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they haven't got any HSTs yet
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{{Infobox Rail companies
{{Infobox Rail companies
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| franchise = Cross Country <br> [[11 November]] [[2007]] – [[1 April]] [[2016]]
| franchise = Cross Country <br> [[11 November]] [[2007]] – [[1 April]] [[2016]]
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|[[British Rail Class 220|Class 220 ''Voyager'']]
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|[[Diesel-electric multiple unit]]
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|[[British Rail Class 221|Class 221 ''Super Voyager'']]
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Revision as of 21:41, 12 November 2007

File:Crosscountrylogosmall.gif
File:CrossCountry-train.jpg
Overview
Franchise(s)Cross Country
11 November 20071 April 2016
Main route(s)South West England - North East England - Scotland
(via Birmingham)
Cardiff and Newport - Birmingham - Nottingham
Other route(s)Cardiff and Newport - Bristol - Birmingham - North East
Fleet size34 Voyagers
23 Super Voyagers
29 Class 170s
Stations called at100 (none operated)
Parent companyArriva plc
Reporting markXC
Other
Websitewww.crosscountrytrains.co.uk/

CrossCountry is a new train operating company that has operated Great Britain’s Cross Country rail franchise since 11 November 2007. The franchise was formed through the amalgamation of the old CrossCountry franchise previously held by Virgin Trains (which consisted of inter-city services that do not terminate in London) with some of the longer-distance routes operated by the former Central Trains.

On 10 July 2007, the Department for Transport announced that Arriva plc had won the rights to the franchise.[1]

Routes

Core

An hourly service will run on each basic route:

No Route Rollingstock
1 Plymouth through Leeds to Edinburgh Waverley Voyagers and HSTs
2 Reading through Doncaster to Newcastle Voyagers
3 Bristol Temple Meads to Manchester Piccadilly Voyagers
4 Bournemouth through Coventry to Manchester Piccadilly Voyagers
5 Cardiff Central to Nottingham Line Turbostars and a Voyager
6 Birmingham New Street to Leicester and Stansted Airport Turbostars

Extensions

There are also extensions to the normal service pattern:

Summer Saturdays will see trains go to Newquay from various parts of the network.

There are also some other train services which will go from one route to another (eg. from Nottingham to Bournemouth), in order to provide more direct journeys.

Frequency

The majority of the network will have one CrossCountry train per hour. Notable exceptions include:

  • Cheltenham to Birmingham - 3 trains per hour
  • Birmingham to Derby - 4 trains per hour
  • Derby to Sheffield - 2 trains per hour
  • Bristol to Birmingham - 2 trains per hour
  • Birmingham to Leicester - 2 trains per hour

Rolling stock

Virgin CrossCountry previously operated Class 220 and Class 221 DEMUs. From December 2007, 21 Class 221 will be transferred to the West Coast Main Line franchise where they will operate the North Wales route and the West Midlands to Scotland services. CrossCountry will also use some of the British Rail Class 170 Turbostars from Central Trains. CrossCountry have announced that they will re-introduce 5 upgraded High Speed Trains[2], however it is currently unclear as to where these HSTs will come from as there are very few spare HST vehicles.

Current fleet

 Class  Image  Type   Top speed   Number   Unit numbers  Routes operated   Built 
 mph   km/h 
Class 170 Turbostar File:CrossCountryTurbostar.jpg Diesel multiple unit 100 160 29 170101-170117 170397-170398 170518-170523 170636-170639 Cross Country Route 1999 - 2002
Class 220 Voyager File:CrossCountry-train.jpg Diesel-electric multiple unit 125 200 34 220001-220034 Cross Country Route 2001
Class 221 Super Voyager File:CrossCountry-train.jpg Diesel-electric multiple unit 125 200 23 221118-221141 Cross Country Route 2001

Future fleet

 Class  Image  Type   Top speed   Number   Routes operated   Built   Introduction 
 mph   km/h 
Class 43 High Speed Train File:CrossCountryHST.jpg Diesel locomotive 125 200 10 Cross Country Route 1976 - 1982 Late 2008
Mark 3 coach File:Crosscountrymk3.png Passenger coach 125 200 40 Cross Country Route 1975 - 1988 Late 2008

References

  1. ^ "Department for Transport announces winner of New Cross Country franchise". Department for Transport. 2007-07-10. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ "CrossCountry Highlights". CrossCountry.


Preceded by
Central Trains
Central franchise
Operator of Cross Country franchise
2007 - present
Incumbent
Preceded by
Virgin Trains
Cross Country franchise