Pembroke Coast Express

The Pembroke Coast Express[1] was a named train operated by British Railways which began running in 1953 along with several other services, as a way of better promoting faster or more direct services. In 2006, the name was used by First Great Western to advertise its Summer Saturday service between London Paddington and Pembroke Dock.[2]

An up service to London Paddington passes Port Talbot in 1962
Pembroke Coast Express
Overview
Service typePassenger train
First service1953
Current operator(s)Great Western Railway
Former operator(s)InterCity Great Western
British Rail
Great Western Railway
Route
StartLondon Paddington
EndPembroke Dock
Service frequencySummer Saturdays
Line(s) usedGreat Western
South Wales
West Wales
Technical
Rolling stockInterCity 125
Operating speed125 mph

Current operation

Since 2006 First Great Western has operated the service between London Paddington and Pembroke Dock on every Saturday in the summer timetable. The up service from Pembroke Dock departs at 10:01 and the service from London Paddington leaves at 08:45.

gollark: You don't want ~~terrorists~~ viewbombers do you?
gollark: The only way to be sure.
gollark: For the hub, anyway.
gollark: I imagine they mostly refresh a lot and click report sometimes.
gollark: Hail the eternal moderators!

References

  1. Julian Holland (2012). Railway Top Spots: Revisiting the Top Train Spotting Destinations of Our Childhood. David & Charles. p. 18. ISBN 1-4463-0262-8. Retrieved 17 January 2018.
  2. Cooper, Jason (31 August 2014). "Pembroke Coast Express, huge success!". Pembrokeshire Herald. Herald Newspapers PLC. Retrieved 17 January 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.