London North Eastern Railway’s Class 800/1 Azuma trains will start operating Anglo-Scottish trains from August 1.
The operator confirmed that the first train will be the 0540 Edinburgh Waverley-London King’s Cross, the ‘Flying Scotsman’, arriving at 0940.
The first northbound train will be the 1730 King’s Cross-Edinburgh the same day. They will be formed of nine-car Class 800/1 bi-modes.
LNER introduced Azumas on May 15 on the Leeds route, and to Hull the following day. By the end of June there will be six Azumas in action.
“The launch of the first Azuma trains to and from Edinburgh and North East England is a pivotal moment for LNER in demonstrating the transformation of services for our customers and communities that we serve,” said LNER Managing Director David Horne.
“Establishing new standards in rail travel is part of our DNA, and the new Azuma trains are already making the customer experience better than ever. They will transform travel for customers with improved reliability, greater levels of comfort and an average of 100 more seats on every train compared to the current fleet,” he added.
“The arrival of the Azuma trains delivers more comfortable journeys and better services for passengers along the East Coast Route,” said Rail Minister Andrew Jones.
“Alongside the introduction of these new trains, we have also worked closely with Transport Scotland to upgrade platforms at Edinburgh Waverley to support longer trains with more seats.”
On Saturdays, the first Azumas will be the 0655 Edinburgh-King’s Cross and 1230 northbound, while on Sunday the 0900 Edinburgh-King’s Cross will be an Azuma, as will the 1430 northbound train.
- For more on the Azuma introduction plan read RAIL 880, published on June 5, and available digitally on Android, iPad and Kindle from June 1.
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AndrewJG8918 - 01/06/2019 14:37
If that’s so. Then LNER should introduce new services such as from London Kings Cross to Middlesbrough, Scarborough, Lincoln, Grimsby, Cleesthopes, Hartlepool and Skegness. With using their Class 800 Bi-mode Azuma trains.
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David - 05/06/2019 09:26
Mentioned 10 times in this one article, the name Azuma was a Virgin marketing idea & should have been dropped by LNER. Noticeable also that the operator presses the diesel variants into service first. After more than 30 years of unnecessary HST's belching fumes under the wires on the ECML operators are still uncomfortable with anything other than something with a diesel engine in it.
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dave59 - 15/06/2019 12:50
Azuma mentioned nine times in this article. I think Richard likes the name.
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