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Driverless Trains
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Driverless Trains
In message , at 23:51:57 on Fri, 4 Oct 2013,
" remarked: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencete...-Tube-future-2 1st-century-vision-London-train-goes--offering-30-space-air-conditioning .html That has to be the ugliest front end on a train ever devised. -- Roland Perry |
Driverless Trains
It looks like the back of a bus.
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Driverless Trains
Roland Perry wrote on 05 October 2013 09:54:35 ...
In message , at 23:51:57 on Fri, 4 Oct 2013, " remarked: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencete...-Tube-future-2 1st-century-vision-London-train-goes--offering-30-space-air-conditioning .html That has to be the ugliest front end on a train ever devised. I don't find it particularly ugly, quite elegant in a way, but what I find odd is that this driverless train doesn't appear to let passengers sit at the front, as on the DLR and the Paris Metro driverless trains. No side windows near the front, and a dark front. So if it's not a driver's cab, what is it? If it's a bolthole for the passenger service agent to use when the train is crush-loaded, how does he get there (no separate side door)? -- Richard J. (to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address) |
Driverless Trains
On 05/10/2013 13:18, Richard J. wrote:
Roland Perry wrote on 05 October 2013 09:54:35 ... In message , at 23:51:57 on Fri, 4 Oct 2013, " remarked: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencete...-Tube-future-2 1st-century-vision-London-train-goes--offering-30-space-air-conditioning .html That has to be the ugliest front end on a train ever devised. I don't find it particularly ugly, quite elegant in a way, but what I find odd is that this driverless train doesn't appear to let passengers sit at the front, as on the DLR and the Paris Metro driverless trains. I was also wondering about that and hope that this mock up will not turn out to be the way of things. The Nuremberg U-Bahn's U-3 line also allows passengers front views. No side windows near the front, and a dark front. So if it's not a driver's cab, what is it? If it's a bolthole for the passenger service agent to use when the train is crush-loaded, how does he get there (no separate side door)? Perhaps there won't be a PSA, as there is not in Lille, Toulouse, Paris, Rennes, Brescia or Copenhagen? |
Driverless Trains
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Driverless Trains
In message , at 15:41:06 on Sat, 5 Oct 2013,
" remarked: Speaking of driverless trains, AIUI, the nearest prospect of that happening in the UK is on the Glasgow Subway. Are there any concrete plans What's usually asked for is "concrete steps". Which are not that uncommon at railway stations, it has to be said. As recently as 2011, the USA was talking about: "concrete steps toward enabling the future of human space exploration across the solar system." Which beats firing people up in rockets I suppose. -- Roland Perry |
Driverless Trains
On 05/10/2013 13:18, Richard J. wrote:
Roland Perry wrote on 05 October 2013 09:54:35 ... In message , at 23:51:57 on Fri, 4 Oct 2013, " remarked: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencete...-Tube-future-2 1st-century-vision-London-train-goes--offering-30-space-air-conditioning .html That has to be the ugliest front end on a train ever devised. I don't find it particularly ugly, quite elegant in a way, but what I find odd is that this driverless train doesn't appear to let passengers sit at the front, as on the DLR and the Paris Metro driverless trains. No side windows near the front, and a dark front. So if it's not a driver's cab, what is it? If it's a bolthole for the passenger service agent to use when the train is crush-loaded, how does he get there (no separate side door)? It's a cab, because it is not a driverless train: "Siemens would be able to supply trains suitable for manual driving, automated operation with a driver in the cab, automated operation with no cab but with a member of staff onboard, or unattended automatic operation. The wall separating the cab from the passenger area is designed to be removed if conversion to automatic operation were to be requested after the trains entered service, increasing the space available for passengers. The control equipment would be located under a seat, where it could be accessed by on-train staff if required; a similar procedure has been adopted on the Docklands Light Railway, where onboard staff can drive the trains manually if necessary." http://www.railwaygazette.com/news/u...und-train.html -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
Driverless Trains
On Saturday, October 5, 2013 9:54:35 AM UTC+1, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 23:51:57 on Fri, 4 Oct 2013, " remarked: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencete...-Tube-future-2 1st-century-vision-London-train-goes--offering-30-space-air-conditioning .html That has to be the ugliest front end on a train ever devised. It looks like a jar lid. Maybe it's the emergency escape; simply unscrew the front and let people out... PhilD -- |
Driverless Trains
wrote in message ... On 05/10/2013 13:18, Richard J. wrote: Roland Perry wrote on 05 October 2013 09:54:35 ... In message , at 23:51:57 on Fri, 4 Oct 2013, " remarked: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencete...-Tube-future-2 1st-century-vision-London-train-goes--offering-30-space-air-conditioning .html That has to be the ugliest front end on a train ever devised. I don't find it particularly ugly, quite elegant in a way, but what I find odd is that this driverless train doesn't appear to let passengers sit at the front, as on the DLR and the Paris Metro driverless trains. I was also wondering about that and hope that this mock up will not turn out to be the way of things. The Nuremberg U-Bahn's U-3 line also allows passengers front views. So does Copenhagen tim |
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