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#121
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In article , martin.coffee@round-
midnight.org.uk writes I'm not sure what the arrangements for getting a civil licence these days. They were conducted by the military but that may have changed. When I was learning to drive a car and was in the TA, I was told that I could get a test done by an army examiner and thus jump the queue for tests. In the end I didn't, though. -- Clive D.W. Feather |
#122
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On Tue, 26 Nov 2019 21:20:04 +0000, Graeme Wall
wrote: On 26/11/2019 20:17, Anna Noyd-Dryver wrote: Richard wrote: On Sun, 24 Nov 2019 19:35:03 +0000, Charles Ellson wrote: On 24 Nov 2019 13:51:40 GMT, Marland wrote: Boltar may be a natural at vehicle handling which not all people are so the physical driving was ticked off on the first day, the rest were spent learning what the ringing sound was as the bus approached a stop. Not in London then where you get ****s ringing the bell 0.1sec after the bus has left the previous stop. Better than ringing it too late IMO. Or ringing it when someone else has already done it If someone rings it immediately after departure from the previous stop, I can see the logic in ringing it again on approach to the stop, in case the driver has forgotten in the meantime. Except most modern buses have a light on the dash that remains on till the doors open again. On one of the bus types that isn't around here [TM] any more, the time/next stop display didn't always update the next stop until up to c.50yds after leaving, wiping out any indications resulting from premature campanology. |
#123
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On Tue, 26 Nov 2019 20:06:54 +0000, Richard
wrote: On Sun, 24 Nov 2019 19:35:03 +0000, Charles Ellson wrote: On 24 Nov 2019 13:51:40 GMT, Marland wrote: Boltar may be a natural at vehicle handling which not all people are so the physical driving was ticked off on the first day, the rest were spent learning what the ringing sound was as the bus approached a stop. Not in London then where you get ****s ringing the bell 0.1sec after the bus has left the previous stop. Better than ringing it too late IMO. Or ringing it when someone else has already done it - why does the device not suppress that - or at the terminus (if you know that it is). Shows a lack of awareness of surroundings and fellow humans I think. The lack of awareness manifests itself when those folk just get up off their seat to walk down the aisle without checking if someone else is already there. Always makes me wonder if they just pull out without looking in their cars. -- AnthonyL Why do scientists need to BELIEVE in anything? |
#124
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In message , at 12:08:47
on Wed, 27 Nov 2019, AnthonyL remarked: Not in London then where you get ****s ringing the bell 0.1sec after the bus has left the previous stop. Better than ringing it too late IMO. Or ringing it when someone else has already done it - why does the device not suppress that - or at the terminus (if you know that it is). Shows a lack of awareness of surroundings and fellow humans I think. The lack of awareness manifests itself when those folk just get up off their seat to walk down the aisle without checking if someone else is already there. Always makes me wonder if they just pull out without looking in their cars. I was driving down a fairly narrow residential street the other week and a car backed out of their drive right across my path. The whole time they were staring straight ahead (maybe looking in the mirror to make sue they didn't hit the opposite kerb). At no point did they look either side to see if there was any cross-traffic. -- Roland Perry |
#125
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#126
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On 26/11/2019 21:20, Graeme Wall wrote:
On 26/11/2019 20:17, Anna Noyd-Dryver wrote: Richard wrote: On Sun, 24 Nov 2019 19:35:03 +0000, Charles Ellson wrote: On 24 Nov 2019 13:51:40 GMT, Marland wrote: Boltar may be a natural at vehicle handling which not all people are so the physical driving was ticked off on the first day, the rest were spent learning what the ringing sound was as the bus approached a stop. Not in London then where you get ****s ringing the bell 0.1sec after the bus has left the previous stop. Better than ringing it too late IMO.Â* Or ringing it when someone else has already done it If someone rings it immediately after departure from the previous stop, I can see the logic in ringing it again on approach to the stop, in case the driver has forgotten in the meantime. Except most modern buses have a light on the dash that remains on till the doors open again. And the bulb fails and the engineers never bother replacing it. -- Ria in Aberdeen [Send address is invalid, use sipsoup at gmail dot com to reply direct] |
#127
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On 27/11/2019 17:26, MissRiaElaine wrote:
On 26/11/2019 21:20, Graeme Wall wrote: On 26/11/2019 20:17, Anna Noyd-Dryver wrote: Richard wrote: On Sun, 24 Nov 2019 19:35:03 +0000, Charles Ellson wrote: On 24 Nov 2019 13:51:40 GMT, Marland wrote: Boltar may be a natural at vehicle handling which not all people are so the physical driving was ticked off on the first day, the rest were spent learning what the ringing sound was as the bus approached a stop. Not in London then where you get ****s ringing the bell 0.1sec after the bus has left the previous stop. Better than ringing it too late IMO.Â* Or ringing it when someone else has already done it If someone rings it immediately after departure from the previous stop, I can see the logic in ringing it again on approach to the stop, in case the driver has forgotten in the meantime. Except most modern buses have a light on the dash that remains on till the doors open again. And the bulb fails and the engineers never bother replacing it. :-) LEDs don't fail nearly so often fortunately -- Graeme Wall This account not read. |
#129
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In uk.railway John Ray wrote:
On 24/11/2019 21:00, Anna Noyd-Dryver wrote: Is there some approved timescale for omnibus campanology of which I'm somehow unaware? I always wait for the next stop to be announced on the PA system, which means that, very often, I don't get the chance to ring the bell. Some Oxford buses tell you to remain in your seat until the bus reaches its stop, but not all seats have a button for the bell within reach - the first on the top deck is about three rows back, for instance. When I've complained to them about their vehicles not having bells within easy reach, they blame the manufacturers, as though despite being one of the Big Five bus operators in the country and purchasing their vehicles from new, they have no say over bus design. |
#130
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On 27/11/2019 19:06, Robin Stevens wrote:
Some Oxford buses tell you to remain in your seat until the bus reaches its stop, but not all seats have a button for the bell within reach - the first on the top deck is about three rows back, for instance. When I've complained to them about their vehicles not having bells within easy reach, they blame the manufacturers, as though despite being one of the Big Five bus operators in the country and purchasing their vehicles from new, they have no say over bus design. They probably don't. These things are decided by accountants, not drivers or engineers who actually have to *use* the things. As for passengers, they don't even enter the consciousness of those who make these decisions. -- Ria in Aberdeen [Send address is invalid, use sipsoup at gmail dot com to reply direct] |
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