line. Then the next week we got the 777 out of new Brighton and that train broke down too. Specificly the 777004
Unfortunately, me personally would rank the 450 lower. Passenger comfort should deserve a 5 and purpose a 6, because some journeys they operate are quite long and something comfortable would be better for that. As with the 700s and other desiros, I am also not a fan of their sounds. Everything else about them however, is really fantastic and I would love to rank them near here.
The 444 is great! But the doors suck.
I get them every day and half the, the door needs pushing open.
01:11 LNER Azuma's won't regularly travel at 140 in service - there's no decent train protection system in place until ETCS gets fully rolled out
02:47 you forget GNER ran a 373 to Leeds ?
07:56 no it isn't
My little celebrations as the class 444 won 😂
I think, as far as EMUs go, the long distance, high speed express units such as 800, 373, 390 need to be considered separately from regional and local trains - they're just not competing at the same game. Having said that, I'm surprised you can give 7/10 to the 801 for comfort! I agree they're great in many respects, particularly performance and looks, but they are the absolute most uncomfortable long-distance train around and are almost universally hated for that. While the first class is bearable, standard is horrid and I avoid it at all costs.
801: Completely agree that they're underrated, I personally find the seats comfortable. They just shouldn't have done 5 carriage IETs, they could do with all being 10 or 11 cars.
379: Fantastic trains but tragically underused.
450: Good trains but wouldn't rate them that high
350: Fantastic trains
803: love them but again could do with being longer
390: Completely disagree, I'm not a fan at all. The seats are comfortable and ride quality is amazing but they just feel so cramped and I hate the seating layout.
397: Transpennine have some of my favourite trains in the UK in terms of ambience, shame they're useless at actually operating them.
444: Good trains but the lack of luggage storage is a major issue.
Can you do the same for all the locomotives?
Possibly one day, but I'm a bit tired of the rankings for now.
@@GWVillager alright then
The 387s have left c2c I hope great northern keep the blue doors because the great northern livery is plane
Having recently been on both the Class 373 and 374, I would swap them around. The ride quality let's the 374 down, you really feel every bump (that seems to be a recurring theme with new vs old stock) the 373 is better and I would say the other categories would be the same for both classes. I wish I gone to look at the 374's buffet in person since it looks amazing, but the train was busy and I had food with me so I didn't bother.
I would be inclined to agree - I prefer travelling on 373s - however other factors that are less obvious such as acceleration, spaciousness, flexibility, reliability and cost push the 374s up in the grand scheme of things.
If bi-mode was included then the 755 would be at the top for sure
Probably. They're very good.
507 should be on here. Don’t get me wrong but they have so many little quirks
444 is good for goinbg to portsmouth
Is it just me that hasnt seen the 802 on any of the videos
It's not an EMU, that's why. It's bi-mode
Oh ya I was just thinking bc u mentioned it lol
397s: train reliable, yes but transpennine express: not so much
personally have to disagree with the eurostars, I much much much prefer the 373s to the 374s for the safety features, the ability to run when spilt, in half for the euro tunnel, and the comfort, just my thoughts
I personally prefer the 373s yes, though I think in the grand scheme of things the 374s are better trains. I don't see the point in having trains comply with the UK loading gauge if they're not to be operating off HS1.
@@GWVillager certainly, the ideal would be the best of both, width and body of the velaro (I think that's how it's spelt) of which the 374 is based with the ability to be easily spilt and seats of the 373, if that were to happen we'd be onto a winner
Unfortunately for the 444, they're operated by SWR.
A Ponce with an opinion that is rightly out of place
Is a 7 out of 10 really considered bad?
i don't like the 390 because the highspeed makes me sick
I don't know how much lner paid you to that
Class 374s should not be on this ranking as they are not designed to run on British Rail Metals compared to their company mates 373s that sadly no more run out of their internationsl routes after HS1 construction and East Coast mainline trial failure. But 374s look and sound great. Further more is not a single production requirement to British Rail Network making them a purely Continental train. Thei are wider than british trains and many continental trains though!
Class 397s are for me the most beautiful trains in the Northwests of England but...is always a but and their riding quality is as poor as their sister classes 195,196,197 and 331 units. Furthermore if you notice a huge mistake, the only i can find on their very good interiors with panoramic windows, is the continuous overhead luggage rack under the lower roof sections of Pantograph Trainler coaches where obviously no items can at all be stored although those tiny inches of hight still there for no purpose but aesthetic, and that is very bad, or else i would just rate as bad feature riding quality. You channel says more of this trains should run if more lines were electrified and i say that no more orders of this trains should be placed under this conditions i mentioned, rather prefer much more class 350s as propper trains the latter are although heavier and more power consumers.
The 444’s are horrid for anything over an hour
No 810????????????????
They're not in service and this video is more than a year old.
@@GWVillager ah I get it. Didn't realise it was in service only
The 373's are not EMUs!
WHAT!!! 444 (and 450) Disastros ride horribly. They've got the suspension of a donkey cart. I was a guard on the Pigs - 442s when they were introduced in 1988; you could run through them whilst they were at top speed 100mph. How on earth you find the seats comfortable too is beyond me, do you not have any nerve endings in your body?
Try that with a Disastro donkey cart suspension and you'll rip your knees out. Even at low speed you're chucked all over the place. As for the driving experience I would rather drive an old 400 slam door (can't beat the 159s though at my other depot Salisbury).
It would have been interesting to see where 442s would have come, certainly far more comfortable than a Disastro with a far superior ride quality, better to drive too. The only real niggle I had with them, sitting over some bogies there was a constant tinny rattle as if something was loose. Well liked by the punters though (the trains not the rattle). Last trains with compartments too of course.
too bad that c2c is nowhere to be seen
It is, in the other parts.
@@GWVillager i found that out minutes later
All I can say for this is 444 is ugly, also I watched all 3 parts and I couldnt find 345
No train that flies a connecting door through the landscape, often even offensively painted yellow, can be called "good looking". Marks for aesthetics: 0.