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#51
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JRS: In article , dated Thu, 23
Sep 2004 18:58:46, seen in news:uk.transport.london, James Christie posted : With difficulty, because GPS has an accuracy of +/- 100m, unless of course you are using Differential GPS, but that is mainly a maritime system. Differential GPS with respect to a set on the platform (or station) seems an obvious move - even deals properly with landslides. But I believe that a platform is the only extended object which comes that near to just under a train door; if so, use a pair of solid object detectors below door level, one at each side of the doorway. Sonar or radar could be used. ISTM likely that if a suitable electromagnetic structure were fixed to platform edges (e.g. a perforated metallic strip) then one might use resonant reflection, and be platform-specific. -- © John Stockton, Surrey, UK. / © Web URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/ - FAQish topics, acronyms, & links. Correct = 4-line sig. separator as above, a line precisely "-- " (SoRFC1036) Do not Mail News to me. Before a reply, quote with "" or " " (SoRFC1036) |
#52
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Boltar wrote:
I read apparently that Southern had been having problems with its train doors not opening on stations north of the Thames because these hadn't been programmed into the database that uses GPS to know where it is! Is it just me or is having some GPS controlled database system being used to open the bloody doors just a teensy bit overkill?? Do they think the driver is too stupid to know when he's at a station and might try to open them when he's bowling along at 60?? Sure have some sort of interlock that prevents them opening when the train is moving but for gods sake , was this implemented just to keep some technicians in work? And what happens during an emergency? What next , GPS controlled toilets that won't flush on certain parts of the network with live networked updates of the turd count at every section?! No wonder money in the rail industry is in short supply if they're wasting funds on stupid systems such as this. Someone tell me its not true... B2003 I don't know why the main line rail companies don't just adopt the Underground's Correct Side Door Enable system, that prevents doors being opened on the wrong sides of the train. It can cope with double-sided platforms, bi-directional platforms, and also automatic cutting in and cutting out of doors on short platforms. Sorted. Why devise something over the top to do the same job? Lee |
#53
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![]() "Ian Johnston" wrote in message news:cCUlhtvFIYkV-pn2-KSqR179sj7HU@localhost... You have to be careful not to confuse the random precison errors with the unrandom accuray ones. Civilian GPS is designed to be precise to about +/- 10m, whereas military GPS, which uses different signals, is precise to +/- 1m. Those errors are random - there is nothing you can do about them. Selective availability was a deliberate degradation of accuracy, done by effectively instructing satellites to tell porkies in their signals, and thereby displace all GPS positions in a particular area by an ordained amount. That's what doesn't happen (much) any more, but the precision errors remain. I have experienced an distinct improvement in accuracy over the last few years but I am also aware that in certain circumstances GPS is not to be relied upon. Such events occur, for example, in narrow valleys where the signals can be "deflected" for want of a better description so GPS wouldn't work very well in cuttings - or tunnels for that matter. SA would not be very effiective if all satellites were to displace their positions by the same amount in the same direction - AFAIK each satellite had its own displacement which was random - watching a GPS position on a chart plotter was quite interesting in those days. Now the position doesn't move and will even plot a position on the correct side of a pontoon. However when the authorities are playing silly b*ggers with the signal it tends to be anounced in navigation warnings..... G |
#54
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"Tim" wrote in message .. .
On Thu, 23 Sep 2004 15:57:55 +0000, Peter Masson wrote: (Can GPS identify which line the train is on if adjoining platforms are different lengths?) Not with any certainty. Of course, what happens if the Pentagon decided to turn off GPS for civilian use without warning (which they've always stated they have the right to do)? Or worse, they have a war and introduce deliberate errors into the system designed to confuse the enemy? Never mind that , GPS is easily blocked by obstructions such as trees , embankments , bridges etc. And as for tunnels... Still , on the bright side that means LU won't be using it for the doors anytime soon ![]() B2003 |
#55
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#56
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![]() --- "Annabel Smyth" wrote: Solar Penguin wrote to uk.transport.london on Fri, 24 Sep 2004: So how does it keep the count of "The next station is..." displays updated when that happens? I don't think it does. My mother was travelling on a train from Clapham Junction to Arundel; I don't know what had gone wrong, but ... she told me afterwards that the electronic displays thought they were going to London, not away from it, so that "The next station is" was totally out of phase with reality! She said it was very funny. Oh... Looks like there are serious problems with the whole thing then. No wonder the trains can't decide which doors to open if they don't even know which way they're going! Let's hope they get these bugs sorted soon. |
#57
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On 24 Sep 2004 14:14:57 -0700, MIG wrote in
, seen in uk.railway: [snip] If any on-train information system crashes just after the last piece of locational information it receives, whether from GPS or anything else, is anyone going to bother about it or warn the passengers? Depends if the staff are even aware! Again talking about 170s, it's not at all unusual for the drivers display to show correct data whilst all displays bar those in the front coach show something else entirely. ![]() -- Ross From & reply-to addresses will bounce. Reply to the group. |
#58
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On Fri, 24 Sep 2004 15:56:21 +0100, Annabel Smyth wrote in
, seen in uk.railway: But there, I suspect, if one loo locks itself out of service, the others don't, unlike on surface-only trains. 170s don't do this; only the affected toilet will lock itself out. I suspect it's something that differs according to the unit design. -- Ross From & reply-to addresses will bounce. Reply to the group. |
#59
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"Tim" wrote in message .. .
On Fri, 24 Sep 2004 04:46:28 -0700, David E. Belcher wrote: SDO Sorry for being think - what does SDO stand for? Oops - sorry Tim, should've made it clearer (Selective Door Opening, for the record). David E. Belcher |
#60
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On Fri, 24 Sep 2004 10:37:17 +0100, Matthew Wild
said: the USAians were complaining that the main signal would sit right on their military band and they wouldn't be able to locally degrade Galileo without doing the same to their own military. Sounds like a feature, not a bug. -- David Cantrell | http://www.cantrell.org.uk/david |
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