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Jammed doors reoppening
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Jammed doors reoppening
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Jammed doors reoppening
In article ,
Ken Wheatley wrote: My uncle was at various times a CO/CP and an A60/62 driver. He told of a time when he entered a station (I think Euston Square) fast - as he should have done - but there was a twit on the platform standing just inside the station on the edge of the platform with this hands on his hips. The grab bar on the front of his CO/CP hit the chap's elbow with a resounding 'BONG', and the elbow's owner span back onto the platform. I bet his eyes watered! But no attempt at a claim for compensation. You didn't get compensation for your own stupidity in those days. -- http://www.election.demon.co.uk "The guilty party was the Liberal Democrats and they were hardened offenders, and coded racism was again in evidence in leaflets distributed in September 1993." - Nigel Copsey, "Contemporary British Fascism", page 62. |
Jammed doors reoppening
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Jammed doors reoppening
Ken Wheatley wrote:
On Sun, 28 Nov 2004 14:43:45 -0000, "Jack Taylor" wrote: It's much more fun when the driver is *not* in a good mood and makes a PA announcement to embarrass the miscreant, whilst refusing to open the doors. If you're in the affected car then it is even more fun watching as the other passengers form a lynch mob. Depends. I got into a Northern Line recently, which was busy, and my bag fouled the closing doors. The total ****-for-brains up front just wouldn't open the door. I didn't budge (I couldn't) nor did ****-face. Eventually other passengers (a lynch mob?) helped me to prise the doors open enough for my bag to be freed. I hope the driver's knob fell off. I suppose it didn't occur to you that if you hadn't got on after the doors started to close your bag wouldn't have got stuck and you wouldn't then have delayed everyone else who was on the train? |
Jammed doors reoppening
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Jammed doors reoppening
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Jammed doors reoppening
On Mon, 29 Nov 2004 11:13:21 +0000 (UTC), "Brimstone"
wrote: I suppose it didn't occur to you that if you hadn't got on after the doors started to close your bag wouldn't have got stuck and you wouldn't then have delayed everyone else who was on the train? No, because I didn't get on as they closed. It was just a bloody awkward bag that slid down my arm as I boarded. |
Jammed doors reoppening
wrote in message ... And then, of course, you get The total ****-for-brains passengers who decide they're not going to make the closing doors in person but will swing their bag/umbrella etc. in the doors. This happens a lot. One time, having watched somebody do just this, the doors closed after a few seconds delay with the passenger still on the platform waving. Off I went. Turns out that somebody in the car had pulled the bag into the car, thus separating passenger from bag! One of the benefits of recorded CCTV is that there can be a replay when a passenger complains that he was "trapped in the doors". Sometimes it has turned out that the passenger was nowhere near the train. usually it is proved that the doors were already closing before the person was near them. Judging by the antics of some passengers, such as standing idly on the platform then making a sudden dash for the closing doors, it appears that their hoping to have an incident where they can claim compensation from LU. When I was a member of that much lamented breed, a guard, we were westbound through Hyde Park Corner (platform access at the extreme rear of the train and guard's position in the back cab) one evening peak when some jerk dashed on the platform and swung a large (half gallon) can of paint into the almost closed doors. He then looked at me with a silly smirk as if to say "Well, you're going to have to open them again now aren't you?" I went up to him, grabbed the handle and tugged but it came away so I got hold of the tin itself and pulled. As I gave it to him I remarked that he shouldn't have put it in in the first place, got back in the can and gave the driver the signal to start. The silly smirk had disappeared from his face and had been replaced by one much more satisfying, well to me at least. Why didn't I simply re-open the doors? Firstly because of the attitude that the silly smirk betrayed and secondly because there were other people directly behind him with more approaching I could have been there all night. There was an apocryphal tale of a guard who got a bollocking for failing to reopen the doors for someone who came dashing onto the platform at the last moment. Apparently he took the manager's advice to heart and allowed those who wished to to get on the train. Allegedly he was at Green Park during one evening peak for some twenty minutes. |
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