There are very few class 91 diagrams into York these days but what there are are made up of refurbished and reliveried sets. This is the Kings Cross to York which forms the 12.02 stopping service to Kings Cross.
These are the pacer replacements. A great improvement.
While staying near to the Carlisle to Newcastle line recently all ECML London to Edinburgh, Aberdeen and Inverness trains were diverted past our door! A London bound train heads East through Bardon Mill Station. A train of aviation fuel passes bound for Prestwick. A northbound train passes heading west. Tanks for Fort William head west. A local stopping train pulls away from Bardon Mill station bound for Newcastle. Another Azuma bound for Scotland.
These pictures were taken while waiting for a train to Sheffield after attending a course at Luton Industrial College in the late 1980s. The trains illustrated are class 319s which are dual voltage units introduced to operate the Thameslink services between Luton and the South coast. The recent introduction of new stock has made them redundant on this service so some have gone into store, it was suggested that a few have diesel engines added to make them bi-modal trains (and thus saving the Government the expense of electrifying routes) and the rest were to be sent to that graveyard for old London trains... the North of England (thus saving the Government the cost of new trains for the North... as usual). The latter are working some suburban services out of Manchester. The end doors were incorporated to enable evacuation of the trains if they failed in the tunnel sections through central London.
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