Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#201
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 10 Apr 2012 09:12:14 +0100, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , at 00:24:07 on Tue, 10 Apr 2012, Charles Ellson remarked: In my previous 1920's house there were two of the large rectangular pressed steel manhole covers in my drive. The one nearest the road was already the water company's responsibility and the other remains the householder's responsibility. I wonder how big a dent in the cover is required before you can require the water company to replace them? pedant sewerage company /pedant (one all ?) No, because both were the responsibility of the same company - Severn Trent Water. Which is both a sewerage and a water company; They call themselves "Severn Trent Water", not "Severn Trent Water and Sewerage" or "Severn Trent Sewerage". There are also companies with names including Fanny Trollopes and the Knob Shop. Therefore it's polite (as well as correct) to refer to them as they refer to themselves - a water company. They do ? :- "Severn Trent Water is a member of the Severn Trent Group of companies. Severn Trent plc is an international utility services and environmental solutions company." They also don't appear to describe themselves as a water company when they only take the used stuff away or when flogging the end product of their "biosolids recycling" [sic]. (Perhaps I should mention the name Veolia to keep things simultaneously on-topic and off-topic ?) the distinction is important when they connect their pipework to your house. Not in my case. In my case two different companies are involved. And you made an erroneous assumption that the same applied to myself. No, I assumed that you have both mains water and a connection to a public sewer. |
#202
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , at 03:20:32 on
Wed, 11 Apr 2012, Charles Ellson remarked: Therefore it's polite (as well as correct) to refer to them as they refer to themselves - a water company. They do ? :- "Severn Trent Water is a member of the Severn Trent Group of companies. Don't be obtuse. I have their bill here, with a logo at the top: Severn Trent Water. On the bill it refers to "Charges for the water supply, used water and surface water drainage services". Three lots of water! the distinction is important when they connect their pipework to your house. Not in my case. In my case two different companies are involved. And you made an erroneous assumption that the same applied to myself. No, I assumed that you have both mains water and a connection to a public sewer. You assumed there was a distinction between the companies providing water and sewerage. There isn't - it's the same company. -- Roland Perry |
#203
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 11 Apr 2012 09:01:41 +0100, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , at 03:20:32 on Wed, 11 Apr 2012, Charles Ellson remarked: Therefore it's polite (as well as correct) to refer to them as they refer to themselves - a water company. They do ? :- "Severn Trent Water is a member of the Severn Trent Group of companies. Don't be obtuse. I have their bill here, with a logo at the top: Severn Trent Water. Logos don't count, company numbers do. On the bill it refers to "Charges for the water supply, used water and surface water drainage services". Three lots of water! the distinction is important when they connect their pipework to your house. Not in my case. In my case two different companies are involved. And you made an erroneous assumption that the same applied to myself. No, I assumed that you have both mains water and a connection to a public sewer. You assumed there was a distinction between the companies providing water and sewerage. There isn't - it's the same company. You assume they aren't provided by different subsidiaries covered by the same brand. |
#204
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , at 00:00:02 on
Thu, 12 Apr 2012, Charles Ellson remarked: On Wed, 11 Apr 2012 09:01:41 +0100, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 03:20:32 on Wed, 11 Apr 2012, Charles Ellson remarked: Therefore it's polite (as well as correct) to refer to them as they refer to themselves - a water company. They do ? :- "Severn Trent Water is a member of the Severn Trent Group of companies. Don't be obtuse. I have their bill here, with a logo at the top: Severn Trent Water. Logos don't count, company numbers do. On the bill it refers to "Charges for the water supply, used water and surface water drainage services". Three lots of water! the distinction is important when they connect their pipework to your house. Not in my case. In my case two different companies are involved. And you made an erroneous assumption that the same applied to myself. No, I assumed that you have both mains water and a connection to a public sewer. You assumed there was a distinction between the companies providing water and sewerage. There isn't - it's the same company. You assume they aren't provided by different subsidiaries covered by the same brand. Getting back to tunnelling (or digging, anyway), have you reached Australia yet? Or are all your straw men getting in the way ![]() -- Roland Perry |
#205
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 12, 8:30*am, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 00:00:02 on Thu, 12 Apr 2012, Charles Ellson remarked: On Wed, 11 Apr 2012 09:01:41 +0100, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 03:20:32 on Wed, 11 Apr 2012, Charles Ellson remarked: Therefore it's polite (as well as correct) to refer to them as they refer to themselves - a water company. They do ? :- "Severn Trent Water is a member of the Severn Trent Group of companies. Don't be obtuse. I have their bill here, with a logo at the top: Severn Trent Water. Logos don't count, company numbers do. On the bill it refers to "Charges for the water supply, used water and surface water drainage services". Three lots of water! the distinction is important when they connect their pipework to your house. Not in my case. In my case two different companies are involved. And you made an erroneous assumption that the same applied to myself. No, I assumed that you have both mains water and a connection to a public sewer. You assumed there was a distinction between the companies providing water and sewerage. There isn't - it's the same company. You assume they aren't provided by different subsidiaries covered by the same brand. Getting back to tunnelling (or digging, anyway), have you reached Australia yet? Or are all your straw men getting in the way ![]() -- A straight line, down from the UK, takes one to New Zealand I believe. One wonders about gravity at the core, :-). Crossrail 1024 perhaps? |
#206
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 12 Apr 2012, 77002 wrote:
A straight line, down from the UK, takes one to New Zealand I believe. I have always been taught that New Zealand is at the antipodes of Italy (also because both might somehow resemble a boot, with the heel on opposite sides of course). But it looks like we are both wrong, The antipodes of New Zealand are in Spain http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antipodes ! (you may count that as UK if you consider Gibraltar :-)) |
#207
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Giovanni Drogo wrote:
On Thu, 12 Apr 2012, 77002 wrote: A straight line, down from the UK, takes one to New Zealand I believe. I have always been taught that New Zealand is at the antipodes of Italy (also because both might somehow resemble a boot, with the heel on opposite sides of course). But it looks like we are both wrong, The antipodes of New Zealand are in Spain http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antipodes ! (you may count that as UK if you consider Gibraltar :-)) Gibraltar is not part of the UK which is the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Gibraltar is neither a part of Great Britain nor of Northern Ireland. I suspect that the 'Antipodes' page on Wikipedia was probably written by a Spaniard or someone from a Spanish speaking country. ;-) |
#208
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 2012\04\12 11:18, Giovanni Drogo wrote:
On Thu, 12 Apr 2012, 77002 wrote: A straight line, down from the UK, takes one to New Zealand I believe. I have always been taught that New Zealand is at the antipodes of Italy (also because both might somehow resemble a boot, with the heel on opposite sides of course). The heels are actually on the same side, if you look at the Antipodes map closely. If New Zealand was moved over a bit, it would match Italy rather well. |
#209
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
A straight line, down from the UK, takes one to New Zealand I
believe. As others have noted, not exactly. One wonders about gravity at the core, :-) Inside a sphere of uniform density, the force of gravity is proportional to distance from the center. In other words, if you descend straight down at a uniform speed, your weight decreases at a steady rate until it reaches zero at the center. Then for the second half of the trip, it increases at the same rate but, of course, with the opposite direction as "down". The Earth's deeper layers are somewhat denser than the rest, so that pattern wouldn't be followed exactly, but it's close enough to the true picture. For an off-center tunnel, like from the UK to NZ, in the middle part of trip the direction of "down" would rotate continuously through 180 degrees without your weight ever decreasing all the way to zero. Hope this helps. :-) -- Mark Brader, Toronto "If it's on TV, it has to be true! (I read that on the Internet.)" My text in this article is in the public domain. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Crossrail tunnelling complete | London Transport | |||
Crossrail tunnelling complete | London Transport | |||
Jubilee line tunnelling this weekend? | London Transport | |||
Crossrail tunnelling pictures | London Transport | |||
Crossrail tunnelling to start shortly | London Transport |