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Sadiq Khan and TfL on taxis and minicabs
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Sadiq Khan and TfL on taxis and minicabs
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Sadiq Khan and TfL on taxis and minicabs
On Wed, 17 Aug 2016 09:13:10 -0000 (UTC)
Recliner wrote: The speed reduction with a high speed train will be trivial. By the time I disagree. Kinetic energy is derived from velocity squared, so a small change in velocity can make a large change in the amount of energy that needs to be dissapated. So if the obstruction was only 200m away, the train may still be travelling at full speed. Even if it was 500m away, the speed will probably still be close to 300 km/h. The driver would be best advised to retreat from the You're forgetting however that the driver will have put the train into braking mode. An ATO train would still have full power to the motors at the point of impact and possibly beyond too. In fact thats what happened in the moorgate crash - albeit with a suicidal driver and not a computer - with the back of the train actively shoving the front up over the sand drag. Where the driver might be needed is during slow speed manouvres near stations, not the high speed sections of the line. You'll certainly need a pair of eyes pulling into platforms. -- Spud |
Sadiq Khan and TfL on taxis and minicabs
On 17.08.16 10:13, Recliner wrote:
wrote: On Tue, 16 Aug 2016 11:23:28 -0500 wrote: Can the drivers of 200mph expresses see far enough ahead to be able to have any material ability to slow or stop the train if they see an obstruction or track problem? They can't see far enough ahead to do anything useful to avoid a tractor on an occupation crossing as at Roudham. Useful like what, steer out the way? I'm curious that a lot of people on this group seem to believe that the speed a train hits something makes no difference. 100mph, 200mph , who cares eh? All the same. The speed reduction with a high speed train will be trivial. By the time the driver spots the obstruction, and decides to brake, the train will almost be on top of it. At 320km/h, the train will have moved about 100m before the driver can even start to brake. There may be some latency in the braking, so by the time the full brake application starts, the train may well have travelled another 100m. What do you mean by latency, the amount of time that it takes for the helm to respond? So if the obstruction was only 200m away, the train may still be travelling at full speed. Even if it was 500m away, the speed will probably still be close to 300 km/h. The driver would be best advised to retreat from the cab and move further back in the train in the few seconds before the crash, though the power car or driving car is highly likely to be thrown off the tracks, and if it hits anything head-on, the damage will be catastrophic. Slowing the train from 320km/h to a bit less will make almost no difference. So at least one less life would be at risk if there was no driver in the cab. Where the driver might be needed is during slow speed manouvres near stations, not the high speed sections of the line. I've heard drivers on RENFE indicate that he could not drive the train without a computer, whilst the computer would not be able to operate the train without a driver. |
Sadiq Khan and TfL on taxis and minicabs
wrote:
On 17.08.16 10:13, Recliner wrote: wrote: On Tue, 16 Aug 2016 11:23:28 -0500 wrote: Can the drivers of 200mph expresses see far enough ahead to be able to have any material ability to slow or stop the train if they see an obstruction or track problem? They can't see far enough ahead to do anything useful to avoid a tractor on an occupation crossing as at Roudham. Useful like what, steer out the way? I'm curious that a lot of people on this group seem to believe that the speed a train hits something makes no difference. 100mph, 200mph , who cares eh? All the same. The speed reduction with a high speed train will be trivial. By the time the driver spots the obstruction, and decides to brake, the train will almost be on top of it. At 320km/h, the train will have moved about 100m before the driver can even start to brake. There may be some latency in the braking, so by the time the full brake application starts, the train may well have travelled another 100m. What do you mean by latency, the amount of time that it takes for the helm to respond? Both the driver's and the system's delays. The driver, having spotted a distant possible obstruction has to decide whether to brake, and then operate the controls; and there is latency in the system: the brakes on a long train with dozens of axles don't respond nearly as quickly as a car's brakes. So if the obstruction was only 200m away, the train may still be travelling at full speed. Even if it was 500m away, the speed will probably still be close to 300 km/h. The driver would be best advised to retreat from the cab and move further back in the train in the few seconds before the crash, though the power car or driving car is highly likely to be thrown off the tracks, and if it hits anything head-on, the damage will be catastrophic. Slowing the train from 320km/h to a bit less will make almost no difference. So at least one less life would be at risk if there was no driver in the cab. Where the driver might be needed is during slow speed manouvres near stations, not the high speed sections of the line. I've heard drivers on RENFE indicate that he could not drive the train without a computer, whilst the computer would not be able to operate the train without a driver. Computers already drive plenty of trains using ATO, and have done for decades, safely and reliably. I'd rather trust a computer to drive a fast train on a dedicated track, than a human trying to follow the computer's orders. At most, the human supervisor should be there to override the computer at times of emergency or when running at low speed on conventional tracks (just as airliners are flown automatically most of the time, but are steered manually on the airfield). |
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