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#22
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#23
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Robin9 wrote:
'Recliner[_3_ Wrote: ;151330']Martin Edwards wrote:- On 10/23/2015 9:46 PM, Recliner wrote:- Charles Ellson wrote:- - Like much else that is wrong today, it has its roots in the Thatcher era. It was assumed that everyone would eventually have cars and the railways would die out. Today's problems are caused not by malice, but the unprecedented demand on rail travel, especially to, from and round London.- I'm not sure how you can blame decisions on seat comfort that were taken under Labour governments on Thatcher? I wouldn't blame any particular government for things like that, but if you must blame a government, surely the decisions were taken in the Brown era? Of course what we can thank the Thatcher government for are the JLE and DLR. I think Ken Livingstone will want some of the credit for the DLR. I'm sure lots of people will want to claim the credit, but we were taking about the national government of the day. In any case, I don't recall that Ken had very much, if anything, to do with the Docklands developments in the late 1980s. |
#24
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Martin Edwards
Like much else that is wrong today, it has its roots in the Thatcher era. It was assumed that everyone would eventually have cars and the railways would die out. Today's problems are caused not by malice, but the unprecedented demand on rail travel, especially to, from and round London. Yet the quality and comfort of cars continues to increase. Neil -- Neil Williams |
#25
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On 10/25/2015 4:36 PM, Neil Williams wrote:
Martin Edwards Like much else that is wrong today, it has its roots in the Thatcher era. It was assumed that everyone would eventually have cars and the railways would die out. Today's problems are caused not by malice, but the unprecedented demand on rail travel, especially to, from and round London. Yet the quality and comfort of cars continues to increase. Neil Certainly, but the pressure on railways round London continues to increase also. It is more about congestion than the quality of cars. -- Myth, after all, is what we believe naturally. History is what we must painfully learn and struggle to remember. -Albert Goldman |
#26
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On Sat, 24 Oct 2015 07:37:09 +0100
Martin Edwards wrote: On 10/23/2015 9:46 PM, Recliner wrote: No, the 378 seats are really hard, much worse than the 313s. The new Victoria line 2009 stock also has thin, hard seats. Like much else that is wrong today, it has its roots in the Thatcher era. It was assumed that everyone would eventually have cars and the railways would die out. Today's problems are caused not by malice, but the unprecedented demand on rail travel, especially to, from and round London. Wow, blaming hard seats on a train built only a few years ago on a PM who left in 1990 would be pushing it even for the most diehard, out of touch Corbynista. Thats quite an impressive political contortion you managed there. Thatcher was mainly a response to the **** The Lot of You attitude of the unions in the 70s who were composed mainly of indolent, greedy, bloody minded halfwits (see RMT for a modern equivalent). If the Wilson and Callagham governments of the day had anything resembling a backbone the political landscape of the 80s might have been rather different so if you want to blame anyone blame them. -- Spud |
#27
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On Fri, Oct 23, 2015 at 08:47:34PM +0100, Basil Jet wrote:
On 2015\10\23 17:17, wrote: In article , (Basil Jet) wrote: I travelled on the Gospel Oak - Barking line earlier in the week, and was annoyed by the fact that half of one of the windows was taken up by a panel of some sort. Later I realised that this was an electronic destination display ... I'm surprised you've not noticed the same on all the Electrostars and Turbostars as well as the Desiros, but not on the S stock. I did notice that the S stock have a tidy sign above the door, which is where I'd put it. The Electrostar and Turbostar are 1990s designs, and AFAIK they didn't have those side-mounted displays when they first entered service. They've since been added, but when you add something to an existing design then you have fewer cost-effective options of where to add it than if it had been designed-in in the first place. -- David Cantrell | http://www.cantrell.org.uk/david Cum catapultae proscriptae erunt tum soli proscript catapultas habebunt |
#28
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In article ,
(David Cantrell) wrote: On Fri, Oct 23, 2015 at 08:47:34PM +0100, Basil Jet wrote: On 2015\10\23 17:17, wrote: In article , (Basil Jet) wrote: I travelled on the Gospel Oak - Barking line earlier in the week, and was annoyed by the fact that half of one of the windows was taken up by a panel of some sort. Later I realised that this was an electronic destination display ... I'm surprised you've not noticed the same on all the Electrostars and Turbostars as well as the Desiros, but not on the S stock. I did notice that the S stock have a tidy sign above the door, which is where I'd put it. The Electrostar and Turbostar are 1990s designs, and AFAIK they didn't have those side-mounted displays when they first entered service. They've since been added, but when you add something to an existing design then you have fewer cost-effective options of where to add it than if it had been designed-in in the first place. They may not have been in the original designs but I don't think any (apart maybe from the original Chiltern units) were delivered without them. And the Desiros have no excuses. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
#29
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#30
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On Tue, 27 Oct 2015 07:33:29 +0000
Martin Edwards wrote: On 10/26/2015 9:39 AM, d wrote: On Sat, 24 Oct 2015 07:37:09 +0100 Martin Edwards wrote: On 10/23/2015 9:46 PM, Recliner wrote: No, the 378 seats are really hard, much worse than the 313s. The new Victoria line 2009 stock also has thin, hard seats. Like much else that is wrong today, it has its roots in the Thatcher era. It was assumed that everyone would eventually have cars and the railways would die out. Today's problems are caused not by malice, but the unprecedented demand on rail travel, especially to, from and round London. Wow, blaming hard seats on a train built only a few years ago on a PM who left in 1990 would be pushing it even for the most diehard, out of touch Corbynista. Thats quite an impressive political contortion you managed there. Thatcher was mainly a response to the **** The Lot of You attitude of the unions in the 70s who were composed mainly of indolent, greedy, bloody minded halfwits (see RMT for a modern equivalent). If the Wilson and Callagham governments of the day had anything resembling a backbone the political landscape of the 80s might have been rather different so if you want to blame anyone blame them. -- Spud Apart from that, how was your goat hunt? If you're going to attenmpt sarcasm at least try and be vaguely intelligable though judging by the nonsense you spouted above I suspect you find that difficult. -- Spud |
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